Thursday, December 17, 2009

Giving the Gift That Never Starts Giving (Cigar Smoke 12-17-09)

I try to give good gifts at Christmas time. In fact, most people think I am very trying. Last year I asked someone who had received a gift from me how they liked it. And they said, “You are very trying.”

Like I was saying, I usually give pretty good gifts. But I do have a tendency to push Santa’s chunky envelope just a little. A couple of years ago I gave someone in our extended family a gift that I didn’t know what it was until after she got it. Really. I bought this kind of psycho-looking funky metal art object with arms reaching to Pomona kind-of-statue thing. At the time, I felt a little uneasy buying it, but I thought it looked pretty cool so I pulled the Visa on it.

Then when the unbelievably happy recipient of the gift opened it, she was very excited. She said, “Wow! I’ve always wanted a jewelry butler.” I am not kidding you. I had purchased a jewelry butler not knowing jewelry butlers even existed. She asked me where I found this and I had to tell her the truth — that I had searched the Internet for months and talked to jewelry experts around the country until I had found just the perfect jewelry butler I knew she would love. (Please don’t tell me what a jewelry butler does. I don’t want to know. My ignorance and I are very happy together.)

I admit I do try to give gifts that are a little off the beaten track. I like to give gifts that nobody would ever give themselves. I look for gifts out in left field, just north of the power alleys. Once Robert Frost told me one of my gifts was on a road that shouldn’t even be considered.

Yes, I am the guy who gives you that purple elephant footrest. I can’t think of a better way to rest your tired feet than propping them up on the back of a foot stool that looks like an elephant, a purple elephant. You know you wouldn’t buy that for yourself.

I once gave a newlywed couple I knew a Christmas gift of a power drill. I thought to myself, just how many pretty, useful things can one couple use. So I sprang for a Black & Decker beauty that could drill through cement, and I’ll never forget what the wife said to me after she opened it: “When did you get out of prison?” You talk about a moment of Christmas joy.

But last year something very unusual happened. I was visiting the house of someone whom I had given what I thought was a really nice gift and, hot damn, they actually had it in their kitchen and were actually using a gift that I had actually given. Actually. It was incredible.

I said, “Do you remember the wonderfully thoughtful person who gave you this stunning gift?” The woman whom I had asked, at first, tried to not tell me who it was, but I held her down near the sink and had my knee on her apron-covered upper torso until she said, “You did. You did. Thank you. Stop.” I said, “Yes, it was me who gave you that cool gift. Thank you for remembering.”

I had given them one of those combo coffee pot and tea-water-heating units that lets you use individual packets of specialty coffee or tea packets to make your own favorite beverage. That way everyone in your family can have just the right drink for themselves. It’s just so modern and efficient and cool (almost snazzy) that I feel like breaking out into a break dance. That reminds me; a few years ago I gave my 80-year-old uncle some break-dancing lessons. He made it to the lesson where he spins on his head in the kitchen. His widow never forgave me for that one.

But that combo coffee-brewing baby was a hit. I just love going over there when they throw a little party and walking among the coffee- and tea-drinking guests. Everyone is getting the exact drink they want and love and need. A latte. A mint tea. A cappuccino imotatte. An English tea. A Chinese tea. A Chai tea. A NestlĂ©’s cocoa packet some little fart neighbor kid snuck in. It just makes my Christmas heart sing.

Speaking of Christmas singing, I bought our family a wonderful gift many years ago and it still is the most joyous gift we as a family have ever received, (although, technically, because I was the one who gave it, I don’t know if I can receive it, too. In the spirit of the season, let’s just say I can.)

Anyway, I gave the family a Christmas ornament that is painted a bright and shiny Tijuana gold, and if I say so myself, it is quite beautiful. It’s a gold metal ornament that looks like Elvis. Looks just like him. Right down to the drug injection marks on his arms. The detail is amazing. And not only does it look great, it plays two of his Christmas songs — “Blue Christmas” and something else we can’t make out. And get this. The batteries are still going. The same batteries it came with 10 years ago. It makes me want to cry.

My family feels the same way.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Driveways Driving Me Crazy (Cigar Smoke 12-3-09)

I know I am a blessed person. I have a great family. I have both my health and my nine medications. I have a hovel up in Oregon I can escape to. And I have enough money to still be able to subscribe to newspapers. And I’m lanky. I’m living on house money, baby.

But I have to complain about one thing. For the past 38 years, yes 38 damn years, I have had really bad driveways. I bought my first house up in Altadena in 1972. It was such a great house and such a great deal that I just decided to hell with having a bad driveway. But indeed, it was a bad driveway.

The house was on funky little street called Northhaven Lane on a cul-de-sac. (That’s French for “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up.”) And you came down this very steep hill to get to the front of our house. And then the driveway was on another even steeper hill to get to the garage. Yes, the god of driveways had doubled down on me and had given me an essentially useless, probably criminal, driveway. You could not go down the driveway and have much hope of coming back up the driveway.

Occasionally somebody could do it if they had a Hemi-kind of V8 engine and floored it in reverse and screech-assed up the thing and scared the hell out of me and my insurance agent. But generally, you could go into the driveway, but you could not get out of the driveway. It was like the Roach Motel for Buicks.

I can’t tell you how many plumbers and pizza delivery guys would not even slow their macho butts down when they got to the driveway and ended up on the bottom and had to be towed back out. I should have bought a tow truck but, like now, I wasn’t that bright.

Anyway, it was an ugly driveway and I endured that car-swallowing sucker for 17 years. And then Marge and I moved into another house in Altadena over on Crest Drive. It was another great house, built back into the semi-woods, maybe 100 yards off the street. Well, Virginia, that 100 yards of blacktop was my new driveway nightmare.

No, it wasn’t steep, but it had a few other fun navigational challenges. First of all, the driveway was very narrow and it went over a flood control channel on a stone bridge built by Chinese slave labor in 1896. Then about 50 yards in, there was a huge tree stuck right in the middle of the driveway. And this tree further divided the driveway into our driveway and the driveway of our neighbor who hated our Airedale. He would call us up and say, “Would you please keep that beast of yours quiet?!” And I would tell him, “Marge isn’t that noisy, dammit!”

Speaking of Marge, she would always have her car parked in the garage and she would want to get out at night, and she would say Jimsie Whimsie could you pleasie-wheezie get my car out of the bad old driveway that scares me because I’m a woman and you’re a man and you like backing out backwards and driving in the darkness of death when you can’t see over Chinese slave-labor bridges into seven-foot tree trunks? Please? I’ll make you chocolate-chip cookies and hide them in my bra. (OK, she never said that part about the cookies, but everything else is damn close to being true.)

So I put up with 12 years of the second horrible driveway. And then we moved to our current driveway-challenged house on Braeburn. When we were thinking about buying it, I mentioned to Marge that the driveway wasn’t really that good, and she said that she knew that, but it was better than the last driveway. And I said yes, it was better — in kind of the same way Mussolini might have been better than Hitler.

Well, she looked at me, closed her eyes, opened them up again, and I was still there, and then she turned to the Realtor and said, “We’ll take it.” So we’ve been in this driveway hellhole for the last nine years. And, OK, I admit that it isn’t quite as bad as the other two nightmare driveways of my past, but it still is not good. You see, it is another long driveway that goes right from the street straight back into the backyard. But now we have a gate to the backyard, which I have to open and close all the time and it’s a hard-to-muffle-my-screams kind of gate.

And then once you get inside the gate you have to kind of split off a little to get both cars in there. And, of course, Marge has her car in the garage and I have to keep mine out in the coldness and dampness where squirrels can take their little dumps on it.

So now when Marge needs to go out and my squirrel-turded-up car is there, Marge will coyly say, “My car needs to get out.” She flicks her eyelashes a couple of times, and adds, “You’re so manly when you’re backing my car up.” And I say, “I’m in my robe! It’s midnight!” And she says, “The neighbors probably won’t call the sheriff again.”

God, what I would give for a circular driveway. Or a couple of chocolate-chip cookies with bra marks.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Spice Up Your Sex Life (Cigar Smoke 11-19-09)

OK, admit it. Your marriage could use a little juice. A little tap on the accelerator of love. How do I know this? Because I have my ear to the ground and my nose to the wind and my mouth to the top of a Coors Light. Like the other night, a friend of mine told me that he had cuddled up to his wife, and said, “You wanna have some steamy sex tonight?” And she said, “Sure, who’s coming over?”

Now if you are a guy, that is not something you want to hear from your Spousy Wousy. So I would like to offer a little bit of marital advice to all the men out there. (You women can read along, too, if you promise not to use this information in your divorce hearing.)

OK, here we go. You’ve been married for a while. The last sexual conquest you had, other than your wife, was a female Sherpa on Mount Everest. Yes, it was exciting getting her out of that big, furry Eskimo outfit, and yes, you enjoyed her moaning your name in Urdu. But that was a long time ago. You are now married. You are not bored. You love your wife. You still find her romantically pursuable to engage in naughty stuff. But you need a little kick.

A while back I thought I’d jack things up a notch, so I suggested that my dearly beloved get flat-out jay-naked and wrap herself in Saran Wrap and meet me at the front door when I came home from work. I know this is kind of trite. It’s been done before. But it had never been done for me. So I was really jazzed. And I rushed home that evening and knocked on the front door, and my Wifey Poo answered the door, and she was stark naked! Of course, it might have been a little sexier if she hadn’t wrapped herself in aluminum foil. I remember it well. All she said was, “We were out of Saran Wrap.”

Another approach you might want to try is using sex toys and marital aids. You might want to try that. Not me. I’m too afraid. I know if I showed up some night in the bedroom with a whip and wearing German boots and running some battery-operated object that whirred, I would not get the desired affect. I just know my beloved would be laughing so damn hard she would spit up on her flannel nightgown and keep slapping her knee. Who needs that?

Here’s something that is not quite as extreme as whirring things. This is a killer. You should pay me for this one. Please don’t tell anybody you heard it here. (I could lose my poetic license.)

When you get in bed with your Loin Mate, just nuzzle her a little, and be playful, and put your finger on her cheek and let it run down her neck and then let your finger drift to the top of her shoulder and then on to that upper chest region where it is OK to touch without permission and then stop, and arch your eyebrows, twice, and say, “Darling, I would like to spice up our sex life a little.”

Hopefully, she is not laughing and says coyly or with slight alarm, “How?” And then you reach down and grab the little red and white tin container you have put on the nightstand and you sprinkle some cinnamon right there on her upper chest freedom zone. And as she is looking puzzled, you say, “Cinnamon. Spice. Cinnamon is a spice. Spice up our love life. Get it? Get it?” And if she tries to dial 9-1-1, say, “Columbus sailed over here for spice. Just do it for Columbus. Please.”

OK, OK, maybe you want something that is a tad more subtle than sprinkling cinnamon on your Matey Watey’s Chesty Westy. May I suggest a Mystery Evening of Love? Yes, I have done this many times. You just arrange the evening ahead of time but you don’t tell your wife where you are going. It’s that damn simple. Even you can do it.

No, you can’t go to a sports event. Geez. And don’t go to your gentleman’s club and say, “Uh, Destiny, this is my wife.” Don’t do that. That’s not mystery, that’s masochism. Other than that, most things are open. It doesn’t have to be expensive. A dinner at a restaurant in a different town and a movie. Maybe go see a play in some little playhouse where there are more actors than audience members.

There are a lot of mysterious things you can plan. Just announce it as a Mystery Evening of Love and you are set, baby. Just don’t tell her ahead of time what it is. You don’t want her to know she’ll be eating at Denny’s in Temple City and then seeing a movie with Adam Sandler in it.

My best Mystery Evening of Love was a few years ago. I told Marge ahead of time to expect a mystery night and she was maybe not all a-twitter, but pretty much semi-a-twitter. When the big night finally arrived, we got in the car and headed out the Ventura Freeway. For an hour and 15 minutes! Marge kept asking me where I was taking her. I kept pretending I remembered where it was.

We finally got to the venue and to reveal the mystery; we were there to see a Tom Jones concert in Thousand Oaks. And hey, Marge loved it. When old Tom was belting out “What’s New Pussycat?” Marge was answering him. And when he sang “She’s a Lady,” Marge whispered to me, “Since we aren’t staying in a motel, would you mind if I gave Tom our house key?”

I told her, “If you ever do that, I will never sprinkle cinnamon on your upper chest again.”

Friday, November 6, 2009

Eureka! I Have Lost It (Cigar Smoke 11-05-09)

I would like to write about something young and vital, but I forgot what youth is. I think it was a time when most of your body parts still worked, and you wished they wouldn’t. I’m not sure what that means, either.

As you all well know by now, and are sick of hearing about, I am now 68 years old. But I am a vibrant, virile 68. Many times people will come up to me and say, “You look so vibrant and virile you could pass for a man of 67.” And I just nod my head and tip my imaginary hat with a young vigor of, maybe, a man of 66.

Anyway, the other day I had just gotten out of the shower, looked at myself in the mirror, flexed my arm muscles and scrunched my rippling abs, and said, “You look like a man of 65.” So I put on my slippers and went into the bedroom to get dressed. And I finish getting dressed, except for my shoes. I can’t find one of my shoes.

Now, I am usually kind of a neat-nik. Some might even say I am an anally retentive piece of human garbage who continually spoils things by trying to always be better than others. Well, what can I say? I am better than all you sloppy losers. I like being neat. I like being orderly. I like being not liked.

But I have to admit that in one area of life I am not neat and orderly. My dresser is always full of T-shirts and pants and sweat suits and jackets, and next to my dresser on the floor are at least five pairs of shoes. Regular shoes, tennis shoes, loafers, slippers. All turned over in a jumbled mess. If I saw this disaster at your house, I would look down on you and know I was better than you.

Hold it a second. I think I am having a senior moment. I can’t remember why I am writing this column. Oh yeah, I remember now. I couldn’t find one of my shoes. I am all dressed and I am looking for my black loafers. I can only find one of them. I go through the pile on the floor again. Not there. I then go into the closet thinking I may have actually put them where they are supposed to be. Thank God, they weren’t there. I go back to the pile and actually get down on all fours. I think I may have accidentally pushed one of the shoes under the dresser. Nope. No missing shoe there. Just dead spiders, rat droppings, toxic dust bunnies and M&M wrappers.

And then, while I am down on all fours, I had an epiphany. (When I was younger I used to know what that meant.) All of a sudden it came to me that I had seen only one of my slippers, too. Yes, on my crawling searches I had seen only one black loafer and only one tan slipper. And I thought to myself, “Self, that is damn peculiar. What are the odds of losing one shoe for two pairs, at the same time?” And I answered, “Self, for a 68-year-old piece of senile shit, you rock.”

So I get up off of all fours and I am standing there in my bedroom, all alone, and I say to my one rapt listener (me), I know where my other shoe is. And I exclaim, “Eureka, I have found it!” And I look down at my feet and tears come to my eyes. I have found both of my missing shoes. On my left foot is my black loafer and on my right foot is my tan slipper. And at this moment I realize that I have experienced an official senior moment. I really cannot believe I was actually wearing two different-colored shoes at the same time for at least a half a day. The night before I had gotten into my robe at around 7 o’clock and had gone back out to the den to watch television and pass on words of wisdom to Marge. I sat there on the couch for four hours and I had my feet up on the table and I never once saw that I had on two different-colored shoes! I never saw it.

And I went outside and had a cigar and put my damn feet up again on a damn end table and I smoked a whole damn cigar and I looked right down at my one tan slipper and my one black loafer for a half hour and I blew smoke rings up their little shoe nostrils and I never saw them!

So I go back inside to relate this Eureka moment to Marge, who has been known to have a few senior moments of her own, her being a much older individual than I am. She’s 69. Yeah, she’s a cradle robber. I say, “Margie Pargie, I have something to tell you.” And she says, “I know your first name is Poopsie, but what is your last name again?” I say, “Whoopsie. It’s Poopsie Whoopsie.” And before I can say anything else, she falls asleep on the couch and her Kindle falls to the floor.

At first I was kind of pissed off that I couldn’t tell her about my “Eureka!” senior moment, but it actually worked out pretty well — because by then I had forgotten what it was.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Not A Happy Ending (Cigar Smoke 10-25-09)

This is a public service column. It is my semi-educated guess that most of you men out there have never had a pedicure. Am I right? Of course I’m right. (I voted for Bush. Twice.)

And until I was 68, I had never had a pedicure either. But, because of a couple of knee operations, bad back and a problem with uncontrolled lankiness, I have had a hard time cutting my toenails lately. So now I have had three pedicures — one at a private nail salon, one from my podiatrist and one by my wife. And I would like to share my experiences so you other men can reap the benefits of my sacrifice for my fellow man.

My first toenail experience occurred in a little nail salon on Colorado Boulevard. I tried to find one that I was pretty sure none of my friends would use or see me enter. So I walk in, without an appointment, and I’m standing in front — hoping to be ignored so I can leave — and then this cute little Filipino-Thai-Korean-Hong Kong woman says, “Can I help you?” And I whisper that I’d like a pedicure. And she says, “What?” And I whisper just a little louder, “I’d like a pedicure.” And she yells out in her little Filipino-Thai-Korean-Hong Kongian voice, “A pedicure!”

Four women and the four salon employees doing beauty stuff to them, and two other currently unattractive people waiting to be beautified look over at me. And then down at my feet. Let me tell you, it is embarrassing when ugly people look down at your toes.

So I get in the chair and I’m sitting there and the toenail woman comes over and looks at me, and says, “Well?” I say, “What?” She says, “It would be easier if you took your shoes off.” I always thought Asian women weren’t supposed to be funny.

Then I put my feet into this little pan of water she had. And then she took off my socks and got started. (Us American men can really be funny, too.) She starts washing my feet in water that looked like it had been recycled from Roman Polanski’s hot tub. Then she towels my toes off and picks one of seven toenail clipper/scissor things and then starts cutting my toenails. And with each toe she would take another cutter and cut like a professional, baby. I was impressed.

Then she filed them down and buffed them with an electric buffer. Then she put plain polish on them. Geez, my damn toenails looked better than my face. And then I looked at her and she looked at me. And I was getting the vibe that I was finished, and that I should leave. But I knew that couldn’t be true, because I hadn’t even asked her yet about the happy ending.

“That’ll be $12,” she said. And I said, “And how much for the pedicure?” She threw back her head and laughed that throaty Asian-woman laugh that only Asian women who are humorous can laugh.

Then, about eight weeks later, I went to my podiatrist to give him a shot at the toenails. He had told me that because I had diabetes, I should take good care of my feet, so to punish him, I made him do the dirty work.

I took off my shoes and he stepped back and said, “Whew. Those are some real sock-rippers there, boy.” And he put on his rubber gloves and said, “Eight years of medical school for this.” He then sprayed my feet with Raid and took one big-ass nail-cutter surgical instrument out of his bag and cut my toenails faster than UCLA can lose a football game. I couldn’t believe it was over so quick — I thought I was having sex.

Then I asked him, “What about the filing and buffing and polishing?” And I don’t think his response would have been approved by the American Medical Association, but he threw the surgical instrument at me while I was running down his hallway. Just as I got to the front door I looked back, and he reminded me of Jack Nicholson in “The Shining.” That sweating, glistening, fiendish face of my podiatrist will live with me forever.

OK, another eight weeks go by and more of my socks are getting ripped, so I have to find someone to cut my toenails before they run wild in the streets, like urchins in Rio. So I think to myself: Self, whom do I know that I can now turn to after burning my toenail bridges with non-happy-ending salon women and killer podiatrists? And I answer myself. Self, you can turn to your loving wife, who, although she wouldn’t agree to “obey” you at the altar, did agree to take you in good health and in a long-toenailed state of health.

So I walked up to my beloved, my little Margie Pargie Wargie, and I licked her left ear and breathed heavily on her neck with savagely hot breath, and asked her if she would like to cut my teeny-weeny toenails just this once because of her deep and semi-abiding love for me, her diabetical Muffin Mate with very few socks left. And she said, “If I won’t obey you, why the hell would I cut those suckers?” “Because you love me and you love hot savage breath, that’s why,”
I humbly replied.

So, incredibly, she really did cut my toenails, and all was going pretty well. Right up until I asked her if there would be a happy ending.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Bill Murray, Where Are You? (Cigar Smoke 10-8-09)

You know it wasn’t until I was 29 that I learned that not all women in bars are named Security. I would go into a place and sit down next to a beautiful (or any breathing) young woman, and I would look at her, and raise my eyebrows alternately, right, then left, then right again, and I’d let her catch a glimpse of my money clip with the two twenties in it hiding the ones, and I would order a Chivas rocks with a splash of 7-Up, and I would say, “Hi, would you like to have the wildest night of clothes-ripping, sweat-dripping sex you’ve ever had, or would you like to go out with me?”

And then, when she paused and gaped at me, I would introduce myself, “My name is Jim. What’s yours?” And she’d always say, “Security.” And I would say, “Hi, Security. This is really uncanny. You’re the fifth woman I’ve met this week with that name. What are the odds?”

But I digress. But before I digress, I would like to inquire if I can officially digress before I have actually started doing something? How can I digress when I’m not doing anything? If I had started my column, and then I mentioned meeting all the lovely Securities I once knew, that would be OK. That would be true digression.

Anyway, I am not digressing now. I am just continuing on with my column and entering into a completely new subject. The digression is now over, or to be more accurate, the digression never really started.

Do you guys have problems with rats, gophers and squirrels? Well, your favorite digressing columnist does. We have rats in our garage. And it is not pretty. These little rotten rodents are everywhere. We find rat droppings on the floor and on the shelves and on our car. They’ve gnawed holes in boxes and are making nests in old clothes. I think I can hear them laughing, too.

At first, I tried to get rid of them myself. I bought some of those deadly rat spring-traps and hired a guy from Gold’s Gym to pull back the iron bar things, and I baited the traps with peanut butter, and yes, the traps all went off, but I didn’t catch any rats. Nope, I just hear them spitting out PB now. You ever hear a rat go pa-tui. And then laugh. It’s not a good sound.

Then I took out my old .22 rifle and staked out the garage. And when I finally saw one of those little brown-faced PB-suckers, I pulled off a round. I missed, but the ricocheting bullet was kind of entertaining. It bounced off an old cook pot and then glanced off a lamp and then off a sand wedge into one of my seven coolers. I felt like I was in a Road Runner cartoon. So, for safety’s sake, I put on a hockey helmet and fired off a few more shots. Didn’t get any rats, but at least all those storage boxes know who’s boss now.

And get this: we have squirrels that are bad-asses, too. About a month ago, we were having trouble with our TV reception, so we call Charter and the guy comes out and checks some stuff, then goes outside and looks at the wire coming into the house from the garage roof, and says, “You guys got squirrel problems.”

“You mean those cute little bushy-tailed, buck-toothed critters who sing Christmas songs?” I said.

“No,” he said, “Those are chipmunks, dumbass. You got squirrels eating your wires. See up there?” And sure enough, the little varmint vandals had eaten clean through the wires, preventing us from getting our daily allowance of reality programming. (I think Marge showed them where the wires were.)

By the way, and this is a legitimate digression, have you ever seen a squirrel go poo-poo?

I have not. I have seen rats leave rat pellets. I have seen every other kind of animal leave their calling cards. I have seen my dog, Hadley, leave mounds that should have been illegal. But I have never ever seen a squirrel even so much as hunch over, let alone leave evidence of television wire coating in their scat or whatever those little squirrel suckers call it.

And now — as if the rats and the squirrels weren’t enough — we have been invaded by gophers. They are in our backyard. Holes everywhere. So we had the gardener try to (don’t tell PETA) drown them with the hose. Didn’t work. Then we got Orkin out here and they put poison down in their little gopher tunnels. Didn’t do diddly. I called Bill Murray and asked him to bring his “Caddyshack” dynamite, but I haven’t heard back from him. Bastard.

So what could I do? I got out my .22 again, and I was lying prone on the grass like Gordon Liddy humping Mrs. Liddy, and I had the rifle pointed right at the gopher hole just waiting for one of the dirtbags to raise his little pest head, and then I heard something. It was very faint at first. I could barely hear it. Then it got a little louder and I leaned closer to the hole. And I swear on my mother’s tattoo, I heard a gopher say in his little gopher voice, “Got any peanut butter?”

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The Fishing Trip (Cigar Smoke 9-17-09)

Well, I haven’t had my morning cigar yet (I’ll pause for you to retch) so I am feeling a little too healthy. And that always makes me grumpy. But I have had my coffee, so I am not shouting, “You lie!” at anyone we know.

Anyway, at this exact time just two weeks ago, I was not stomping around being grumpy or yelling at weasels or anything. Why? Because I was up in Oregon, just mellowing out, enjoying clear water and trees and seagulls, and fishing for salmon. And you know what I discovered? I discovered another human being just as grumpy as I am. Sometimes the lord works in mysterious ways. (I think the lord is grumpy, too. I think he may be ticked off that I used a lower case “l” on his title.)

So who is this fellow grump? I don’t want to use his real name. Let’s just call him Mike Harrington who used to go to Humboldt State College and now lives in Beaverton, Ore. OK, Mike knew I was scouting around to buy a boat, so he suggested I come up to God’s country (note the uppercase “G”) for a fishing trip in his kick-ass jet-powered sled boat, if I had the guts — which he doubted I did, because he had known me earlier in my life, and was pretty sure I was the inspiration for the term “gutless wonder.”

I laughed my insincere laugh of repressed spit, and said, “Give those salmon suckers a head’s-up, because the Altadena Assassin is on his way.” Mike said, “Laris, it’s only a fishing trip — relax.” I said, wiping some non-repressed spit that escaped to my chin, “Assassins never relax. The SAA (Salmon Assassins of Altadena) won’t let us.”

Anyway, I get up to Portland, and Mike picks me up at the airport and says, “Couldn’t get a cab, huh?” And we drive to his house in the trees, and we get there and his delightful wife, Shirleen, asks me if the Salmon Assassin would like a BLT. I did one quick karate-slashing move and said, “Kwaa!” (meaning “yes” in Tai Quando. I’m hoping Tai Quando is a martial art and not a Chinese province.)

After a nice evening of watching TV, eating a Costco ice cream bar and listening to Mike grump about his Oregon Ducks getting their little duck clocks cleaned by Boise State, I asked him what he thought about the Duck uniforms. His face got red and his head started to expand and two of his pimples popped, and he said, “They have frigging feathers!” I suggested that they might use them to fly away. He suggested that I might do the same.

Eventually, I asked, “What time do we have to get up tomorrow morning?” Without even a pause, he said “Five.” “Five a.m.?” “Yes, 5 A.M.!” I mentioned that the mouth of the Columbia River, where we were headed, was only about an hour-and-a-half away, and maybe we could sleep in a little. He mentioned that I was the most sissy Salmon Assassin he had ever met.

We get to the river, we launch the boat and we start heading for the place Mike says the salmon will be. He says the tide will be coming in around 12:30 or 1 p.m., and that’s a perfect time to catch ’em. I calmly and affectionately say, “Mike, you dumbshit, do you know it is now only 6:30 in the morning? Mr. Dumbshit, it is 6:30 right now. The fish are showing up at 12:30. What are we going to do for SIX hours!” He says, “Troll.”

So we did troll for six hours. And we did a few other things, too. Between trolls, Mike would maneuver the boat at high speed so it would bounce up in the air and come down on the waves dramatically wrong and wrench my back in serious spinal-disc premeditated pain. I asked him why he would do this to a fellow Humboldt Lumberjack, and he said, “Feathers.”

Then he started to put on some sunscreen and I asked what number he used. And he said, “Number 2.” I said, “Were they out of number 1?” He smirked and tried to hit another wave wrong, and I said, “You know, that sun shit goes up to, maybe number 54, or something. Number 2 is about as effective as, say, water. Air is number 1, water number 2.”

Well, after trolling our asses off, we did catch a salmon. One 22-inch salmon. And we had to throw back a big 15-pounder because it didn’t have a tag on its dorsal fin. The Salmon Assassin was not happy.

The only other fun thing that happened, if you don’t count all the nature stuff, was that Mike took a leak into a half- full apple juice container and then said, “Better not drink the top half, fish face.”

Well, we kind of made up after a while and went out to dinner. And because we’d been using his boat, I offered to pay for the meal. That’s just the kind of assassin I am. And I told my inadequately sun-screened buddy he could have whatever he wanted on the menu as long as it wasn’t one thing: expensive.