Thursday, January 15, 2015
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Hooray for Hollywood
Whenever someone in Hollywood tells you “Hello,” their true
meaning is “Goodbye.” If they come up to you and plant a kiss on your cheek and
tell you how much they love you, it’s really similar to a kiss from a
particularly odious cosa nostra Don
who, after ordering your death contract, arranges your funeral with tears of
remorse streaming down both of his swarthy cheeks. I have been in many
negotiations where I knew the other side was trying their level best to screw
me, but in H-wood, one never knows where they stand, even after a deal is
consummated. The one thing you find out in short order is, they are going to
screw you, and the only suspense is how they are going to do it.
This particular saga begins in Paris
in the early summer of 1975. Strolling around the Left Bank, hopping from one
sidewalk café to another, I appeared on the surface to be a resolute, and
possibly a secure man. But I was merely your pathetic hero, just waiting for
the hunter to spring his trap. And spring he did.
A
friend of mine from college, Laurence Snelling, was a writer-in-residence in
Paris. He lived in a pied a terre in
the 14th arrondissement where
he plied his scribbling trade.
Larry
is a tortured human being. My guess is his father’s suicide contributed greatly
to his psychological disorders. His academic brilliance was always offset by
his laziness and reluctance to face head on, anything out of his structured
world. His widowed mother forced him to attend Sewanee instead of Princeton,
where he envisioned he would be aligned with the F. Scott Fitzgerald branch of
that vaunted institution, and he resented this missed opportunity, greatly. As
far as I know, he still writes his novels, in bed, with a fountain pen, and
eschews the computer as if it were a pariah, most vicious. His sexual appetite
is legion, and no prey is off limits to him.
He
attended Harvard Law School for one year and quit. His stated reason being,
“The law was not for him.” I figured, once Larry realized he would be eaten up
in a competitive world, he chose to write instead. He has had about six
fictional novels published in his name, along with two mystery type books under
the pseudonym of Peter Mallory. Most of his adult life was spent in Europe,
primarily in France and Italy, and presently, he lives in New Orleans with his
five cats. For all the time he lived in Europe, he was married to a lovely,
intelligent, and long suffering wife, Virginia, whose saving grace was, she was
rich as Croesus. Her wealth permitted Larry to live in a style far in excess of
his means.
Snelling
was fairly successful with his first three novels in the early to late sixties,
but since then, had found it more difficult to sell his works, particularly
since he fired his agent, Sterling Lord. His way out of this declining slump
was to have one of his first books made into a movie. He assumed once a movie
was made, he could sweep out his closet and republish those books that formerly
did not sell particularly well or those he had not yet succeeded in getting
published. All I knew at that time about a movie was, you walk up to a little
kiosk, plunk down a few dollars, they sell you a ticket, and you gain entrance
to a theater where someone shows you a flick. That’s seeing a movie; making one
is something vastly different. In my naiveté, I actually didn’t fathom the
difference.
Larry
introduced me to a friend of his, Robert (Bob) Swaim, a movie director, who
also lived in Paris. Bob Swaim was young and charming, with a beautiful French
wife, and several children. He lived in a lovely apartment, spoke perfect
French, and thoroughly enjoyed being recognized as someone involved in the
movie industry.
However,
what I eventually found out is, everyone in that phony trade is constantly
trying to be someone or something else. In Swaim’s case, he wanted to direct a
major movie. Up until this point he had only done commercials and minor movies,
all in French. He convinced Snelling he could write the screenplay and direct
the movie made from one of Larry’s books, namely, The Heresy. This was a plot set in the south of France in the early
1200’s, about the time of the sixth crusade. It involved an obscure group of
gnostics, the Cathars, whom the Pope, through his Holy Inquisition, eliminated
at their fortress town of Monsegur, by stoking up a few stake fires and
throwing the harmless Cathars in, feet first.
The
explanation and transition from Larry’s novel to movie was so convoluted, even
I didn't think such an esoteric theme would translate well to the golden
screen. However, Snelling was persistent, so we made a deal with Swaim to write
a treatment for me to peddle to some naive investor. Swaim, being inherently
lazy, began dragging his writing hand, and consequently I was still begging him
in September to finish it. He never finished the treatment, although I believe Larry
ultimately did finish one, which was horrible. It made no difference, for the
hook was set. This boy wanted to be in the movie business.
When
I returned to the States, I received Paris calls from Larry who told me I
should go to California to meet one John Oldman, a mover and shaker in the
movie trade, to see if a movie could be made from another of his books, The Temptation of Archer Watson. He
indicated Oldman had read the work and was definitely interested in doing
something with it. I felt this work was much better suited for the movies than Heresy was, and this revived my interest
in doing a movie. Archer had
everything; witty dialogue, sex, and tennis, which was served on every yuppie’s
platter during that time.
Oldman
had apparently snookered poor Snelling into believing he was the reincarnation
of Louis B. Meyer. Larry, being the only person in the world who is more gullible
than I, convinced me to travel to Los Angeles to meet this captain of industry;
John Oldman.
How
wrong first impressions can be. John Oldman dressed impeccably, drove a
Mercedes, and sported a wad of cash. Later on I realized the clothing outfit
was one of the few he owned, the Mercedes was leased, and the wad of cash he
was sporting was borrowed from the absolute last person John could hit up. John
was very reticent on first blush, and warmed to conversation, only after some
verbal prompting. I saw him make several “pitches” to persons expressing
interest in one of our projects, and every time, his voice never rose above an
ear-straining level. I finally took over John’s duties as pitchman, seeing how
everyone on the receiving end of his pitches, had to move so close to him, I
thought they were kissing.
My
last contact with John probably best exhibits his personality. I got a call
from him late one night telling me he was about to be evicted from his
apartment and needed $400 to placate his landlord until his check arrived, from
wherever he was working at that time. I sent him the check. Of course, several
months went by and no Oldman call was forthcoming. Through a mutual
acquaintance, I obtained his new number, found out where he worked, and finally
got him to answer my call. “I was just getting ready to mail you a check,” he
said, after the usual banalities were completed. True to his word, several days
later, I received his check for $400. The check bounced.
We
formed a corporation known as Oldie, Inc., we opened an office in L.A. (the
only way those people refer to Los Angeles), and we “took meetings.” Everyone on the business side of the
movie industry takes meetings in H-wood. I was loving it. I just couldn’t take
enough meetings.
Oldman
convinced me he was a close tennis-playing friend of Jack Gilardi, a theatrical
agent at International Creative Management (ICM) and reported Gilardi was
poised to help us succeed. Oldman actually had a business card giving his
address as c/o Jack Gilardi at his ICM address, so what more proof does a
foolish lawyer need? I merely assumed my good buddy Jack was in on the deal.
Gilardi
was punctilious. A façade masked the hard, crafty underbelly of a theatrical
agent involved in the promotion of a few of the piles of human detritus that
orbit Planet Hollywood. He knew all the right people, dressed perfectly, spoke
with an educated twang and, as best I could tell, really enjoyed what he was doing.
Like everyone else in the town, he could lie convincingly, which is the only
attribute I found permeated the entire society.
Gilardi,
at the time, was married to the ex-mouse, Annette Funicello. He lived in the
appropriate H-wood mansion, drove the obligatory Mercedes, and was California
charming. He convinced Oldman, and later me, he had under contract a budding
young writer, Jonathan Axelrod, who was described to me as the next Raymond
Chandler.
Sitting
in Gilardi’s office at ICM, anticipating the arrival of a young writer, who was
allegedly on the cusp of greatness, my little heart was all aflutter. Once the
door opened, I was confronted with this braggadocios, name-dropping, talentless
kid, who would have been a permanent embarrassment to the founders of the
Screen Writers Guild. My fears persisted, even as Gilardi and Oldman attempted
to assuage them, after Jonathan left the office. Those suspicions were
confirmed absolutely when I received the first draft of his screenplay.
I
remember a confrontation with Axelrod after he delivered the first draft of Archer, where I yelled, “this thing is
supposed to be funny and there are absolutely no yuks in this crap you wrote.”
“I
can make it funny,” he pled, almost in tears. It certainly didn’t appear to me he
could make it funny.
Gilardi
had told us we were getting a huge break catching this writing genius before he
became a household word and Axelrod would do the screen version for $25,000. If
we agreed, we had to post one-half of the total sum immediately. This I did,
not wanting to lose another golden opportunity. We were told Axelrod had
written the last Barbara Streisand movie and had worked on several other H-wood
luminaries’ movies. "Worked on," as used in the movie industry, means
anything from he wrote the entire script without help, or it could also mean he
once fondled the front cover of an unsuccessful screenplay.
In
either case, the meaning is the same; you had no earthly idea what the guy did
on any movie, ever. To hear any of these shameless people talk about their
credits is an experience all by itself.
Everyone in H-wood has a meticulously prepared five-minute speech
laboriously outlining their numerous talents, credits, and exploits. I’m not
talking about the recognized stars; I’m talking about the lowly office clerk
who is just waiting for Mr. & Mrs. Opportunity to come a-knockin’.
Ultimately, we got the first draft of
this screenplay and I went into apoplectic shock. You think Franz Liebkind,
writer of “Springtime for Hitler,” wrote a bad script; this was ten times
worse. Had Mel Brooks known, he would have used the Axelrod masterpiece as a
model for the world's worst script, in his movie “The Producers.” What was to
be a script based on Archer Watson, a
novel full of comic characters and situations, and funny, ironic, witty
dialogue, was transformed into a juvenile piece of pap, which was tedious and
ungrammatical. It was little more than a trite, heavy-handed, cliché-ridden
message flick featuring a sixties atmosphere that was long gone, and never
existed in New Orleans in the first place.
In retrospect, there was no way
Gilardi read the manuscript. His
interests were in the ten-percent commission and getting Oldman, his
tennis-playing buddy, out of his hair, in that order.
As
soon as I refused to tender the additional $12,500, the inevitable lawsuit
ensued. Oldie, Inc., Oldman, and Abadie were all made defendants in a State
Court in California. We hired our California lawyers and counter-sued ICM,
Gilardi, ICM’s lawyer, Michael Black, and Axelrod, alleging fraud, misrepresentation,
etc. After attorney fees, court costs, and a cost of defense settlement, I was
out plenty. This coupled with the L.A. office lease, keeping Oldman alive, my
flights to L.A., and my bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel, it felt as if
someone had vacuumed my wallet clean of all its dead Presidents.
Later,
Larry rewrote the Axelrod masterpiece and we then had a screenplay to peddle. For
some inexplicable reason, I assumed once we had a product we all felt had
commercial value, the rest of the puzzle would easily fall into place and then,
we would make a movie. What I didn't count on was I, along with every other
man, woman, and child in H-wood, had a screenplay to peddle. They walked down
every street with it neatly tucked under their armpits and breathlessly
anticipated taking a meeting with any producer or producer want-to-be, so they
could flog their product.
For
the next several months, I attempted to peddle the script, but each time was
faced with more calculated resistance. I met numerous celebrities,
quasi-celebrities, and others calling themselves celebrities, all of whom told
me how much interest they had in doing this film, if only I had come two days
earlier. If I hadn’t run out of cash, I might still be there, getting the door
slammed in my face, and loving it.
One
of the people I met was a very funny man, a theatrical agent named Roy Silver.
Roy was quick witted, intelligent, and exacting. You could tell he had
negotiated many deals for his former clients, Bill Cosby and Tiny Tim, among
them. His interests were eclectic as evidenced by his love of Oriental cooking.
He regaled me with stories about the people he represented, and the best was
one about his client, Herbert Khaury, a/k/a Tiny Tim. Right after the marriage
on the Carson show to Miss Vicky, Roy booked the ukulele-playing songster into
a Las Vegas hotel.
One
night, several white-on-white, dark suited behemoths forced their way into
Roy’s more modest accommodations and announced to him they were the new
managers of Tiny Tim and were taking over his contract. I asked Roy what he
said to them. He replied, “Nothing. I packed my bags, left the hotel, and never
saw of, or spoke to, Tiny Tim again.” Roy understood the business better than
most.
Presumably,
Oldman wanted to deflect me away from the fact he could not get the movie sold,
so he took a different direction. He came up with the brilliant idea of putting
together a television tennis tournament, with the top four female tennis
players in the world making up the field. Up to this time, women’s tennis was almost unknown. They were
just beginning to get a smattering of television coverage. It took a farcical
match between Bobby Riggs and Billy Jean King to vault women's tennis into the
limelight.
A
lawyer friend of Oldman’s, Dennis Bond, said his client, Paul Williams was
performing in Tucson, Arizona as the opening act for Olivia Newton-John. He
convinced us to travel with him to Tucson to the Margaret Court Racket Club
Ranch. At that time, Margaret Court, Billy Jean King, Rosy Cassales, and a
young neophyte, Chris Everet were the four best women players in the world. Off
to Tucson, on my nickel, to convince the manager of this beautiful club he
really wanted to host this TV extravaganza. Oldman swore to me he had an in
with an advertising executive at Coca-Cola who would jump at the chance of
putting up seed money and would sponsor this unusual event. The Margaret Court
club manager was naturally receptive; he got a television first at his club at
minimal cost to him.
Several weeks later, a friend I met in
California, Paul Schulman, set up a meeting with the head of sports at several
major networks in New York, who unbelievably expressed interest in our project,
providing Oldman produced Coke as a sponsor. Of course, the closest Oldman had
ever come to a Coke executive was his putting a dollar into the slot of an
airport vending machine to purchase this delectable potable.
I just couldn’t keep up with Oldman, because
occasionally, I had to return home and practice law in order to replenish my
rapidly evaporating resources. Only God knows what he was doing in my absence. Every
time I saw or talked to him on the phone he always had some fantastic scheme
that was going to break the bank.
It did; it broke my bank account. In October
1977, I was still passing out scripts to alleged interested persons, who either
knew someone to whom they could create interest in the script, or they swore to
finance it themselves–all a pack of lies. At the end of 1977, I had enough of
the movie, TV, and entertainment industry to last a lifetime. I had taken my
last meeting in Southern California.
“California is a fine place to live –
if you happen to be an orange,” said Fred Allen
In spite of everything, I will always
have the memory of Gilardi, a gorgeous Jill St. John, and me, lunching in the
Polo Lounge at the Beverly Hills Hotel, with this pathetic drool cascading off
the end of my chin and clinging to their every wink.
Eat your heart out, boys.
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Bernie–the–Bear
Bernie-the-BearI first heard of Bernard John Darré during September of 1954. His father died in the stands when his Fortier High School football team was playing my high school in the initial game of that season. Bernie was a sophomore and I was a senior. I preceded him at Tulane by two years and was formally introduced to him in September 1957, when as a 165 pound interior lineman, he was granted an athletic scholarship after the importuning by his high school coach persuaded the head coach at Tulane to add him to the roster. Rumor has it was more a leveraging of the Tulane coach than importuning, since the Fortier coach had previously persuaded several larger and infinitely more talented athletes to complete in the university’s football program. Tulane’s coach was forced to accept this token player as a down payment on future fledgling stars. After the death of Bernard’s dockworker father, the family, never very wealthy before, now fell on even harder times and without a scholarship, he certainly would never have been financially able to attended Tulane, and I would have been deprived of one of the great joys of my life; having known Bernie-the-Bear.One thing I failed to mention above, he was a straight “A” high school student, something that surely escaped the clutches of your humble narrator, plus he had just celebrated his seventeenth birthday at the time of his freshman matriculation. Once he began eating regularly, exercising, and growing, Bernard’s body matured. This skinny boy, whose family lived on a street in New Orleans opposite the docks and next to a raucous barroom, morphed into to this two hundred forty pound athlete good enough to be selected to play in the College All Star Game, the Shriners’ East-West Game, and subsequently became a high draft choice of the Washington Redskins Professional Football Team, where he labored for two years.Once again, I forgot to mention, he graduated as an ‘A’ student from college, with a major in chemistry; an unbelievable feat, given the fact football took up so much of his time. He was able to save enough money from professional football to quit that avocation, and pursue his doctorate in chemistry from Ohio State University, which he received in the mid-sixties.Returning to Louisiana, along with a fresh Ohio bride, he took up residence in Baton Rouge, with a job in the Ethyl Refinery as a research chemist. Several years later, and obviously bored with a mundane laboratory existence, he left for the more intellectual confines of Stanford University, where he obtained his Masters of Business Administration degree.Welding together those academic pursuits, he was hired by the Shepherd Chemical Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, where he rose to lead them as their president and CEO until his tragic death on April 26, 2006.When I think back over the last fifty years of our friendship, I cannot remember one harsh word spoken between us, and that from one who has harsh words with almost everyone. I never heard him utter one negative comment about any human, animal, or flower; but do not mistake that for weakness. For while he was never a syrupy gusher of complements, and he took the people surrounding him in stride, he exuded an unmistakable aura of strength, which brought reason to discussions and comprehension to opposing views. He was totally secure in who he was, and who he was dealing with, and had no time or understanding of those who would not play the game by the strictest moral code. Everyone got the benefit of the doubt; often to his detriment, but he never wavered from his unalterable moral position and never compromised his gentle behavior.But that was the mature Bernard. There was another side to this gentle giant.In undergraduate school, Bernie was infatuated with this young lady, Cathy Bishop. For some unknown reason, she and he were discussing the effects of underarm deodorants on the human body and she apparently was complaining to him about the cost of purchasing the designer products and how they negatively reacted with her super-sensitive skin. Bernie, in an attempt to impress her, told her what a magnificent chemist he was and he could brew up a batch of sweet smelling stuff that would make the Dior’s of the world ashamed to market their inferior product, and at the same time would treat her skin like talcum powder.“Oh, Bernie. Could you make some for me?” she asked, batting her eyes seductively.Well it’s all Bernie needed. His weakness for eye batting placed him at a distinct disadvantage and he repaired to the laboratory to brew up the promised elixir. In actuality, what he did was borrow a bottle of his mother’s deodorant and began replicating the ingredients listed on the bottle. Several days later he extracted the final product from his lab caldron and presented Cathy with the resulting brew.“Oh, Bernie. Thank you so much,” she said, still batting her eyes at this poor schmuck, causing his knees to buckle like a piece of overcooked spaghetti.Cathy took the little box home and couldn’t wait to administer it to her waiting armpits. In all fairness, I did get a whiff of the mixture before he gave it to her and it smelled pretty good to me. By this time, Bernie was bragging to anyone who would listen, that he had created an aphrodisiac that would turn his new love into this compliant slave.To Cathy, the deodorant smelled wonderful, and the dulcet aromas sneaked out from under her arms and wafted beneath her nose. “Smell this,” she said to all of her friends, producing the newly minted bottle from her purse. “Bernie made it just for me.”When Cathy got home and took off her clothes, she noticed any area where she applied Bernard’s mixture, was covered in a bright red rash. Over night, the rash blossomed into these horrible looking sores and she itched like a fresh dose of the chicken pox had invaded her skin.It turns out Bernie had added or subtracted several ingredients from his mother’s bottle and that, plus the fact he was drinking beer with me in the lab during the brewing process, certainly detracted greatly from the final product. That was the end of Bernie’s love affair with Cathy; even though he told her he could correct his mistake and brew a perfectly acting liquid the next time. Cathy was too smart for his line.The second Bernie story which accurately illustrates another side to this complex man, happened one summer while I was attending summer school at Tulane. Bernie didn’t have to attend summer school because he was a straight ‘A’ student, while I was often grateful for the professor’s gift of a ‘gentleman’s C’ and had to attend one summer session in order to keep up with my aggressive classmates. Bernie was hired as a laboratory assistant by the chemistry department, so we were both living on campus without much to do.I called Bernie one day to get him out of the laboratory and accompany me to one of the nearby watering holes. He answered on the first ring.“What do you want?” he asked, knowing full well I wasn’t calling him asking for the atomic weight of helium.“How’s about a drink?”“Come over here and pick me up. I have to finish this experiment before I can leave.”When I arrived at the chemistry lab, Bernie was busy pouring some awful-colored mixture in with a clear liquid causing the reaction to bubble over like a Doctor Frankenstein experiment.“Brewing up a little something else for Cathy,” I asked, never letting him forget about his romantic blunder.“No. This is grain alcohol mixed with something else.” Bernard was smart enough to know I wouldn’t have any comprehension of the ‘something else’ liquid.All I heard was the word ‘alcohol,’ so I asked, “Can you drink that stuff?”Bernie looked at me like I was crazy. “Yeah, you can drink grain alcohol, but you have to mix it with jungle juice or something, because it’s one hundred and ninety proof. That stuff can make you blind if you’re not careful.”It was all I needed. Before we departed from the local watering hole, I convinced Bernie we were having a party at a friend’s house that night, and he and I would mix up this delectable potable to be served to all our friends and their dates. That afternoon, Bernie, our friend, Cameron Gamble, and I began mixing up this homebrew with the primary ingredient being the grain alcohol Bernie had purloined from the chemistry lab.In order to make sure the brew was tasty and the juice-grain alcohol mixture was correct, we needed to sample it throughout the afternoon. By the start of the party, Bernie, Cameron, and I were giggling like teenage school girls; the liquor having already taken its toll.All I can remember about the party was most of the girls were passed out on the floor, and their dates were so drunk, they just left them there and presumably staggered back to the dormitory.I woke up in a filthy ditch in front of Cameron’s house, trying to get up so I could also stagger back to my room in the dormitory before I drowned in all the gutter muck. I have no idea how long I was lying there.I looked over to my left and Bernie was face down in the same ditch. I thought he was dead. Fortunately, he wasn’t dead and I sat him up and shook him as hard as I could.“Get up Bernie. We’ve got to go home,” I mumbled, with the ditch’s refuse still stuck to various parts of our bodies.“Hell of a party, Pierre. Hell of a party” my great friend said, as he sneaked a smile past his drunken lips.
Monday, November 24, 2014
Algiers
I felt this hand shaking me. Back and
forth; back and forth, until I opened my eyes. Peering through my sleep-filled
globes I recognized the offender immediately. I also recognized the voice. “Get
up; right now! You’ve got to get a haircut.”
“Why? I don’t need a haircut. I just got one last month.” Any
objection voiced to this woman was a losing battle; and I knew it. When my
mother wanted me to do something, it was a fait
accompli. Either you did it, and did it quickly, or you suffered the
unpleasant consequences that stemmed from even the slightest misdemeanor. Those
unpleasant consequences were generally linked to a beating with a wooden
hairbrush, causing my super-sensitive rear end to redden, like a turkey’s
wattle.
“I’m only going to say this once,
boy. Get up, get dressed, and go get a haircut. You’re making your conformation
tomorrow morning and Bishop Jones will be there to perform the ceremony.” The
bishop’s name was said with such reverence, that I thought we could have been
in a receiving line at Buckingham Palace, and as we neared the Queen, her minion
announced us, “Ma’am; may I present Ilda Agnes Boylan Abadie of Pelican Avenue
in Algiers.” My mother would have bowed as low as she could, which was not very
low given the fact she always wore a steel-banded corset about her lower body,
impeding her every movement. Then the Queen’s snooty minion would have looked
at me and with a caustic sneer on his lips, said to the Monarch, “Ma’am,
this retched thing trailing behind her is her son, Little Buddy.”
Well, it was Little Buddy who hustled
around the corner to Perkel’s Barber Shop, where a Mister Perkel and Mister
Daigle plied their trade, trimming the hair of all legitimate males in our
small community of Algiers. There was one other barber shop in town, but only
those less fortunate went there and generally came out looking like they had
just attended a private screening of A
Clockwork Orange.
As was always the case when I would
arrive at Perkel’s Barber Shop, it was crowded. Inside of Perkel’s, a picture
window overlooking a green park on one side of the street and the Holy Name of
Mary Catholic Church stood mightily opposite the park. My mother never allowed
us to enter the church or the church yard, because for some insane reason, she
hated all things Catholic. The one exception to her inviolate rule was made for
my father; a devout Catholic. A man who went to church every morning of lent
and never missed a Sunday, even though an archaic rule in the church forbade
him from taking communion because he married out of the church and to a
non-Catholic. Still, my mother grudgingly cooked his fish on Fridays, made the
pilgrimage on the Algiers ferry to his mother’s house (my grandmother) on
alternate weekends, and only rolled her eyes up into her head when a Catholic
politician, actor, or priest, said something in my father’s presence. Otherwise
she would have uttered a snide comment to whoever was closest to her.
Immediately across the street from
Perkel’s, was Rosenthal’s Drug Store. Now old man Rosenthal was a rare creature
himself. He had a hawk-like face with glaring yellow teeth when he smiled,
which was not often enough for my taste. He could have played the part of Fagin
if only we had an Algiers repertory theatre. There was a long counter in the
store where Mr. Rosenthal would serve sodas, malts, and soft drinks, to wash
down the over-sweet cinnamon rolls he sold and everyone seemed to enjoy. I had
a minor spat with the man when I requested he put another scoop of ice cream in
my soda. “Ya only gets one scoop; my boy,” Mr. Rosenthal said. When I insisted
on a second scoop, I was banned from the store for a few weeks.
Once, my father got sick and I was
instructed to go around the corner and ask him for some medicine. He gave me a
bottle of pink liquid, from which my father took one giant swig and vomited it
back into his bed. I’m pretty sure it was the last time we bought any medicine
from Mr. Rosenthal.
On the corner across the park from
Perkel’s was another drug store; Calderara’s Pharmacy. I never saw anyone go in
or out of there. Presumably they had a few customers, but they must have
entered under the cover of darkness. He probably sold a bunch of that pink
stuff, like Mr. Rosenthal gave to my father, and that severely hindered his
bottom line.
Once I made it inside Perkel’s hair
emporium, the chairs racked up beneath the picture window were filled with
middle aged men waiting their turn for one of Mister Perkel or Mister Daigle’s
superb coiffures. Before I had a chance to sit down, I noticed something was
different. For the first time ever, the third barber chair in the shop had a
young man standing behind it, attired in a white shirt and trousers, with
scissors poised at the ready.
The only problem was, this youthful
fellow didn’t have anyone in his chair to clip, and furthermore, he had this faraway
look in his eyes, that reminded one of a man in Algiers who used to bay at the
moon all night. I remember waking one night to hear this strident scream
emanating from in front of my house. For weeks, I didn’t sleep a wink. Finally,
I told my mother about the experience, fully expecting her to explain about the
horrid murder that happened on our street, but instead, she casually said, “Oh,
that was just the Moon Man.” Everyone in this ridiculous village completely
ignored this insane man, who nightly howled at the moon like a deranged
werewolf.
As I stood in Perkel’s, I wondered
why no one was in the third barber chair for I knew at least five men were
waiting for their ritual cut. Glancing around at the other men in the shop, I
could see them giggling among themselves, but I didn’t think anything about it.
“They are probably saying things to each other about what the older boys talk
about doing to the girls in our school. I can’t imagine anyone doing that with
a girl.” I must have thought that at the time.
Finally one of the giggling men said
to me, “Little Buddy, why don’t you jump up in the third chair. Mister Perkel’s
son will take care of you.”
Well I knew my mother’s instructions
to me were, “Tell Mister Perkel or Mister Daigle you have your confirmation
tomorrow and Bishop Gerault M. Jones (a fervent bow of her head) will be there
to confirm you.” She didn’t say anything about Mister Perkel’s son doing the
cutting. “Cuz if she wanted me to see Mister Perkel’s son, she would have said
so,” I thought silently. Paucity of words was not one of the woman’s
shortcomings; she told you what she meant and you had better listen, or else.
“Go on son,” the Greek chorus sang
from the chairs. “He don’t bite.”
My indecision was obvious, but I was
afraid to say anything to either Mister Perkel or Mister Daigle; so poor Little
Buddy sauntered up to the barber chair, like Marie Antoinette climbing the
steps of the guillotine, and plopped down to the elevated giggles of the men
seated by the window.
Before I knew it, Mister Perkel’s son
was whipping those scissors around my scalp so fast, for a minute there; I
thought he was Edward Scissorhands on one of his outings. When he finished with
the scissors, he ran that buzzing thing all around my head, powdered my neck
(he spilled great quantities of the powder down my back in the process), took
my money and said “good bye” in the kindest fashion.
On my way out of the shop, I glanced
over at the older guys still in the chairs, and their former giggles had
morphed into gales of laughter. I couldn’t imagine what was so funny. It didn’t
take long to find out, because when I arrived home, my mother took one look at
Mister Perkel’s son’s masterpiece, and she shouted, “Who did this to you? It
couldn’t have been Mister Perkel or Mister Daigle; who was it?”
“No ma’am, it wasn’t them. It was
Mister Perkel’s son. The men made me get in his chair. I couldn’t talk to
either of the other barbers before he called me.”
My mother pulled me by the ear into
her bedroom and stood me before a full length mirror. With the hand that wasn’t
abusing my ear, she took a mirror and placed it behind my head. Immediately, I
saw this checkerboard looking back of my head that had a mixture of small tufts
of hair interspaced between great gaps of gouged, naked scalp.
I was horrified. I knew I couldn’t go
before Bishop Gerault M. Jones (head bowed) with my hair looking the way it
did.
“You go back there right now and tell Mister Perkel to fix what his son did; and I don’t care what he has to do.”
“You go back there right now and tell Mister Perkel to fix what his son did; and I don’t care what he has to do.”
Back to the barber shop I go, my head
was hanging all the way to my chest. I stopped at Rosenthal’s for a quick soda
in order not to have to go into to the barber shop while the other men were
still getting their haircuts. Finally I crossed the street and entered the shop
with the back of my head looking like it was wacked with a meat cleaver.
I pleaded my first law case with
Mister Perkel and he did what any father would do to straighten out the damage
his prodigal son hath wrought. Even after the expert rendering by the maestro,
the back of my head still looked like a killing field in the Civil War.
The next day, my mother was up early
to inspect what an overnight elixir had done to my rear scalp as she had
generously applied one of Mr. Rosenthal’s ointments to it before I was allowed
to get into bed. By her tone, I assumed the ointment hadn’t performed up to its
advertised high standard when I heard her say, “It looks worse than it did
before. Look at all these scabs.” It appeared, once again, Mr. Rosenthal had let
the Abadie clan down.
As I dressed for the my conformation
ceremony, which was to culminate with my taking communion for the first time at
the alter in Mount Olivet Episcopal Church on Pelican Avenue in Algiers, my
mother slammed this winter knitted cap down onto my head. It reached my
eyebrows in front and the nape of my neck in the rear. It was the most
ghastly-looking thing I had ever seen. “I’m not wearing this,” I wept and
dragged the offending object from my head.
“You’re wearing it or I’ll take the hairbrush
to you and your back side will look worse than your head does.”
Needless-to-say I wore the wool hat.
I felt such a fool crossing the street to the church. Standing in line with the
other confirmees, only the girls and I had on caps. All the boys were teasing
me, calling me a girl and things like that, but I sort of rose above them,
affecting an attitude of ‘I don’t care what you think.’
Then a hush came over the
parishioners as the back doors to the church opened and there in the frame
stood Gerault McArthur Jones, The Exalted Bishop of the State of Louisiana
Episcopal Church. He was dressed in a splendid purple robe with several red
sashes ringing his massive girth. He carried a long golden staff in his right
hand, and he looked capable of parting the Red Sea with it; or in our case the
Mississippi River.
I now understood why my mother
lionized this impressive and august man. He smiled at the confirmees and walked
among us, much like Jesus did with the lepers, as his golden staff clanged
against the stone floor with each step. When he got to me he uttered a sound as
if he had finally found the elusive lepers, and in his basso-profundo voice
bellowed out, “Take that cap off, boy. In our Episcopal Church, men are not
allowed to wear a head covering. You will not approach Christ’s alter wearing
that abomination.” With one of his magnificent hands he swept the cap from my
head, revealing the scarred scalp for all to see.
However, as soon as the bishop began
his rant, my mother left her prescribed pew and ran down the aisle, like a
jilted bride bolting the church and snatched the cap from the hand of the
bishop. She plunked the cap back down on my head, practically blinding me, and
looked the bishop straight in the eye. She said in a loud voice, “Bishop, let
me tell you one thing; he’s wearing this God-damned hat and that’s all there is
to it.”
Bishop Jones’ name was never again
mentioned by anyone in my house. My father must still be laughing; wherever he
is.
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Shrimp Boat is Comin'
The Shrimp Boat
In
the late 60’s, already the victim of two abortive attempts in business, I blindly
ventured into a third. Shrimp Boats of Louisiana, Inc. was a corporation
composed of shareholders Reese & Abadi. Reese knew a fellow by the name of Dick Wasserman, who
made a living selling cooking equipment to restaurants. Dick was about
forty-five years old when I knew him, and was a man who appeared to consume
copious portions prepared in one of those Wasserman stainless steel ovens. He
was your typical salesman type, who spoke his memorized inanities, non-stop.
Every
time I heard his name mentioned, I could only think of the Wassermann
diagnostic test for syphilis and wondered why I was eating anything exiting
those ovens. He actually was fairly differential in his dealings with us and
generally looked to his business partner to answer any of our questions. He was
talked into his side of the partnership because he could sell his restaurant
supplies to every franchisee, thereby making a hog’s killing before any of the
franchisor’s profits were realized. Nice work if you can get it.
Dick
had apparently combined his talents with another man, whose name escapes me,
and they founded a franchise with its defining signature being a restaurant
shaped like a shrimpboat and specializing in seafood. After about an hour
meeting with those two, George and I decided the only thing missing from our
lives was a restaurant shaped like a shrimpboat and specializing in seafood; so
we bought the deal. This was the first franchise sold by our antagonists, and
neither of them had ever been in the retail restaurant business prior to this
first sale. Reese and I missed that fact during our initial discussions.
I
once heard of a redneck from Mississippi and a Polish guy from Indiana, who
opened a French restaurant in New Orleans. They were absentee owners, to boot. I
immediately knew they had absolutely no chance of success. Neither one of them
was trained in the business, as they were professional football players who got
sold a bill of goods. They were well known luminaries in a city chocked full of
fabulous restaurants, and obviously they thought the crowds would flock to
their spot merely because their names were associated with the venture. I laughed
like hell when I heard those two jocks got taken down by some hustlers. “How
could they have done that?” I mused.
Well,
the ultimate laugh is on me. How could two lawyers succeed in the food
business, whose only restaurant experience is sitting at a table d’hôte, with napkins stuck under their chins, a plate of
boiled crawfish in front of them, and whistling up two more martinis? Answer is;
they can’t.
As
you drove down the main drag in a New Orleans suburb, up loomed this ugly
structure resembling a hurricane-beached shrimpboat. It had a gangplank for its
entrance, lifeboat rings with the name Shrimpboat of Louisiana written in a
semi-circle attached to the front door, fish nets hanging inside, and it even
had a crow’s nest upstairs to seat overflow diners. The kitchen had brand new,
Wasserman-supplied, stainless steel equipment and all of the tables, chairs,
booths, and pictures in the dining area were laced with a maritime theme. Then
came opening night.
“What
can go wrong will go wrong,” is a motto this place thrived on. Opening night
the rains came down in torrents. Now a little rain never stopped a Denny’s or
Burger King from serving their customers, because their parking lots are paved
and the customers have easy ingress and egress to these restaurants. At the
Shrimpboat Restaurant, during this rain it became abundantly clear to everyone
that our franchisors had not supplied a proper parking area to us. As
the few unsuspecting patrons, who braved the elements, attempted to exit from
their parking spaces, they found their vehicles had sunk to about midway up the
hubcaps in this thick, soupy, South Louisiana clay that held its prey like a
jungle beast mired in quicksand.
Of
course, any sane person who witnessed the two lawyers and their secretary in
the parking lot, up to their knees in goo, thoroughly soaked from the
ever-present rain, pushing their initial customers out of this quagmire, would
have suggested the doors to this august establishment be immediately nailed
shut, and a “closed” sign should be hung from the doorknob.
Rather
than nail the doors shut, we merely ordered several loads of oyster shells to
be dumped onto the parking areas, exchanging minor cuts to the customers’ tires
for mud up to the floorboards. At any rate, the oyster shells did the trick and
we continued in business.
We
did have to revise the gangway, since the moisture from the rain made it more
slippery than goose grease, and several first night customers emerged rubbing
their sore derrière.
The
next thing brought to our attention as owners was the packaging supplied by the
franchisors was defective. Since I was the delivery boy for the first month (a
lawyer in the restaurant business must start at the bottom), it was pointed out
to me, in no uncertain terms, the food a take-out customer was receiving was a
little off; maybe more than a little off. What was supposed to be crispy fried
catfish, in reality was a soggy, flaccid, hunk of something resembling a fish,
or at least in the same phylum as a fish.
We
discovered the delivery packaging was flawed in several ways. First, it had no
holes in the box to allow the freshly cooked seafood to expel its steam. Second,
the walls of the take-out boxes were lined with aluminum foil, creating more
interior moisture, resulting in all of the boxed contents being drowned in a
sea of evaporated steam, grease, and seafood liquids creating the fish
sculpture previously described. To add insult to injury, all of the other
accompanying foods (fried potatoes, rolls, etc.) were welded together with the
mystery seafood producing an unidentifiable glob of the most uneatable omelet
one can imagine. That was the end of our take-out business; at least, for
return callers. Can you picture the looks on the patrons’ faces as they opened
the tightly sealed aluminum-lined take-out boxes, expecting crispy fried
seafood and instead receiving a rancid smelling collage stuck to the bottom of
the container? As delivery-boy, I never saw so many jaws drop as the first
glimpse of the boxed contents went from pleasure, to awe, to wonderment, to
ire, to really pissed off, and finally to; “You expect me to pay for this
crap?” In some cases, the box hit me in the back before I could beat my hasty
retreat.
Those
were just a few of the startup problems. There were numerous others. As the
business rapidly decreased, our investment increased proportionately, until
such time we were forced to make a change. We told Wasserman and his buddy to
buzz off, and finally, one night after closing, we had a face-off in the
parking lot with the two of them versus Reese and me. Since I have always
eschewed physical violence, particularly if it involves me, I invited Rod Saavedra
to the party. Reese and I had long since forgiven Rod for his minor
transgression of stealing our money. The night ended up with much shouting and
posturing about who was at fault, and we verbally severed our relationship with
those two unarmed bandits. Saner minds would say Reese & Abadie were at
fault for participating in this boondoggle in the first place, but who listens
to saner minds?
“Show
me a sane man and I will cure him for you.” Carl Jung
We
replaced our management (Reese & Abadie) with a friend of mine from high
school, one Joe LaBella. La Bella, in Italian, is beautiful; whereas in Latin,
bella is war. Something must have gone awry in the translation, just as
something must have gone awry in the LaBella family. Joe looked like he was descended from the Vikings; not the
Romans. Joe’s blond hair, blue
eyes, and fair skin certainly didn’t resemble the other Italian boys I grew up
with, but his attitude was indeed beautiful. I can’t remember ever seeing Joe
without a large smile and a kind word for me.
Joe was a great baseball pitcher in
high school who specialized in a roundhouse curveball. The only curveball
thrown here was the one the franchisors threw at us. Joe quickly told me he had
enough of the restaurant business and we replaced him with another friend of
mine from college, Carlton Sweeney, who lasted long enough to realize it was a
sinking ship that could not be refloated; a virtual beached Titanic, and we
were the ones drowning.
Carlton
Sweeny had some kind of personality complex, because when he spoke to you, he
did so with his head sunk down into his chest and he never looked you in the
eyes. I understand he has been enormously successful in oil field ventures,
since leaving his temporary residence in the food business, which proves the
old axiom, “Slinging hash ain’t like drilling oil wells.”
One other person was tried as
manager, and he lasted all of two weeks. I was actually a little dubious about
his restaurant skills, when he instituted a breakfast menu to compliment our
long suffering lunch and dinner fare. He was of Indian extraction (dot; not
feather), and I guess he thought we needed to lose money on three meals per day
instead of just two.
By
this time we were losing so much money, Reese & Abadie had to return to the
front lines taking over the day to day management. One particular night we ran
an oyster special and several of the patrons suggested instead of serving the
oysters on a mock oyster plate, we should serve them on real oyster shells, as
most other seafood establishments in this area did. Not to be outdone by our
competition, I raced out to the parking lot and collected about two dozen partially
damaged oyster shells we had unloaded there after the opening night rains. I
placed the bottled oysters on the fractured shells, salted them down and served
‘um up. You never heard so many wonderful compliments about those “freshly
shucked beauties.” Our best selling item was a total fabrication.
Shortly after this brainstorm, Doug
Atkins, a behemoth professional football player, entered this mock vessel, with
a sidekick in tow, and ordered (demanded) oysters-on-the-half-shell. Try to
imagine our half shells; they were not one half of the entire oyster as is
customary in our local restaurants, but one half of one half, making them look
a little weird, particularly with the majority of the bottled oyster sagging
over both ends of the shell. The weeks of cars driving over the parking lot shells
had taken its toll on the shell’s configuration.
Atkins, was about six feet eight
inches tall, weighed well over three hundred pounds, and made Hulk Hogan look
like Shirley Temple. He began slurping down our ersatz
oysters-on-the-half-shell like there was no tomorrow. I don't know for sure
what effect our oyster combination had on this big animal, but what I do know
is; he never played one more down of football.
One
of my law professors, Hoffman Fuller, and his family came in one night while I
was waiting the tables, handling the cash register, and trying to sober up the
cook. He had taught a course in taxation, and he must have given me a donation
of a passing grade, because to this date, I have absolutely no earthly idea
what Congress has hidden in that IRS code. The man was literally so embarrassed
he began to sink further and further down into the booth when he recognized one
of his poorest students was wiping down the tables and shoveling hash to the
few patrons left. His wife and family stared at him like he was a stroke
victim. I, on the other hand, had completely lost all pride and approached the
table with a, “Well, hello Professor Hoffman, how’s tricks?”
“Ah,
Mr. Abadie, er, er how er are you?” he stammered, turning red as a beet, while
attempting to return to his original seated position.
“Fine
Professor, what’ll ya have?” For some inexplicable reason, I never saw him
again. Presumably, he now instructs his tax classes in the pitfalls of
attempting to circumvent his blessed IRS code and winding up like that Abadie
boy.
Several
of my close friends frequented our little establishment, but only once; no
relative ever dared show their face a second time. On a chance encounter in the
business district, they were either at a loss for words, or I spied them
dashing across the street to avoid a face-to-face confrontation with me, as
though I had just contracted a fresh dose of the bubonic plague. The really
close ones just laughed out loud and shook their heads in a physical show of
disbelief. They didn’t have the gumption to ask how we were doing. I guess they
knew.
Two
things finally did us in. Actually two hundred things did us in, but in reality
the last two were devastating. When I came home one night my wife asked me if I
saw the man land. I was so out of it, I asked, “What man?” Of course she was
referring to July 20, 1969 when Neil Armstrong landed on the moon saying,
“Tranquility base here. The Eagle has landed.” From growing up reading Buck
Rogers and all of the other space comics, to this historic event, I was always
fascinated by space and what is going on out there, and here it was I missed
the most significant space adventure ever. Served me right.
The
last thing causing the close of this purveyor of fine foods was an event that occurred
one dark and rainy night. It was also a night when the Shrimpboat proprietors
featured an all-you-can-eat chicken special. I realize this was a restaurant
specializing in seafood, but through some nefarious means, one of our
longshoreman clients had located several crates of beheaded chickens and Reese
and I figured, “What the hell difference does it make now? Let’s serve um up.”
After
a cursory inspection, our alcoholic cook swore to me the birds were just fine
and he could fry them up to a golden perfection so that the old Colonel himself
couldn’t tell the difference. I was particularly skeptical on hearing this
proclamation, since he hadn’t changed the grease in the fryers for about ten
days, and frying all the rancid seafood in them surely left a putrid residue,
which would have sped the old Colonel to his grave many years sooner. But it
was an all-you-can-eat special, and the combination of the inclement weather
and our growing reputation for serving the worst food on planet Earth,
apparently was keeping the wily patrons at bay. So I did not discontinue the
promotional sale, feeling I was safe, or in this case, the unsuspecting
customer was safe.
At this point, I worked at my law
office from 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Rushing home, I undressed and changed into
my nighttime attire; old pants and an apron. I generally got to the Shrimpboat
at about 6:00 p.m. and worked to 10:00, or even 11:00 o'clock, if any
malingering customers had a desire to remain and chat after swilling the
uneatable gruel.
This
final night a huge red-neck family waltzed in about five minutes before closing
time, and spying the crow’s-nest, the big ugly one ordered his family to ascend
the spiral staircase, leaving behind an entirely empty first floor. My bedside
demeanor had waned over the intervening several months and as I approached his
table, out of breath from the climb, I barked, “What do you want?”
“I want that God-damn chicken
special, boy,” he shouted, popping several more veins in his already crimson
nose.
“What do these two lovely children
want?” I replied, looking down at two small malformed creatures, obviously a
product of years of double-wide trailer inbreeding.
“They don’t want nothin’ boy. I’m the
onlyest one eatin’.”
Now there was this loud-mouthed
red-neck, what looked to be his wife (possibly his sister too), his two little
cretin children, and an old lady who just sat there with saliva dribbling down
her chin. I’m not sure how she got up those God-damned stairs without a hoist,
but she made it in better shape than I did. So, down the stairs I went to see
the cook, who was sitting in his favorite spot on the floor, sucking out of a
bottle of cheap bourbon, and I barked the order, “One chicken special chef, on
the double.”
While the chef was drunk, he was not
stupid, and he replied, “What the fuck them other red-necks eatin’?”
“Nothing,” I said, with a wink, as
the cook levered himself from the floor and commenced throwing the
longshoreman’s headless monsters into his boiling cauldron.
Up I went to the crows nest the third
time (second time to deliver drinks) and placed a large platter of faux chicken
in front of this classic Bubba. About ten minutes later, I heard him yell, “Hey
boy! More of this here chicken.” Another platter was delivered. Same request
ten minutes after that, and I delivered yet a third portion. This time I
noticed the grease was running down the faces of not only the obnoxious
red-neck and his wife-sister, but also down the faces of the two no-neck
monsters, and lastly, the spittle on Granny’s face was replaced by a puce
colored gravy, which one can only assume was a product of the chef’s nasty
cauldron.
“Sir,” I said, politely. “You can’t
feed your entire family on one chicken special.”
“Listen boy,” he yelled, rising from
his chair. “You jus’ haul yo’ ass down them stairs yonder and fetch me another
plate of this here stuff, and don’t you worry none, about who’s eatin’ it.”
I was about to respond when one of
the no-neck cretins turned his head in my direction and said, “Big Daddy, I
think I’m goin’ to be sick.” And sick he was. All down the front of my shirt,
pants, belt, and shoes. Great globs of whatever animal it was the longshoreman
stole, coupled with the chef’s ten-day-old grease, produced a chicken salad
mosaic that stained my entire front.
I screamed maniacally, “Get the fuck
out of here you red-neck bastard and take these retards with you.” I raced
downstairs into the kitchen and came out brandishing one of the cook’s longest
and sharpest knives, still screaming at this dysfunctional family at the top of
my lungs. I chased that big bastard all the way to his pickup truck,
threatening to castrate him and his wife-sister, as they sped from the depleted
oyster-shell parking lot.
I went back into the kitchen,
breathing heavily from the exercise, snatched the cheap bottle of bourbon from
the staggering cook, and emptied it in one long pull. I turned to the cash
register, unloaded the money, gave most of it to the cook, and told him, “Chester,
we are officially closed.” I ordered him to hang a sign on the front door–
Closed for Repairs– whereupon I drove to the nearest liquor store, bought a
bottle of Wild Turkey bourbon, and then on to Reese’s house for the final
showdown. I relayed the most recent episode to George and told him I was
thinking of how we could get out of this contract with the franchisors.
“How,” he asked sleepily.
“Sue the bastards,” I replied.
And sue we did. George’s nephew, Sam
LeBlanc, was a real lawyer (as opposed to Reese & me), with a respectable
firm, and George importuned him to take our case. We went all the way to the
trial, empanelled a jury, and Reese and I testified to “the truth and nothing
but the truth, so help us God.” Our expert witness, Paul Sels, a Burger King executive at
that time, testified and probably scarred the hell out of the defendants,
because shortly after the morning recess we were offered a settlement, which we
promptly accepted. If you had multiplied the settlement by ten thousand, we
still lost a lot of money.
For several years after the
conclusion of this trial, every time I waltzed into the courtroom where the
trial was held, the Judge’s clerks sang out at me, “Shrimpboats is a’comin,’
their sails are in sight....”
Reese and I were the laughing stock
of the entire courthouse.
“Always
the dullness of the fool is the whetstone of the wits.”
Shakespeare: As
You Like It
Monday, September 29, 2014
My newest novel, Time's Up, is now available electronically.
When handsome and urbane psychiatrist, Michael Amoretti, discovers his best friend and fellow colleague, has been murdered in a San Francisco office building, the psychiatrist is thrust into a labyrinth of death and deceit. After two of his children are murdered, Amoretti realizes this odious killer won’t stop until his entire family is destroyed. His only remaining option is to team up with an unlikely duo of homicide detectives and a mysterious Stanford forensic psychiatrist, renowned for his expertise in the pathology of serial killers. As the murders mount, so does the suspense, and only through a series of missteps will Amoretti realize the killer has been under his nose the entire time.
You can purchase the novel here for only $2.99.
http://www.amazon.com/Times-Up-Peter-Abadie-ebook/dp/B00NT82F1C/ref=sr_tc_2_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1412011072&sr=1-2-ent
You can purchase the novel here for only $2.99.
http://www.amazon.com/Times-Up-Peter-Abadie-ebook/dp/B00NT82F1C/ref=sr_tc_2_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1412011072&sr=1-2-ent
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