The Vacation Is There Is No Vacation.

by Serge Bielanko


In a few weeks we are boarding an airplane with a baby. So, we'll be THOSE people for an afternoon. The ones with the screaming infant...ruining everyone's little bullshit dream of Coach Is Now First Class!

Hmph. People get to thinking to themselves: well, maybe the flight will be pretty empty! I hope so! I'd love to have a whole row to myself so I can slip my shoes off and hang my socky sausage toes out just an inch or two in the aisle so that everyone going back to take a piss can notice them and notice me sleeping the afternoon away high in the sky; a seasoned air sleeper on my three and a half hour jaunt to my economical four hour layover in Detroit.

F them.

I wanna fill one of Violet's diapers with Nutella. I wanna wait 'til she explodes into a sack of wailing tears at twenty-nine thousand feet. I wanna stand up in my cramped row so the people tsk'ing in the rows around me notice that one of THEM has risen. And I wanna eat the 'shit' right out of my daughter's diaper in all of its gooey clumpish glory. I want Nutella on the tip of my nose for effect. I want a possible Air Marshall dry heave.

Then, I want someone with some goddamn authority around here to bring me a plastic Captain's Wings for my sweet little pumpkin nugget, pronto.

Christ.

Anyway. I can't relax. That's my summer vacation in a Coke cap. Four days back east. To pass Violet around to her various peeps. Maybe deep-fry a Butterball by the garage. I wanna bring my fly rod but I know some kid in Cargo will slowly slip it out of its metal tube/out of its protective pouch and snap it over his thigh-front; and then just ice-ily/methodically slip it back into where he got it. Punk.

I dream. I dream of two or three weeks of Europe the right way. Escargot in a clandestine dive: butter sauce under a single nude light bulb. Airy white wines at a picnic table in a beer garden of chattering locals. Rambling over afternoon moors under a rainbow in a spritz. Canals with swans. Cobblestone street strolling, holding the milksoft hand of the woman I love. Making a phone call to Monica every afternoon. (Psyche! She's with me in all my travel dreams.) Pizza with a knife and fork. Lunch meats for breakfast. Summer romance with an endless fat clump of Euros riding shotgun in my H&M man-purse. Sex in the morning before the museums.

Either way: not happening.

So where you headed this summer? Tell me. I can take it.


On Sunday I Drove Us Past The Devil's Place.

by Serge Bielanko


Sometimes you chuck a fat knotty stick and it lands in hell. Not often, but sometimes. There I was in Dog Canyon at the edge of the creek with Monica and Violet behind me. First stick I see I pick up and toss it without really thinking. Max and Milo are two stallions in a great western: leaping through creek water. Majestic splashes rise like ghosts in the wake of their perfect arcing figures. They follow the stick. The stick hits the fifteen foot high debris cage, rolls a little, and slips through the small opening designed to let high water trash and branches and shit to pass. The stick hits the hard fast water there and slips on through.

Max hits the same water and tries to stop but goes through.

Milo hits the water there and probably doesn't even try to stop. Little bastard goes through.

I hear Monica screaming. But a lot of the sound in the world around me is sucked away. I hear my wife screaming and some of the sound of the slashing creek as it slams head on into the iron grates of the tunnel entrance. Mostly though I go deaf.

I know Max and Milo can swim good and there is this mid level step where they've ended up instead of flushed right into the dark whale's open mouth. But in an instant of life I can see plainly that there isn't much to be optimistic about here. Both fellows are barking, they're scared. Max has managed to swim toward the hole in the grate, but he's now too far below it on that next tier down. Plus the white water ripping through it ain't about to let some fucking dog conquer it. Behind Max, Milo is paddling/treading with all of his giant heart just to keep from slipping back the two feet to the place the strong spring current wants to deliver him. I see the horror in his eyes. And Max's.

"Serrrrrrrge get them out!" Monica is blaring. The sound slips into my silence bubble. "Do something!" She's crying: I can tell. Violet is strapped to her chest and she too must be feeling the sizzling panic shooting up and down the bank all around us.

My mind wanders over to re-watch the evening news from two nights ago. I put my feet up like I like to do and sit back with some imaginary snacks and watch the story of the lady across town whose German Shepherd went splashing in his local creek. He got pummeled by the sneaky sly current. Just washed away. His owner didn't think twice, she went in with/after him. They found her a good mile or so downstream wandering around the street above the gushing water, soaked and shocked and sad. The dog is still gone.

It must occur to me that I need to shut off the damn TV in my head. It must occur to me that Violet's watching. All of my body's blood is chooglin' across my heart; I am feeling mighty stoned on currently unfolding events. I love my dogs so much.

The water is made of old snow so it has to be as cold as a tomb but I don't feel it. I think a moment about the fact that I need to try and do whatever I'm about to do without slipping through the hole myself. I don't need that type of Sunday afternoon bullshit: riding a black river through a dark vein under the city. I'm not dressed for that. We're supposed to have hot dogs and sauerkraut and watch THE WRESTLER later. Plus, I don't wanna die.

At the hole I lean hard against the grate as the water pounds past me. Somehow Max has drifted back, and Milo is now under my face. I catch Max's eye/he winks. What would happen if they were gone? Both of them, on the same walk? A comet would slam into our world, I know that much. A fiery comet with steel spikes and pepper spray and bad bad vibes forever. I threw the fucking dumb stick. I need to make this happen.

I speak to my God. I reach through the hole and past Milo's petrified gasps, and I grab a hold of his blue collar and his neck scruff and I clamp in with all the dig my hand's ever had. I tell myself that it might be a good thing that I found Milo staring at his collar on the floor at the house a few days ago. I made sure I tightened it when I slipped it back 'round his head.

In Milo's eyes I see anticipation and looking forward to Frisbee. Dogs are beautiful soldiers. They never think of death. The notion escapes them. That's why its so sad when they die. They had no clue that was ever an option. I drag him hard, all 75 Country Ham pounds of him, and I mumble pray "Please let that collar stay tight."

He comes to me. I throw him hard behind me and shove his ass away toward the bank so he knows I mean business. I love Milo, but I could see the little fucker sailing right back by me through the hole as I'm trying to coax Max over.

As it turns out, Max needs no coaxing. He fights the current with whatever energy he's been ware-housing and moves towards me, towards the hole. Max is my best friend in the world. In his face I see his frustration, his questioning my aim. When he nears me I lean in, slide my arm under his long torso and just grab and pull and heave at everything, with everything I'm made of. He budges. Then he slides upward, through the rough boil of cold mountain tumult; first his head, then his shoulders as he grabs for me, and then he is there, in my arms...outside of the hole.

I throw him somehow. To the bank.

I wade backwards away from the gate. I turn my back on this vicious place. Monica is crying, sobbing. Milo is leaping around as if nothing different happened here. We all walk slowly past the five or six people who stood and watched. No one says anything.

I run my fingers through my hair/through my new haircut. I look like a fat Harry Connick Jr. Tomorrow morning AT&T will shut my phone off because we're a little behind with stuff this month. But whatever. Today I can walk around in minor shock and enjoy myself and my wife and kid. My dogs. My hot dogs.

And mark my words: whenever they tell this tale centuries from now no one's gonna care who threw the stupid stick in the hole.


Boxcar Dust.

by Serge Bielanko


If you don't particularly love babies or hearing about one then I could see where the whole Thunder Pie thing could get old fast. But, honestly I can't help it. Everything I once was or knew or pretended to know got dropped into a puddle of baby drool. When I picked it all back up: it wouldn't wipe off.

Not that I want it to. But all the rock/roll stories, all my real serious portrayals of down and out and blue, all the tales I planned to tell one day before it gets too late...they all got slipped under the bed with the dust for awhile. You get the kid into the house or the apartment for the first time and like a preacher high on good sermon, you stand at the door and shake hands/say goodbye to Mr and Mrs FreeTime, The Widow SexLife, dear old Mrs WildFridays, and the good CountryDoctor with the deep pockets of herbs and brandy. (I just have been needing to say Country Doctor, that's what that last one is all about. I've been watching FROM LARK RISE TO CANDLEFORD on PBS). A moment of small talk, a hunk of squid handshake, and they're out the damn door with a bewildered puzzle on their sheltered faces. All they known is me, so now they're just as lost...staggering into telephone poles and wandering out into traffic.

Me? I miss them. And they weren't anything great to begin with. If you know me that's probably what you're saying to yourself just now. Damn, Serge: don't flatter yourself. It'd been a long time since anyone's seen you swinging from the Tiffany lamp down at the saloon! And you weren't exactly running out of moves in the bedroom when the wife showed up with one in the oven, eh? The truth is, Serge, if it weren't for the kiddo you very well might have found yourself in the parking lot of some Sheraton some rainy Sunday morning, staring at the marquee through the drizzle rolling down the windshield. ROCKY MOUNTAIN BATTLESTAR GALLACTICA CONVENTION AND SYMPOSIUM. You were not doing all that much, man. Seriously.

I know, I know. And thanks for the stingy reminder.I know all that. But the thing is: whenever something changes so much you try and change with it, out of the need for adaptive survival skills, right? Right. The last few years I have changed or been forced to change a lot. Loss of home/new home. Loss of friends/new friends/no friends. Loss of passion/YouPorn. Loss of Rockness/there is no new Rockness. Well maybe I could put Loss of Rockness/weekly paycheck! My point is this. I sort of suddenly have a precious baby girl who I want to raise to know my guts and my heart and my mind for what it is...or has been for a very very long time. A life influenced by music and mountains and books and cities and beers with people I onced loved and conversations in the corner of a smoky backstage room around a campfire of picked-over lunch meats and flung-about celery sticks.

If I adapt too much, get towed too far by the Tide of Super Change...I will be a different man. Violet will hear a different voice. My stories might get told differently than they should. If a hobo has a baby...that baby needs to be part Hobo. It might not be all cupcakes and lambs all the goddamn time, but it needs to happen.

Here, stick some of this boxcar dust up yer midget nose. Smell my life darling.

I need to tell you that you come from me and all my horrific misfortune and all my lucky pennies and I wouldn't want you to ever forget that I loved you more than the sun loves the sky if I ever wasn't here to tell ya' that, my sweet little peanut butter cup.