RSS

Author Archives: rgryan

About rgryan

R.G. Ryan is an author and speaker living in Las Vegas, Nevada with his first wife and their dog, a Miniature Schnauzer of some renown.

Snapshots At St. Arbuck’s Vol II PREVIEW

Keep An Eye On Summer

The sun had chased the moon from the sky and burned away all but a few silvery wisps of marine layer turning the waters of the Pacific into a deep and beckoning azure.

Parked in my 1958 Volkswagen Bug on the bluff overlooking Manresa beach in Santa Cruz I was listening to the Beach Boys sing, “Keep An Eye On Summer” on the car’s AM radio and feeling glad to be young and alive.

With graduation scarcely two weeks past and the rest of my life in front of me I felt no compulsion toward anything save relishing this newly earned freedom.

Since Manresa’s typically reliable swell had apparently chosen to take the day off, I left my surfboard in the car and jogged lazily down the trail and onto the sand shocked by the fact that at 10:30 in the morning I seemed to be the only one on the beach.

I tossed my beach blanket onto the already warm sand as a mischievous onshore breeze teased a few strands of my longish hair over my eyes momentarily obscuring my field of vision.

Brushing away the offending hair I was stooping to spread out the blanket when I noticed movement in the periphery of my vision.

To the north I saw a lone figure loping across the hard sand down by the waterline eating up the distance in relaxed strides—head back, blonde tresses swinging rhythmically, mouth stretched into a smile of pure pleasure she didn’t seem to have a care in the world.

Suddenly she spotted me, shielded her eyes against the sun and then gave a short little wave of recognition before altering her course.

My heart stutter-stepped in my chest for bouncing across the sand was Susie Simmons—she of the dimpled smile, dancing eyes and fantasy of every red-blooded man in the senior class.

She had been the head pom-pom girl and I the director of the school’s Pep Band.

As such, we had worked closely together throughout the school year and had become friends of a sort, talking during study hall, after student council meetings, after class, but never a phone call and for sure never a date.

Being around her nearly every day, often in close proximity had ignited a smoldering, pent-up flame in my soul.

“Hey you,” she called affably from about ten feet away.

“Hey yourself,” I said (at least I think it was me for I did not recognize the strange croaking emanating from my throat).

Stopping in front of where I stood she immediately threw her arms around my neck and pulled me into a warm hug nearly sending me into cardiac arrest.

“What was that for?” I said as she stepped back.

“Oh, I don’t know,” she replied with a laugh. “I guess I’ve just missed you. It’s weird, you know, seeing people nearly every day for four years and then, all of sudden you don’t see anybody.”

She plopped down on my blanket, looked up at me with those crazy blue eyes of hers and said, “Well, aren’t you going to sit by me?”

I dropped like a stone, lost my balance and fell ingloriously backwards, which she thought hilarious.

Once recovered she said, “So, what are you going to do now that high school is over?”

“I don’t know,” I said. “I suppose I’ll go to Cabrillo until I figure out what I want to do with my life.”

Cabrillo was the local Junior College, future home to some 80% of our fellow graduates.

“You don’t know what you want to do,” she said, making it more of a statement than a question.

I shook my head, “No” and said, “Not really.”

“You’re kidding, right?”

“Actually, I’m not.”

She leaned forward and scooted around so she was facing me.

“You’re the best musician, maybe ever in our school and you don’t know what you want to do?”

I said, “Well, what do you want to do?”

She stared at me in silence long enough for it to be a bit uncomfortable before saying, “I want to dance. You know, in front of people…like on the stage.”

I had no doubt she’d be a success for she was a marvelously gifted dancer and I told her so.

“Thanks,” she said quietly. “But my parents…”

“Not thrilled with that direction?” I said.

“No, they’re not. Their idea is that I be a nurse like my mom and sister.”

We sat for a while in silence, the breaking waves providing a hypnotic underscore for our little scene.

Suddenly she said, “Why didn’t you ever ask me out?”

The question was so preposterous an uncontrollable laugh escaped my throat.

“I’m not kidding,” she said. “I waited the entire year for you to ask me out and you never did. And I want to know why.”

I felt like saying, “Well, you know there was that little matter of you going steady with the student body president; the captain of the football team; the fact that you were Homecoming Queen…” But instead I just said, “I wanted to…you have no idea how much I wanted to.”

She reached over and took my hand in a gentle grasp saying, “You know, of course that you’re the only one I could ever really talk to. All those hours after student council when we’d just sit on the bench in the quad talking. That was the best.” Staring deeply into my eyes she said, “We would’ve been really good together.”

My heart, which previously had been merely pounding now threatened to jump out of my chest.

“You’re killing me here, Susie,” I said while withdrawing my hand and brushing the hair out of my eyes. “I mean finding this out now is torture!”

“So, you’re saying it’s too late?”

I said, “Look, you’re going away to college, I’m staying here. A girl like you—“

“A girl like me? And just what exactly am I?”

I stared at her, once again amazed at how beautiful she truly was.

“Beautiful,” I said softly. “You’re absolutely beautiful,” and just left it at that.

After a few seconds she said, “You know what I wrote in your year book? That part about not forgetting me and keeping an eye out for me wherever life takes you?”

I nodded my head silently, not trusting myself to speak.

“Well, promise me you’ll do that,” she said as she stood to her feet and reached down to help me up.

Standing there in front of her I said, “I promise.”

A quick hug and a peck on the cheek and she was off at a run tossing a quick glance and a smile back over her shoulder.

And then she was gone.

I saw her one more time about six months later, high on LSD and running with a really bad crowd.

And as we look at the future

Though it be through a tear

Keep an eye on summer this year

To this day I can’t hear that song without thinking about that morning on the beach when things seemed so right with the world and I came so close to something so unreachable.

I thought about all of this as I sipped my medium coffee with room for cream on the patio of St. Arbuck’s on the Pacific Garden Mall in Santa Cruz one recent late summer’s morn; comfortable in middle-age, deliriously happy, still in love with the wife of my youth.

And yet, I wonder what became of her.

I wonder if she’d remember me.

I wonder…

 
3 Comments

Posted by on July 23, 2010 in writing

 

Snapshots At St. Arbuck’s: Distressed

He was a handsome guy, seated a couple of tables away from me at St. Arbuck’s, which, on this mid-summer’s morn, was packed to the walls.

He was wearing torn and distressed designer jeans that probably cost as much as a nice watch and an equally distressed, but no less expensive tee shirt.

The hair was, you guessed it, distressed.

You know what I mean—the kind of style that intentionally looks as if one had just gotten out of bed, sprayed/gelled the hair into place and gone out to face the day.

Once again, very expensive.

He seemed to be, uh, distressed and made constant furtive glances toward the in-store restroom facilities and then back to his computer.

MacBook Pro; Restroom; MacBook Pro; Restroom.

Like that.

Finally, he looked at me and in a deep Aussie brogue muttered, “Watch my stuff, mate?”

To which I replied in the affirmative.

He dashed toward the Men’s Room, grabbed the handle and found that it was locked.

Looking around as if to make sure no one was watching he turned toward the Ladies’ Room.

It was out of order.

Walking hurriedly back to his table he sat, staring laser-like at the restroom doorway.

In the time it took him to glance down at his computer, a mom and three young children took up a vigil outside the restroom door.

When he looked back, his face registered a degree of horror typically reserved for viewing carnage, and I could tell that in his mind he was calculating how long it would take for that crew to do their business and vacate the facility.

A line of sweat appeared above his perfectly plucked eyebrows and he began to lick his lips compulsively.

Lick; lick.

Lick; lick.

Lick; lick; lick.

A constant rhythmic manifestation of the immense stress the young man was obviously feeling.

The door opened and out stepped the lone occupant, a store employee, who politely held the door for the mom and her clutch of children while apologizing for the inconvenience of only one working facility.

The young man glanced my way, swore, and stood, his intention quite obviously to secure the next shot at using the restroom.

Before he could get there a large man in a too-small tee shirt and too-tight shorts brushed past him and headed for the door.

I could tell by the expression on the young man’s face that he was considering an open-field tackle on the guy, in the end deciding that to do so would probably mess up his hair, or something.

The man grabbed the handle, found that the door was locked, decided not to wait and turned to leave.

Just as the young man made his move toward the restroom a female voice hollered from across the room, “Terry!”

With an expression of raw, naked desperation on his now sweaty face he tried to wave at the girl—a quite lovely young woman, by the way—and be done with it, but she made her way across the crowded store, wrapped Terry up in a warm, familiar hug and began making small talk about this and that as Terry’s gaze kept shifting from her to the restroom and back.

The restroom door squeaked as mom and kids exited, the kids talking noisily and excitedly about going to the water park.

At that moment the young woman was showing Terry something on her iPhone leaving him no way to gracefully end the conversation.

He was facing me, looking over the top of her head, the sweat now running in free flowing rivulets down his troubled face.

Reflected in his eyes I saw terror known only to those who have, well, business to do—urgent business—and mere seconds to accomplish the doing of it or risk certain public humiliation and eternal embarrassment.

Suddenly, he turned and without comment or a backward glance ran toward the restroom, yanked open the door and rushed inside.

The young woman stared after him, mouth open slightly and a look of total bewilderment coloring her lovely face.

She turned toward me and widened her eyes as if to say, “What the heck?”

I shrugged and thought to myself, You know, there are times when a man’s gotta’ do what a man’s gotta’ do.

 
2 Comments

Posted by on July 15, 2010 in writing

 

Poetry In Motion

Location: Somewhere off the coast of Baja California onboard the Mariner of the Seas, en-route to Cabo San Lucas, Mazatlan and Puerto Vallarta.

Yes, it’s true, R.G., the landlubber, is on a cruise ship.

A very, very big cruise ship.

Talking aircraft carrier big.

Thirty-five hundred passengers and twenty-eight hundred crew members big.

Which means that whatever you want, whenever you want it, somebody will magically appear to insure that your every need is met efficiently and expeditiously.

I haven’t been on a cruise ship prior to this adventure.

And I don’t know why.

If you are the type of person who doesn’t care for sleeping late, eating a gourmet breakfast served by a crack team of wait staff; lunches featuring any type of cuisine you may have a hankering for; relaxing afternoons spent lounging around a pool with drinks and appetizers aplenty; evening gourmet dinners, served by the same crack staff followed by Vegas-style shows, clubbing, gambling…you name it, then cruising probably isn’t for you.

So, there I was, sitting at—wouldn’t you know it—a shipboard St. Arbuck’s located on the Grande Promenade, wondering why people thought that the addition of the lowly “e” to the end of words like, “Grande” somehow made the word, well, more Grande, and enjoying a quite excellent medium coffee, with room for cream.

The constant stream of humanity as it ebbed and flowed past my front row table was a wonder to behold for a hardcore people-watcher like myself.

I saw them from a hundred feet away.

Two middle-aged African-American gentlemen walking—well, that’s not entirely accurate, for to designate what they were doing as merely walking would be like diminishing what Céline Dion does to, “singing.”

No, it was more than walking…it was poetry in motion.

Every movement seemed to be in response to some internal rhythmic pulse that only those two could hear.

Long, lean and sartorially resplendent, they took the table next to mine with a nod of the head and a friendly, “Good-day to you, sir.”

They introduced themselves as Buddy and Melvin—Mel to his friends—both from St. Louis and on the cruise with their wives, who happened to be sisters.

Turns out they were celebrating forty years of marriage.

“Yeah, man, we got married one loooong, hot summer forty years ago,” Buddy said with obvious pride.

Mel said, “Twins. We married twins.”

“Identical?” I inquired.

“Uh-huh,” Buddy replied, nodding his head slowly. “And don’t think they didn’t try to mess with us.”

“Oh, you know that’s right,” Mel chimed in with a deep and resonant chuckle. “Second date, they switched on us!”

I said, “And you really couldn’t tell the difference?”

“Huh-uuuuuuhhhhh,” Buddy said, drawing the vowel out dramatically. “See, they was tryin’ to decide which one of us to date, and, of course, the only way to do that was to experiment. First five or six—“

“Six,” Mel said, interrupting.

“That’s right, six dates they switched it up constantly, and we were never any the wiser until after we was married!”

“And you never figured it out?”

Buddy stabbed the air with his finger. “Now, Mel here will tell you that he had an idea somethin’ fishy was goin’ on ‘round about the fourth date, but based on my recollection he was just as clueless as me!”

“Come on, now,” Mel said defensively. “We talked about it. You know we talked about it.”

“I don’t remember nothin’!” Buddy said emphatically, making his eyes as big as saucers.

“Sure you do. It was that time the four of us went to Club Plantation. The girls excused themselves to go to the ladies’ room, and when they come back there was somethin’ not right. Later on you asked if I noticed they’d swapped shoes, but I said they did more than swap shoes, they swapped dates!”

The two stopped talking long enough to admire an exquisitely beautiful young lady who smiled and offered a quick, “Good morning,” as she sashayed past our position.

“Mmm, mm, mmmm!” Buddy said, shaking his head.

“You got that right. You sho’ do got that right.”

Buddy said, “It don’t hurt to look.”

“Yeah…but I can’t remember why.”

They laughed and bumped fists.

I said, “So did they finally confess?”

“No!” they said in unison.

“Fact is,” Mel said. “To this day we can’t tell ‘em apart when they’s dressed up.”

“And, uh, when they’re not?” I prompted.

They shared a knowing grin before Buddy said, “Let’s just say the good Lord took it upon Himself to provide a means of identification.”

“Birthmark,” Mel said with a grin as wide as the ocean upon which we sailed.

As we shared a collegial laugh I realized that it was, well, poetic.

 
4 Comments

Posted by on July 7, 2010 in Flash Fiction, starbucks, writing

 

The Midnight Cowboy

I never cared for the taste of strong liquor until the day Lorna introduced me to the aqua vitae.

She of the exquisite face and form.

She with hair the color of burnished copper catching the reflection of the setting sun.

She of the jade-green eyes…jaded.

Gone now.

Long gone.

Good and gone.

But if it’s good, why do I feel so bad?

By, “introduced,” I mean to say that she was the cause of my foray into the nether regions of the liquorous palliative.

Although, I dare say that given the speed with which I hit the skids—one of her kinder descriptives of my, shall we say, unfortunate situation—one could argue a certain inevitability at work.

Thirty-eight last month!

I’m thirty-eight, and everyone I know thinks I look ten years older.

No, strike that.

Everyone I know who will be honest thinks I look a good fifteen years older than that!

The bar is kind of quiet tonight.

It’s funny, you know, but everyone in here is looking for something, even if it’s just a place where you can escape inside a bottle; even if only for a little while.

The jukebox squawks out a tired, old tune.

A tired, old tune that, to this day can still tear my heart out.

I hate it that she still has that power over me.

You probably wonder why she left, me being the prize catch that I am.

It’s simple, really, she was beautiful and headed for an amazing career in film, while I, well, can we just say that I’m not beautiful, and leave it at that?

That skinny woman sitting at the back table keeps looking over at me. If you want to know the truth, she looks over at me about every ten seconds.

I wonder if she expects me to go over and stand there while she pretends interest long enough to get a drink out of me? Or whatever.

Not tonight, sweetie.

“You want another round?” this from Ralphie, the bartender, apparently, my new best friend.

With a slight motion of my hand, I indicate that he should keep them coming.

It occurs to me that I sit at the end of the bar every night, which is fitting because, to be completely honest with you, I’m at the end of my rope.

“The Midnight Cowboy is having another round!” I shout out, apropos of nothing or anyone.

If I keep this up, it will definitely be “last call” for the Midnight Cowboy.

Not that anyone would care one way or another.

That’s what they call me around here, you know.

The Midnight Cowboy.

I’m really drunk.

It’s a good thing I lost my license…no, really, because if I hadn’t, I know for sure I’d try to drive home…probably with the skinny chick in tow.

No…come to think of it, I’m not quite that drunk, although ten minutes ago I tried to buy a drink for my reflection in the mirror on the way to the head.

I turned me down, of course.

That was funny…man, that was really, really funny.

I mean, wasn’t that funny?

Against my better judgment, I dig my iPhone out of my pocket, spilling close to a hundred dollars in loose bills on the filthy, sticky floor, scroll to Lorna’s name and proceed to dial her up.

She isn’t home, of course.

I may be drunk, but I’m not crazy!

I just wanted to hear her voice on the answering machine.

Yes, she still has one of those.

“Hey, cowboy,” says a husky, feminine voice behind me. “Want some company? You look like you want some company. I can usually tell the guys who want some company.”

I turn to dismiss the unwelcome intruder…and look right into those jade-green eyes.

“Lorna?” I manage to croak out before the tears blurred my eyes. “Lorna, I…”

“Shhh,” she said, while wrapping her arms around me.

“You really smell good,” I said after breathing in her oh-so-familiar scent.

“Well, you don’t,” she said with a soft laugh. “Come on, let’s get you out of here.”

I open my mouth to utter the first of about a billion questions, but she just covered it with her hand and said, “We’ll just take it slow, all right?”

I was walking with her toward the exit; unsteadily, but walking nonetheless.

I waved what I believed to be a final good-bye to my reflection as we passed the mirror and walked out into a night that was much warmer than I had remembered.

 
5 Comments

Posted by on June 30, 2010 in Flash Fiction, writing

 

The Piano Man

Author, Speaker

A beautiful spring day in San Diego, a descriptive that could be liberally applied to virtually any day in this fair city.

I heard a comedian joking one time that the most boring job on earth had to be that of TV Weatherman in San Diego.

JIM: We’re going to toss it to Steve for the weather report. How’s it looking out  there Steve?
STEVE: Well, Jim, today it’s going to be nice. And it looks like tomorrow it’s going to be nice again. Back to you, Jim.

Like that.

I sat on the patio of my favorite beachside St. Arbuck’s…you’ve been here with me a time or two before, so you know the drill: across the street deep indigo water set against an azure sky that hadn’t seen a cloud for days on end; salt air tickling your nose ever so slightly; an easy camaraderie with the regulars, even those whose names I do not know.

The patio was packed with people afforded the luxury of easing into their day.

There was the aging Hippie whose obnoxious dog incessantly wanders from table to table begging for whatever largesse may be solicited from the assembled patronage; the “morning crew”, an eclectic group of friends gathered around the fire pit animatedly discussing politics; the German tourists from the Inn next door who couldn’t decide whether to sit inside or outside; everyone’s favorite barista, now on maternity leave, who had come by to show off her precious treasure; the lawyer who routinely and generously dispensed legal advice to anyone who inquired.

I was savoring my medium cup of coffee, with room for cream, and possibly the best chocolate croissant on the planet (the croissant whose origins date from Budapest in 1686, not France as is so widely supposed).

Off to my left I heard a man and woman talking.

She, a middle-aged woman of some means, as evidenced by her quite stylish attire; he, a man of the same age-group dressed in what could be kindly referenced as “shabby chic.”

I heard the woman say, “So, are you a musician, or something?”

He replied, “Yeah, I’m a piano player.”

“Professional? said she.

With a detached air he said, “If by that you mean, do I make my living at it, then, yes.”

“Huh,” she said. “My daughter is getting married next month and we haven’t been able to find anyone to play for the reception. Are you interested?”

Peering at her from over the rim of his reading glasses, he said, “Sure. When is it?”

She told him the date, and looking off into the distance as if consulting a calendar in his mind he affirmed that he was, indeed, available.

“Wonderful! the woman said excitedly. “What do you charge?”

“Two thousand dollars,” he said without expression.

Caught completely off-guard by his reply, the woman stammered and stuttered before managing, “Two-thousand! Why that’s, that’s—“

“A lot of money,” he said, finishing the sentence for her.

“I…I can’t believe you get much work at that price,” she said rather indignantly.

With a Cheshirean grin he said, “At that price, I don’t need to work much.”

Rendered utterly speechless, the woman stood there as if not knowing what to do or say.

“So, you going to hire me?” said the man.

A big breath, as if in preparation to speak, and then she turned and walked away toward the biggest, blackest Mercedes I’ve ever seen, got in, slammed the door and drove off in a huff, nearly taking out a Mini Cooper in the process.

Turning in my direction, the Cheshire Cat grin still in place he said, “Happens to me a lot.”

Suddenly, the grin melted away from his face as he stared off into the distance in obvious remembrance, or contemplation…I couldn’t tell which.

Turning back in my direction, his mouth twitched a bit before he said in a voice thick with emotion, “Looking at me now you might not notice—“

“But I’ve had my moments,” I said, completing his sentence. “Emerson Drive. Love that song.”

“Yeah,” he said nodding slowly. “Me too. Story of my life.” After a pause he added, “I really did have my days in the sun.”

“I’m sure you did.” Craning my neck to see beyond the overhang, I glanced at the sky. “Seems to me the sun’s still shining.”

He followed my gaze, staring once again off into the blue.

“I…well…I’d like to believe that. But reality is an ofttimes-cruel teacher. And my reality doesn’t look a thing like that!” he said gesturing at the sun swept landscape.

Turning around in my chair so I was facing him, I said, “The thing about reality, is that it’s largely a matter of perception.”

He waved his hand dismissively.

“Yeah, yeah…perception IS reality. I know. Heard that my whole life.”

“But what if it’s true? Henry Ford said once that, ‘Whether you think that you can, or that you can’t, you are usually right.’”

He laughed, and then laughed a little more.

“That’s good. I mean, that right there is really good. I’m going to remember that.” Standing abruptly, he scooped his belongings into a backpack and said, “Sorry to bug out on you so quick like, but I’m gonna go talk to that lady.”

“But she’s gone.”

“No worries,” he said with a laugh. “I know how to get in touch with her. See, the only reason I quote ridiculous prices like that is that it’s about the only self-esteem I’ve got left. I need that job, so I’m gonna go talk to her, see if we can work something out. No time like the present to start believing in myself again. Thanks! Thanks a lot.”

And with that, he was gone.

“Looking at me now you might not notice…but I’ve had my moments.”

I believe that there are many more “moments” to come for the Piano Man.

For you…for me.

 
6 Comments

Posted by on October 8, 2009 in writing

 
 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 28 other followers