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Another One Bites The Dust: “The Consumers”

Been a while since I posted on here. A semester’s worth of teaching people everything I know about the craft of writing (which is, admittedly, a lot less than I thought I knew) has me about to let my hair grow just so I can rip it out.

Anyways, had to stop by just to send out the link for my latest publication, a short story titled “The Consumers” which was recently accepted by The Medulla Review (Click here to be transported to that awesome place).

“The Consumers” is set in the future, in a world that is ravaged and regressing and totally overpopulated. Not a totally original setting, I know, but the story itself has got a little twist to it in the form of a makeshift criminal trial being held in a crumbling church. The defendants are Mark and Sheila Ovapo, present along with their lawyer and their newborn baby Mark Junior. The charge: unlicensed conception. Things get kind of ugly from there.
As always: enjoy, be safe, get your ass to a voting booth and punch that ticket, and above all, please–for my sake and yours and for the sake of all the souls that are screaming in agony at the continued practice of this atrocity–please please please stop doing this goddamn dance.

Deuces.

-PAJr.

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Filed under Patrick Anderson Jr., Politics, Quarter Life Crisis, Shameless Self Promotion, Short Story

Short Story: “Screen”

She lies back on the bed and raises her left knee slightly as he takes off his pants and straightens the creases in the legs. Turning away from her, he drapes the pants across the back of the chair in the corner of the room, then removes his cufflinks. She smoothes the sheets beneath her arm as he glances at her and she smiles at him politely, watching as he starts to remove his tie then pauses, still staring at her, his hand clutching the knot near his neck.

“I missed you,” he says.

She nods in response, her eyes wavering. Earlier today, she wondered what it would be like right now, during this moment. Tiptoeing through Victoria’s Secret, scooting hangers aside, peeking, searching, hoping to find the perfect combination of Let’s Forget What Happened, Move On and We’re Having Fun, I Promise.

She looks down at her stomach, her skin exposed beneath the lace negligee, her right foot stretched forward, calf taut, shadows highlighting the lean muscles stretching up to her hip.

As a child her dream was to grow up and become an actress. She remembers telling her mother this one morning before school, as they said a curt goodbye to her father and piled into the car. Her parents were both still fuming in the aftermath of that morning’s fight—the words “money” and “expenses” had been thrown around a lot—and she remembers describing to her mother her aspirations to be on stage, on TV, on a movie screen; the pat on her leg when she finished talking, the look of sadness in her mother’s eyes, the tight smile.

“Marriage is an act, honey,” her mother said. “All the acting you’ll ever need.”

She didn’t understand until now what her mother meant by that statement. It only upset her at the time, the transformation of her dreams into a backhanded insult.

But now, watching him as he places his tie on a hook in the corner of the bedroom, she suddenly imagines a camera behind his head, watching them, watching her, judging. She widens her smile, curves her leg even more, arching her back, enticing him. Enticing herself.

“Forget about the clothes,” she whispers.

“What?” he asks.

“Forget about the clothes,” she repeats, louder, less sexy.

He glances at her again, then looks down and slowly unbuttons his shirt.

“Wrinkles are annoying,” he mutters, focusing on his fingers as they work each button free. She closes her eyes but keeps her smile, imagining hands on her breasts, strong, disembodied hands, hands that tear at her bra, at her underwear, hands that pick her up and place her on the desk in her office on the other side of the house. Hands that close the door then reach towards her, caressing every inch of her body.

“Honey,” she says, sternly. “Forget the clothes and get over here.”

“Ok,” he says, exasperated. “Alright, hold on. Don’t rush me.”

She opens her eyes and he’s stopped unbuttoning his shirt halfway, his slight paunch visible through his undershirt, wisps of curly hair erupting from the top of the v-neck.

She smiles again, wider this time, so wide her face hurts.

“I’m not rushing you, honey,” she says. “I just…miss you too.”

“I just don’t see why we have to rush it. It’s been so long, so much has …” He pauses. “I just want to take my time. I can take my time.”

“Yes,” she says, closing her eyes again, “you can.”

The hands reappear in her mind, brushing against her stomach, now accompanied by his eyes, staring longingly into hers. Moonlight gleams through the window to her left and she raises her chin, exposing her neck. Her flesh tingles suddenly, blood pulsing just beneath the surface. She exhales softly, her breath brushing against the hands as they run the length of her shoulders and arms. The office door won’t open for another ten minutes, the outside world seemingly miles away. His hands, his eyes, are all she can see now, and the freedom of sin is so energizing that her thighs tense with excitement, wrapping around a waist that instantly moves with her own.

“Wow.” The voice coming from beside her.

She opens her eyes and her husband is standing above her in just his underwear, grinning and scratching his furry chest.

“I guess you really did miss me,” he says sheepishly.

She looks down at herself, her back slowly reclining from its arch, her legs spread with gooseflesh visible from her shoulders to her ankles.He climbs on the bed and lies next to her, gingerly touching her belly button.

“I just thought…” he starts and she avoids his eyes, frowning deeply and staring at his shirt across the room, folded neatly on the chair next to his pants. “I thought this was going to be awkward.”

She sighs and adjusts the hundred dollar black bra that suddenly seems so lifeless that her eyes well with tears the moment she touches it. He circles a finger around her belly button and her stomach flexes with the tickling sensation, an unpleasant feeling.

“How long have we been together?” she asks, gently moving his hand to her hip and patting his arm. “We’re past the point of awkwardness.”

He smiles and rolls on top of her, and she imagines the camera again, the little red dot indicating that it’s recording, the same red light dimming then finally going out completely a few minutes later when he rolls off and promptly falls asleep.

patrick anderson jr

-PAJr.

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Short Story: “Imagine That”

patrick anderson jr

The movie previews are showing when she walks into the theater with her friends, right past his seat. Her group sits a few rows back from the screen, a few rows ahead of him.

He watches her giggle at the funny parts—the improvised comedy and seasoned superstars—and imagines how she’d look in his embrace, staring up at him lovingly and him gently placing his forehead against hers, running a hand through her long hair.

Trying to watch the movie but really watching her, he imagines the movie ending and him walking out behind her and her friends, approaching her in the hallway of the theater to tell her how beautiful he thinks she is and that he’d love to have a slice of pizza with her sometime, and she’d give him her number and he’d call the next afternoon, arrange a date at Villiani’s over on 33rd street and 2nd ave.

He imagines asking his cousin—the owner of the house he stays at in Long Island, of the couch he sleeps on and the bathroom he uses to shower and brush his teeth—if he can stash the boxes of clothes and books lying on the backseat of his car in the garage for a couple of hours so he can take her out in something that doesn’t resemble a storage closet on wheels. He’d ask his cousin if he could hold on to forty of the two hundred he pays a month to sleep on that couch and use that bathroom, so he can at least pay for the date.

He imagines taking her out, her eyes lighting up whenever he tells a particularly good joke, his eyes lighting up whenever she laughs. He’d discuss the superiority of New York pizza with her, walking over to fifth ave afterwards, up to 48th street to point at all the ridiculously expensive stores they’d pass, declaring with envious undertones, “But seriously, I’d never buy anything from that damn place, even if I was rich.”

He imagines eating ice cream and touching her hand by accident, then not by accident, their first kiss near the Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center, done precisely there so they could come back a decade later and reminisce.

He imagines taking her home and her asking him, shyly, if he wants to come up for a drink or two. He imagines waking up the next morning with her back against his chest, the smell of her already becoming a part of him.

He imagines telling his cousin he won’t be living on the couch anymore, that he has to get his own place, for himself, for her. He imagines not having to wake up before everybody else anymore, not having to leave the house the moment he’s done in the bathroom, come home after everybody’s gone to bed simply to shower and sleep.

He imagines not living out of the back of his car, not having to search for places to read and write anymore, not hanging out at the library all day and relocating to Denny’s when the library’s doors close.

He imagines not going to the movies alone anymore, and when the movie’s over, he walks out behind her and her friends and imagines that everything went exactly how he imagined it would be.

The girls giggle about something, then head out the door and into the snow, bundling close, turning left and shuffling down the sidewalk. And he imagines he turns left with them. Imagines it vividly—like it’s happening right there in front of him—then turns right, and walks away.

-PAJr.

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Short Story: “Nice”

patrick anderson jr

Inhale.

I am your savior from a life of monotony. I am the provider, the one who gives you a reason to go to work on Fridays.

Exhale. Slowly.

I am the insurance of your hard work, the one there for you during your momentous occasions, your family reunions, your honeymoons, your birthdays and retirement celebrations.

Relax. Because I am the gateway, the doorman to the building of happiness.

I am, undeniably, all these things.

And across the room, Colin’s been better at it than me for the past four years. He jumps up from his desk now as he disconnects from a call and removes his headset, staring at me with a sly grin on his face. He grabs a piece of paper and winks at me.

“Five-grand, Cayman Islands,” he says, balling the paper up and cocking back in his three-point stance. “Just hit a mil, my friend. My shit is smooth as butter.” He tosses the paper in my trash can. “Boo-yah.”

I hate it when he does that, and I want to point out to him how dumb and gross that “smooth shit” comment was, wipe that smug grin of his face. But instead I just grumble “Nice, Colin. Real nice.”

“I’m a nice type of mofo,” he quips, strutting towards the break room.

I take a deep breath and close my eyes again.

I supply your escape, grant you a safe return when it’s all over. I deliver you back to your real life smiling and refreshed, direct to your front door if necessary. I send you follow-up emails to ensure you feel cared for even after you’re out of my hands.

I am a travel agent, and this is my office.

Rose sits to my far right, and she watches Colin as he walks past her and hesitates for just a moment to rub her shoulder, dangerously close to her right breast. She moves her arm away and glances at me, raising an eyebrow. I shrug and turn to the computer in front of me, my station, my tool to construct your destiny. It’s nearly nine-thirty and I’ve yet to log in. I stare at the arrow on the monitor, hovering over the username tab. I click, type my name and password. The TropLocale company website logo pops up—a sliced open pineapple with a shadowy surfing silhouette pouring out of it—and I’m welcomed by the server. I sigh.

“What’s up with Colin?” Rose asks. I glance over and see that she’s rolled her chair next to mine. Her skirt is classy, professional, tight. I can just barely see the curve of her thigh through the thin fabric and I imagine taking her down to the Bahamas resort location, or maybe Turks and Cacos for a weekend. Maybe forever.

“Same as always,” I say, glancing at the break room to see Colin grinning at another employee and throwing jabs at the air. “Starts his mornings with a Red Bull and Viagra. He’ll masturbate in the coffee pot later, no doubt.”

“He does have that spread the seed vibe, doesn’t he?” she asks, looking at Colin with disgust in her beautiful eyes. “Probably thinks it’d boost everybody’s sales.”

I chuckle and she smiles. I want to kiss her.

“How was your weekend?” I ask, too quickly.

She continues to smile, but her eyes fade, just a little.

“Nice,” she says, pausing and staring at me sheepishly. “Spent Saturday at the beach with Matt.”

I glance at the computer so she won’t see my face drop. She does anyways.

“How’d that go?” I ask.

“It was… nice.”

I nod, as if nice explains it all. And it does. Nice is the mask for the all-encompassing uncomfortable reality of any situation, every hand-holding, sweaty-roll-in-the-hay moment of it.

Nice.

The summary for it’s better you didn’t know the details.

Rose pats my shoulder.

“And yours?” she asks, her tone suggesting the question’s a simple courtesy.

“Mine?” I say, and then whistle slightly. “Mine was…”

Nice, I think.

“Mine was… you know.”

Rose smiles again, and I still want to kiss her though the thought makes me sick to my stomach now.

“I’m glad you’re doing okay, Lance,” she says. “I really am.”

She turns and rolls her chair away. I focus on the computer monitor, and stare at the blinking cursor, waiting impatiently. I am the director without a script. I am the politician, run by his constituents.

“Oh, Lance?”

I glance over and Rose is beside me again. My throat rises. I am the symbol of anticipation.

“You should come by the house sometime.”

My eyes grow wide.

“Matt and I would love to have you over. And Trixie would love to see you again.” She pauses. “She barks whenever I mention you.”

I stare at Rose and she looks away nervously. I finally turn back to my screen.

“Yeah,” I say. “I’d love to.”

“Good,” she says. “Give us a call sometime.”

Rose rolls her chair away and I’m left with the pissed-off blinking cursor on the screen.

I am the sacrifice, the bank for your negative emotions.

I pick up my headset and answer the first call, an elderly woman planning a trip to Jamaica for her and her husband’s thirtieth anniversary in a few months.

“Before I go any further, sir,” she says brusquely, after I’ve taken down her basic information. “Will it be raining when we go down there? I don’t want our trip to be ruined. And I trust you realize it will be ruined if it rains.”

I glance at the calendar on my desk as she speaks. It’s November, and I’m scheduling this lady’s trip for next June. She’d like me to forecast the summer weather on a tropical island seven months in advance.

“No ma’am,” I say, without hesitation. “Clear skies all summer long.”

“Well, that’s nice to know,” she says, and I hear glass break far off in the background. “Very nice.”

-PAJr.

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What A Farmer Taught Me About Writing

patrick anderson jr

I come from a family of immigrants. The American way, I guess.

My grandparents moved to Miami from Jamaica in 1979, settling in a small two-bedroom house in Richmond Heights.

My recently-married mother moved in a year later, in 1980, my dad following in May 1982 (spent their first year and a half of marriage away from each other; one of the many things that’s a glaring example of how different things are now than back then. I doubt I’d make it that long).

I came around in 1983, part of the first generation of our family born in the states, me and my parents bundled up in one of the bedrooms at my grandparents’ with a mattress and a crib for two years, until my parents saved enough for us to move into a small apartment in a tolerable part of Cutler Ridge.

Even after that move though, my grandparent’s house was the default when it came to babysitting. Both my parents worked full time—Dad in retail, Mom in insurance—so we made a lot of visits to Grandma and Grandpa’s.

My grandfather was a farmer in Jamaica, with acres of land and a knack for producing a variety of crops.

Born in 1906, he was one of a large group of individuals that came to the states during World War Two to help the shorthanded farming industry.

Forty-or-so years later, he was still at it, and by time he moved to Miami at 73-years-old, the routine and lifestyle of a farmer was so ingrained in his persona it had become a part of who he was, at his core.

As a result, I never knew what a backyard was until 1992, when my parents moved my sister and me from that crappy Cutler Ridge apartment into the three-bedroom suburban house I’ve called home to this day (despite it being 1,500 miles south of my current location; home is home is home).

Prior to that move to suburbia, the space out back of my grandparent’s house in Richmond Heights was the only patch of privately-owned land I frequented, and in no way could it be considered a “backyard.” It was, for all intensive purposes, a farm.

Day in and day out, my grandfather would be out there, sunrise to sunset, planting, cultivating, harvesting. And I joined him a lot of the times, sitting next to him on the dual stools he brought out whenever I was over, cutting (and chewing) sugar cane and schucking gungo peas out of pods (I found out much later gungo peas are called pigeon peas in America) for my grandmother to cook that weekend in a huge pot of rice and coconut milk for our weekly Sunday dinners.

As a result, I always associated my grandfather with nature—with the natural—and nature with him. The smell of grass, dirt, that long-standing sweat that seeps into worn-out clothes and gives it this musky scent that never really leaves, no matter how many times you wash them, no matter how faded they get. His callused hands, wide and firm. The feel of his beard, always prickly by the end of the day so when he rubbed his chin on my cheek during a hug it felt like light sandpaper on my skin, tickling and scratching at the same time.

To me that was all Grandpa, all the time.

Grandpa taught me a lot about nature in those years before I became a teenager and fell into the inevitable trend of not-hanging-out-with-your-grandparents-anymore. But one of the things I remember most was something he told me later on, during my high school years, in my own backyard in that suburban house I still call home.

When we moved in, my dad had given my grandfather—his father-in-law—a piece of our backyard to use for farming. Years passed and I rarely paid attention to the area, taken up with my own experiences, far removed from the rural life my grandfather was so used to. His presence was always welcome though, and it became a common occurrence for me to be home after school for hours, going about my business and thinking I was alone, only to hear the sliding glass door in the back open right before sunset, my grandfather tottering inside, hunched over from the extended period on his knees or sitting on his stool.

One day after school—high school, so it was late 90’s/2000-2002, around there somewhere—I was bored and I heard him clinking around back there. It was close to summer then—which in Miami basically means it is summer, the haze of heat shimmering up from the grass outside, visible even from the air-conditioned safety indoors.

Most other people’s grandparents who were hitting their mid-90’s were either dead or on their way out, but here was my grandfather outside doing things that would have had me complaining.

For some reason I don’t remember (it couldn’t have just been boredom, I had video games for a reason), I decided to join my grandfather back there that day, watching him as he dug up the grass and soil to plant seeds, gripping his shears with gloved hands (unnecessary, honestly; his hands were like gloves on their own). Watching him work his way around the plot sparked my interest, his ability to create life from nothingness. And he must have seen something in my eyes that day, because he ended up giving me a small patch of his allotted area to plant some fruits.

Changing into yard clothes, I grabbed the pair of gloves and small hand shovel my dad kept in the garage and got in the dirt next to Grandpa, doing everything he told me, digging into the hardened earth and turning it so the soil was nice and thick and black, shoving the seeds deep in and patting the area down, not too tight, room for air and water. And for about a week I was obsessed with the notion that I was growing something on my own, out there every day waiting for a sprout, for the tiny buds to poke up from the soil and expand into edible goods, the way I’d seen my grandfather do for so many years.

At the end of that week though, all I saw was the same patch of damp soil. Flustered, I came at my grandfather like it was his fault, asked him what was going on. What’s wrong with the seeds? Why’s nothing happening? Where’s my damn avocados? (I was in high school, so I knew it wasn’t going to grow overnight, I’m not stupid. But I did expect to see something)

And my grandfather laughed, sitting on his stool and schucking his peas, gnawing on his piece of sugar cane. Told me, in his heavy patois accent:

“You cyan rush dem tings. Is still just dirt and seeds. You must give it time. Let it grow.”

Years later, while teaching my first semester of Introductory Creative Writing courses in graduate school, this little piece of advice came back to me.

Teaching has a way of making you look at your own personal philosophy, no matter what your craft. It’s hard to teach others how to be better at something when you barely know what/why you’re doing it yourself. So, in thinking about my own motivations and techniques I realized that—when it comes to writing—the closest metaphor I can find is borne from my grandfather’s statement.

I rarely get writer’s block, simply because I always think of that first draft—whether it be a novel, a short work of fiction or non-fiction, or even a poem—as mostly dirt, fertilizer. Literally, crap. 99% of it at least. Which makes it a lot easier to just sit down and let the crap out (gross, I know, but really, really accurate)

But I also know that, buried in that crap, are a few seeds.

Some seeds grow, others don’t. Regardless of the end result though, all seeds need attention, a bit of cultivation.

The second draft is where the writer’s true farming begins. The time, the hard work, the mental version of water, revision and cutting and rewording and rewriting the equivalent of harvesting and processing.

My grandfather lived to be 103 years old, died three years ago, surrounded by his family. His legacy: thirteen children, thirty-something grandchildren, another fifty or so great-grands and a couple of great-great-grands (these are in no way exact numbers, obviously; just know that my family is freaking huge).

I know each of us have hundreds of memories of him, and dozens of specific ones that define who he was to us, what made him this almost mythical figure in our minds.

This is one of mine. “You must give it time. Let it grow.”

Thanks Gramps.

patrick anderson jr

R.I.P. Roland Johnson, May 15th 1906-May 21st 2009

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