Updated November 2000
I hate mornings as it is, but being woken up at 4 a.m. is probably
the worst. "What the hell is it?" I asked in an almost
complete, dreamlike state.
"Pack your bags, you're leaving for Warsaw" was the
answer.
"What?" I began to ask "It's Saturday, isn't it?
Who is this?"
"It's Johnson, Medon's appointee." Came the monotonous
reply. What the hell does Medon need an appointee for, I thought,
and what was an appointee? Johnson, whoever he was, cruelly interrupted
my dazed thought process "you're leaving on the 9 am flight",
great, that gives me, oh, 4 hours of sleep. "Your briefing
is here at the center at six, be there." I was about to protest
about the fact that the center opens at ten on Saturdays, but
Mr. Appointee already hung up. Great, I didn't even know how long
I was going for, what the hell was I suppossed to pack? And what
kind of a name is Johnson, you'd think I was in the military or
something.
You have to understand the strangeness of the situation, my intrests
always revolved around international politics, so that is what
my major in college was. When it came time to get a job, for some
reason, my options were few. I got a dead end job as an understudy
for some political firm, and I had no prospects for the future.
Then one day, out of the blue, a Mr. Medon calls. He says he needs
someone with knowledge of Central Europe's cultures and languages.
I informed him I was no expert, but before I could finish, he
basically handed me the job. I was going to get $47,000 a year,
after taxes. I took it, I mean, I was barely getting twenty grand
at the time!
I remember how strange my first day on the job was. When he gave
me the address I was surprised, I figured it would be somewhere
in downtown Chicago. But no, it was in the blue collar neighborhood
of Cicero. When I drove up to the building, I thought it had to
be a mistake, it looked like an abandoned strip mall. The parking
lot had grass growing through the numerous cracks, and the building
itself had four vacant offices. The only business besides the
one I was to work at was Larry's Flower Shop, and it didn't look
like a promising one. I drove up in my '85 Honda Civic, parking
right next to a brand new silver BMW Z-3, the only car on the
lot. The "business hours" sign had "closed"
written on it for every single day except Tuesday and Saturday.
I walked in, and it was deserted. Big, metal, bulky desks, probably
out of the fifties, lined the walls. All of them had a nice layer
of dust on them, and so did everything else. At the end of this
fairly large room was a cheap brown door, I walked over and knocked.
"Ah, Mr. Vogt, please come in!" Was the sound coming
from the inside. I jiggled the rusty gold handle and walked in.
This room was by far the worst example of office decoration I
had ever seen, it looked appropriate for a junkyard office. Old,
fake wood paneling decorated the walls, while the dark orange
carpet, accented by the stains of centuries ago filled the room
with a stale stench. The smell probably existed because the room
had no windows, and was probably always closed. The ceiling was
actually wallpapered, crookedly I might add, in a dark yellow
and green flower pattern, the only light was the one coming from
the corner, a lamp which I swear I had to have made in my sixth
grade shop class. The desk was actually a large rectangular table,
it was covered in papers and coffee mug imprints. The man behind
the desk looked absolutely delighted, he was wearing some fancy
Italian silk suit, with an awful choice of a tie which was patterened
with terrible representations of oranges. His long greying beard
was not to be outdone by his moustache, which looked waxed. But
what really focused my attention was the fact that the left side
of his moustache was completely gray, while the right side was
still brown.
"Care for a drink?" Mr. Meldon, I presumed, asked.
"No thanks, I had a Jolt on my way here." I replied,
but Mr. Meldon didn't get my joke and ignored my comment.
"Well, take a seat, here's some coffee." I sat down
on some old, orange cushioned seat that looked as if it was out
of some seventies porno. "Let me tell you all about us here
at the center. We're in the business of diplomacy. We try to get
our business partners to cooperate with us." he lectured
stretching every last word of the sentence. "Your job is
going to be simply researching for 'us'." He grunted and
sat back in his chair, he lit a cheap cigar and looked straight
at me, forcing me to look at the floor. "Now, what you'll
be researching is quite simple, it will be the laws in which we
have to operate." At this point he got up and gave me seven
books. In my hand where the general law and economy books for
almost all of the former Eastern Bloc countries. I saw the one
on top, Czechoslovakian Economic Roadblocks. A little out of date,
but I didn't feel like commenting. "Read these, get a good
grasp of what's going on, and you'll report to me in a couple
of weeks. I'll let you know when your next visit should be."
With this I took the out-of-date books, and he escorted me to
his car, which turned out to be mine. "Here you go",
he said, handing me the keys to the BMW, "this is your company
car." Nice company car, I thought to myself, you'd figure
they could afford some furniture. So I drove home and tried to
read the books, and was presented with this sort of busy work
for about three months, leading me up to now.
I had to get packed, I looked at my closet, upon seeing that it
was empty, I knew I wouldn't be looking very proffessional for
the meeting. I picked my crumpled suit off the floor, and suddenly
realised I really needed a Tylenol, maybe a few. No wonder I was
so dazed on the phone, I was still drunk. What time did Joe drive
me back, was it two or three? I made myself some coffee, swallowed
down some pills, and I felt as good as three day old socks. I
never agreed to be on call 24 hours a day. I quickly changed thoughts,
why was I going to Warsaw? I'd read, well at least skimmed, all
the crap Meldon gave me, but when I reported on it, he never gave
a shit. Never a word, just "uh, huh, great, well, here's
this weeks material, tell me if you need more time." Fact
was, everytime I did come in he was alone, the office looked untouched,
and I stayed for five, maybe ten minutes. I never met another
person. My friends said I had the dream job, doing nothing and
getting paid for it. Nor did I ever think twice about it, I just
figured I was lucky. The same way I was lucky on my ACT's out
of high school, the same way I was lucky with my LSAT, getting
me into the U of C. I always believed luck was on my side, except
for when it came to women. No, women and luck never entered the
same county with me. The last steady girlfriend I had was six
years ago, freshmen year of college. She cheated on me, and I
used it as an excuse to get rid of her. She just wasn't my type,
no one was my type. Their was only one person on the planet that
was right for me, and she went in and out of my life four years
ago. I saw her for one night, one night only. We spent it talking
on the old streets of Cracow. I told her I'd keep in touch, she
said I wouldn't. She was partially right. I felt I truely connected
with her, like we had a bond that we couldn't escape. I felt fate
would have its way, and we would one day be united. I wrote her
some letters, usually on some depressing night, where I rambled
on about my love for her and my burning desires. I always regretted
sending them, "you'll scare her away" I'd say to myself,
but on the other hand, loneliness made me do it. She replied twice,
she didn't exactly express the same feelings I did, fact was she
talked about school and what someone said to her that day. I never
looked at that, I only saw the words love, Adriana. Problem was,
we lived on different continents. I met her in Cracow during a
trip my Junior year of college, and never saw her again. That
was the only time I had enough time and money to go there.
My thoughts switched again to my crumpled suit. It was a cheap
one I picked out during my first year at U of C. I wouldn't let
my parents buy me one, I guess I felt guilty that I was wasting
their money on an education that I wasn't using. Regardless, even
with my healthy new checks, I never felt like getting up to buy
a new suit. I picked the dark olive suit off the floor and tried
to straighten it with my hands. I knew it was a feeble attempt,
but it was out of habit. I looked in my drawers, great, all out
of socks and underwear. Well, I'd been out of socks and underwear
for two days as it was, so it was another day of smily face boxers
for me. The socks I wasn't happy about, I turned over old newspapers
searching the floor until I found a pair under the bed that looked
like they hadn't been worn in a while. You have to understand
my theory on clothes, especially socks. Socks are only good for
one day of wear, maybe two if you're lucky. Now, if your socks
haven't been worn for two or three weeks, I firmly believe that
the odor and whatever else your foot projects onto the sock, evaporates.
Therefore, I usually have no problem with wearing old socks, the
only exception is if you've already done this to the sock twice.
Then the sock must be washed. Underwear on the other hand is a
completely different matter. You can wear underwear as long as
it feels good, but you may in no way ever put on an old pair of
underwear, it doesn't work the way the socks do.
So, I put on my navy blue socks, smelled my white shirts that
hugged all the corners of the room as if saying "please,
please, not me!" I did a smell check and decided which one
was the best. I put on the only tie in sight, pulled on my suit,
and looked in the mirror. Yes, I was a used car salesman. A little
cologne, and I was ready to leave. A little light went off in
my head saying "pack", I hated those lights. So I got
my old, worn, brown briefcase, looked over the room and decided
I would buy some clothes in Warsaw. I threw in my trusty deoderent/anti-perspirent,
and I was ready to go. Getting into my car I could feel my feet,
and figured that maybe it was time to amend my sock theory.
It was only a short drive to the office, and I figured if I had
tried I would have been able to squeeze in a shower. The roads
where still dark and empty. The sky was letting off a hint that
maybe the sun would rise, the yellow lights buzzed above my car
like pairs of bees, and I started to feel a little excited. I
was getting a paid vacation! I still had some friends in Poland,
I would probably be able to meet up with them. I knew times where
changing, and that it might all be different, but when was I ever
afraid of change? "All of your life," I said to myself,
but that wasn't true. I never planned, I always winged it, figuring
life was more exciting when you didn't know what was beyond the
curve in front of you. My life was a guidance counselors nightmare
"look at that guy, he never planned a thing in his life,
he never studied, never cared about anything, and now he's making
$47,000!" I remembered that I should call my parents, and
maybe my friends, but I'd do it after the meeting.
Chapter Two
"So what's the name of this kid again?"
"Clyde Vogt, he's got the ties, and a dual citizenship, I
couldn't have dreamed of anything better! He gets a good deal
of money, but doesn't do anything until he's asked of it."
"Won't he be a bit suspicious? Won't he want to know what
this thing's all about?"
"Look, it'll be all legal, we just need to get in their as
fast as we can. We offer it to him straight, no questions asked.
He does what he's suppossed to, and we're all happy. Now, it's
all settlled, he gets a lifetime partnership, and a percentage
increased monthly income. He's tasted the good life. I've read
the kid over, he wants something to do with international law,
but his grades weren't good enough. And he doesn't want to be
some divorce lawyer. Remember, this is the best thing that could
have happened to him! We can even let him think he's a consultant
or something. He'll drive away with the biggest smile you've ever
seen!"
I turned the corner onto Central Ave. and already saw the group
of cars in front of the office. Great, a bunch of rich guys are
going to see me like this. Hopefully they won't notice my raspy
voice, judging from Meldon, I doubt I'll even speak. Besides,
luck was on my side. I smiled at the thought. I parked my Z-3
next to an Acura NSX, I prefferred my Z-3. I walked up to the
door, straightened my suit, and as I was almost ready to push
the door, it opened. "Hi, I'm Johnson. We spoke on the phone?"
I thought Johnson would be younger, but instead he was a guy in
his mid-fifties. He was thin, and looked quite eloquent compared
to Mr. Meldon. Smiling, he turned around and said "follow
me", as if I didn't know where the only office in the center
was. He knocked on the door, and the familair raspy voice of Meldon
came through "come in, come in!" I walked into the room,
it looked the same as before, with the exception of leather seats
for the five men present.
"Well, Mr. Vogt, these are my business associates, if you
were wondering" I was ready to crack a joke about the fishiness
of the situation but he continued, "now we have a simple
proposition for you before you leave today. We would like to have
you work as, " he hesitated and looked at one of his associates,
a thin old man that had a frown as long as I've ever seen, he
looked at me and continued "consultant". Funny, I had
already forgotten what he was talking to me about, maybe I should
have had another coffee.
"Sure." I blurted out. Confused, Mr. Meldon eyed me
strangely.
"Well then, as a consultant you will also become a partner
of our firm. We don't like to have workers, we prefer you to work
for yourself. Your job will be similair to what you've done so
far, only you'll have less of it." Luck was on my side. "And
it'll include what you will do this week, you don't have to decide
now..."
"No, that's great" I said, "I really enjoy the
job, and I'm sure I'll enjoy the business trips too." I was
hoping they would take my eagerness into account, and I didn't
want them to have the chance to change their minds if I screwed
up.
"Well, yes, of course, great" Mr. Meldon said in a somewhat
confused but happy tone "as a partner your pay will increase
to $8,000 a month, with monthly inflation adjustments, and yearly
6% increases" I didn't really hear anything past the "$8,000",
it was making me smile so widely that I think I was making my
new partners uncomfortable. I truely was the luckiest man in the
world, everyone but me was obviously really stupid, or I was a
genius, and these men finally saw it.
"Now, as a partner, your job will be to register our company
in Warsaw"
I interrupted Mr. Meldon "We're multi-national sir?"
"No, but you have dual citizenship, you can register us under
your name." That made sense. "It would be a waste of
time and money to become multi-national right now, this doesn't
pose a problem, does it?" Mr. Meldon probed, as if making
sure I had brushed my teeth that morning.
"No, no, of course not!" I answered, I felt the chests
of everyone in the room expand and contract in a somewhat simultaneous
sigh of relief. No need to worry, I felt like saying, I can dance
naked on this table every day for $8,000 a month!
"Well". Mr. Meldon continued "after you register
our company, you will go through the list of properties we wish
to buy, and you will try to buy them. When you successfully buy
these properties, the contract becomes valid, otherwise, you will
still receive your old pay. Have I made everything clear?"
I knew that there had to be a hitch, but hey, luck was on my side
after all.
"Um, do I fly in business? And how long do I get on this?"
I was more interested in my first question, but I threw the second
one in because I wanted to act as if I actually cared.
"First Class and up to a month, hopefully one week, now,
here is the binder with all the paperwork, which is filled out.
Inside you will also find the properties we wish to buy, our lowest
bid, and our highest bid. Payment can be made by direct cash transfer
from a bank which we will specify by phone, when the time is appropriate.
Now, I believe everything is clear, and you need to go and get
a new suit before you leave." He was one to talk, I'd never
seen anyone with a worse sense of style. He continued to speak
"there is a limo out front, we will park your car at the
house, and please, Mr. Vogt, get some sleep, you look horrible."
On this note I thanked them all, again and again, and left for
the limo. Yes, this was the life, I felt like some high roller
on Wall Street, or just some filthy rich twenty-something from
Hollywood. My adrenaline was pumping and I was trying to figure
out when my income would hit a million a year with 6% increases.
Ah, it didn't matter, I could have lived on 47 grand a year the
rest of my life.
I walked outside and opened the door to the limo, a man was sitting
inside. "Is this my limo" I asked.
"Of course it is, I am here to help you with your choice
of clothes" the very stylish man answered. I wondered where
this man was when Mr. Medon went looking for a wardrobe.
"Great, what do I need" I asked as the limo pulled onto
the street.
"Something that will speak of you as a professional."
"Won't that be a bit of a stretch?" I quipped. The stylish
man did not find the comment amusing. I wiped the grin off my
face and tried to be proffesional. "So, where are we going?"
"Don't worry about that, I'll take care of what you will
need" he answered sternly. He slid back in the black leather
seat and started looking me over. I was starting to get uncomfortable,
so I headed for the liquor cabinet. It was fully stocked, I grabbed
the Cranberry Finlandia and poured myself a drink. I could see
the mans eyes frowning down upon me. "Would you like one?"
I asked trying to be polite.
"At this hour? No, I don't think so, I only drink natural
substances. No coke, no liquor, nothing carbonated. Juice and
wine is all I have."
I was already smiling at my retort. "Why this is only the
finest Vodka made of wheat and cranberry! It's like wine made
of bread. Nothing is better, personally I don't drink wine, gives
you a terrible headache."
"You are obviously more then a social drinker." The
man said with an air of snobiness.
"No sir, I am no more or less a social drinker then you yourself."
Luckily for me the limo pulled up to a store, which was still
closed. We got out, I saw the sign "Angelo's Fine French
Fashion", a bit of a tongue-twister. The stylish man walked
over to the door and pulled out some keys, quickly and effortlessly
he opened the door. "You work here?" I enquired.
"I own the store" he answered, I decided to shut up
on that note. He took out some measuring tape and began to feel
me up, at least that's what it felt like. After he got his measurments
he instructed me to sit down. After twenty minutes of boredom,
the man came out with a suitcase. "You are now packed, have
a safe trip". I'm not sure he meant it. I walked to the door,
waved good-bye and left.
It was now time to get to the airport. I looked at the liquor
cabinet, it was an ideal time to get my friends some presents.
I picked out a bottle of Johnny Walker Black Label, I hated whisky,
but I knew Johnny Walker was suppossed to be good. I also got
some rum and vodka, not really caring what brands they were, all
of them seemed expensive. The driver pulled up to the "Departure"
sign as I was zipping in the last bottle, it really didn't want
to fit, so I had to sit on it. Well, it was time to go.
I checked in at a record time, I did have a first class ticket
after all. I was one of the first ones to sit in the waiting room
for boarding. I still had another 50 minutes till takeoff. I was
about to get a drink at the bar when a man walked up to me "Vogt!
What a wonderful surprise!" I was trying to place the man,
but really couldn't. "How's your old man? I heard he started
some car instruction school or something?"
"Auto Advisor", I corrected him.
"Whatever, how is he doing?! How about yourself, I haven't
seen you since you graduated U of C." So he was at my graduation
party, I still couldn't place him. "Ania got herself a job
with a shipping company, she's still trying for some ambassadorial
job, but you know how it is." Oh yes, beautiful Ania's dad,
I actually had a fling with her. She came to my graduation party
with her mom and dad, it was actually a graduation party for my
parents friends. They wanted to show me off a little bit, I knew
I would get some money out of it so I didn't object. That night
I asked Ania if she wanted to go to the Dells with my friends
and me, and she obliged. Luckily my friends pulled out, and I
was left with her. I'm sure her dad would't be very happy if he
knew about that weekend. I never called her after that, so I guess
she's still a bit upset with me.
"Shipping company? That's great, I heard their is a lot of
upward mobility in those companies," I lied with a straight
face.
"Probably not, but at least she's working. How about yourself?"
"I'm a consultant for a real estate company that has holdings
in Central Europe" I answered proudly, "this is my business
trip".
"Maybe you should invest in a new suit." he cracked.
"How about we get a drink at the bar, I want to hear all
the latest news from the Vogts!"
"I'd love to, but I really need to get up to date on some
of my consultation." I pulled that one out of my ass. Great,
now I forced myself into reading the binder. I killed my chance
for another drink.
"I'm sorry to hear that, well, we'll have a chance to chat
on the plane." With that he patted me on the back and left
for the bar. He looked like a heavy drinker, his nose was as red
as the Soviet flag . I pulled out the binder and opened it. It
was quite heavy, it was packed with info. I actually found out
the name of my company, "Meldon and Associates" read
the letterhead. Wonderful name I thought to myself, originality
was obviously the strong point of my new partners. The first few
pages were just overviews of what Mr. Meldon said. The seventh
page had a map of Poland with the properties I was to buy. I would
be making a lot of trips. The following pages had documents with
instructions on what my offers where to be, and what the building
would become. Most of them would be hotels and restaurants. In
total I would be buying eight properties.
I looked back at the map and paused, Milicz? I was born in Milicz
and one of the properties was in fact there. I quickly flipped
through the binder until I got to Milicz. "Ruins of the XIV
Century Castle" the top read. I would have to give Mr. Meldon
a call, that was a terrible investment. The castle wasn't near
the town center, it was just old ruins that from what I remember,
could in no way be rebuilt. They should have consulted me on that
one. Oh well, as long as I got paid. I looked over another property,
this one in Szczecin; a WWII bunker to be turned into a nightclub.
Now that made sense. Prague had a club called "Bunkr"
the last I remembered, and it was quite amazing. They should start
making clubs out of bunkers everywhere.
"All first class passengers please come up to boarding."
I hesitated, but quickly realized it was me they were talking
about. I walked onto the plane with my binder and sat down in
my window seat. The First class section only had twelve seats,
and from the looks of it not even half would be taken. I put my
seat back and fell into a slumber.
I woke up during the in flight movie with a terrible thirst, I
was still struggling with my hangover. I called over the stewardess
and had her get me a Rum and Coke. Nothing better then booze to
kill the ills of alcochol. I smirked thinking of the Polish saying
"the one who drinks and smokes doesn't have bugs". Of
course it rhymed in Polish. The stewardess came over and gave
me my drink. Everyone was sleeping, I looked at the screen and
saw the inflight movie. It looked like it was some cheap French
production. The movie had me absorbed until one of the witches
had to kill the father of her child because he was a normal human.
It wasn't that I didn't like the idea, it was that I'd already
seen two thousand movies on the subject when I was a teenager
absorbed in the horror genre. Personally, I liked the idea of
human sacrifice, simply because it was absurdly stupid. Now take
that absurdity and start sacrificing all the wackos in the world.
We'd start with Saddam, throw in a hint of Kadafi, a little bit
of David Duke, and whoever the leader of the Femi-nazis is at
the particular time. That would make for a lot of fun. Ask me
about the death penalty, and I would say "no way". Human
sacrifice is the more acceptable of the two for me.
I woke again from my light sleep to see it was two hours left
to Warsaw. I put my left hand on my arm rest, and oddly enough,
I felt a forearm. I looked to my left to see Mr. Rudolph the Red
Nosed Reindeer sleeping. He quickly nodded from his sleep when
I accidentaly touched his arm. "Oh, told you we'd have time
to talk! Heh heh! Well, I snuck up here during the movie, great
seats! You just don't get that in coach."
"Right" I said pulling out one of my worst fake smiles
ever. "Well, let me just look at my binder for one second,
okay?" I pulled out the binder in hopes he would fall back
asleep. I looked over the map again. Most of the cities where
in the west of Poland, except one, Olsztyn, which was in the northeast.
I looked at the cities, north to south. Koszalin, Szczecin, Gorzow,
Zielona Gora, Milicz, Wroclaw and Opole. Milicz was the only small
town in the lot. It was odd to me that they left out Warsaw and
Cracow, on the other hand properties in those areas where no longer
bargains.
"That's funny." Ania's dad intruded.
"What's that?" I questioned him.
"Well, those are all German cities you have marked."
I quickly moved to show him the error in his ways. He was obviously
talking about pre-WWII borders.
"No, look at Olsztyn. That's East."
"You remember Hitlers excuse for attacking Poland? He wanted
the Polish corridor, it seperated Gdansk and Olsztyn from the
rest of Germany."
"Oh." I replied feeling doubly stupid. "That is
a little odd, but I think it probably has to do with investment.
Most of Western money is going to Western Poland." While
I was saying this he was already laughing, ready to burst with
his answer.
"Right, like Koszalin? It has thirty percent unemployment!"
"Yes, but it is by the Baltic, do you think they are looking
for Polish people? I bet you Germans will be swarming in all of
these areas. That's probably why they are all in former German
territories, so Germans can at least economically regain lost
lands."
"Don't tell me you support that?! " He exclaimed with
shock on his face. "Remember how America reacted when a Japanese
company bought Rockafeller center years ago? Pretty soon Germans
will be pushing us out, you watch out."
"Well for now it's Americans buying them out, so I wouldn't
worry" I replied. I looked over the map again, it was a bit
odd, but what was I to question my superiors for. It was time
for landing, and luckily for me the stewardess asked Rudolph to
leave for the back. I looked out the window, it was cloudy. Like
always, it was raining in Warsaw for my arrival.
I walked out of the terminal and saw a large "Vogt"
sign. I wlaked up to the man holding it, "It is moi."
"Great! I didn't have to wait long at all, please follow
me" the short stubby man answered in perfect english. He
took my bags and loaded my bags into the trunk. Once again I remembered
why I loved Europe so much, Merecedes taxis. I jumped in the front
and caught a glimpse of Rudolph running toward my taxi, I acted
as if I didn't see him, and off we went. Poland had certainly
changed, billboards lined the roads, and newly renovated buildings
fought the rain as we drove past them. One thing that hadn't changed
was the congestion and potholes on the street. The road felt like
a war zone as the driver fought his way through traffic, sitting
closly to the steering wheel. After about ten minutes of death
staring me at the face, we arrived at my hotel, the Jan III Sobieski.
It was an old building to be certain, but the color scheme they
decided on for the outside was quite horrid. Pink, green and yellow.
It closely resembled vomit. I tipped the driver and wlaked in.
The inside was much better, truely a world class hotel. I walked
up to the counter, got my key, and decided I needed some sleep.
I awoke to the sun shining into my room. The clouds had cleared,
the sky was crystal clear, you could see some of the smog settle
towards the earths surface, and everpresent battle against nature.
I looked at my binder wondering what I should do that day. I didn't
feel like working on my first day, so I got my wallet out and
started looking over the hundreds of numbers I had written down.
I found "Milosz", he used to live in Chicago but moved
back to Poland during my high school days. I went to the phone
and started dialing. His mother picked up and gave me his current
number, when I talked to him he asked me to meet him at the club
Remont, I agreed.
"So, you've come to Poland, did somebody die?" Came
the question from behind me, it was Milosz.
"No, just some business" I replied. Milosz had a short
haircut, quite unlike the one I remembered in High School, when
his hair went down to his waistline. "So, no more metal?"
"Oh, I still listen to metal" he replied "but I
couldn't really go around selling apartments in that hair, come
on, lets grab a seat." We walked over to a corner, a petite
blond waitress passed and smiled, the women were as pretty as
ever. "So what has happened to you in the last, oh 8-10 years?"
"Life, I guess. Things are better than I imagined. Life seems
to hand me a puzzle, with the directions before every step."
"I know what you mean" he answered "but it isn't
like that, nothing is. You wouldn't believe the shit that happens
everyday, what passes before us without us ever noticing. Every
second, you're either a player or you're being played. After that's
done with, you've got either heaven or hell to choose."
"Or neither" I added.
"I don't buy into purgatory" Milosz answered
"Neither do I, I don't buy into religion. As Marx said, 'it's
the Opium of the masses'".
"So you're okay with death? You never stay awake saying to
yourself 'there has got to be more?'"
"Yeah, I do, but I've got a theory on that."
"I hope it ain't like that sock theory of yours."
"I'm putting that one to good use as we speak " I quirked,
"No this is different, tell me if you can follow this"
"Alright" Milosz said leaning back in his chair with
extreme amusement.
"Matter is neither created, nor destroyed, am I right?"
"That's what all my physics teachers said anyway."
"Right, number two, the big bang is a recurring event that
has happened infinite times before, and it will happen an infinite
times more, right?"
"I won't argue with Stephen Hawking on that one."
"Well, in that case, the number of combinations in this universe
is finite, because the number of pieces it can put together is
limited, right?"
"Sort of, but organisms can reproduce from one, and become
two."
"Right, but they have to take something, which is matter,
and transform it into something else, they don't create matter."
"I see what you're getting at." said Milosz, he was
now leaning forwards intent on what I had to say next.
"So, if matter is limited, but time is infinite, that means
the number of combinations is finite, which means that everything
will exist again, infintely many times, and we have in fact been
here, at this club an infinte number of times, and we have existed
probably billions of times more in different situations."
"I follow you, but I don't think you're right about us being
here an infinte number of times."
"Why is that?" I inquired.
"Well, we may have existed an infinte number of times because
combinations are limited, but I don't think situations are. Situations,
things we do, so on, they are based on decisions which cannot
be predetermined. They are infinite."
"But in that case, we may never exist because our parents
may never make the decision to consummate again."
"Not so, that particular event HAS to happen for the human
race to exist, I mean seriously, by your token, we have both slept
with everyone, like that waitress, twenty billion big bangs ago,
I bet you did her, I got her first though, thirty billion big
bangs before you."
I smiled at the wording. "Very feasible, I have trouble comprehending
the ideas in this theory, it's almost unfathomable."
"Yeah, but I like it, good theory. Better than the Jesus
was an alien theory, which I've heard in countless places. No
way that was yours. Is this one your own?"
"I swear I didn't rip it off. But it's just to simple, either
somebody has already written it down somewhere, or it has some
big hole which we are looking over. Although nobody has given
me a valid argument against it. It could explain deja vu, anyway."
"No way, that would mean we have souls that stick around
and wait until we reappear again."
"I guess, but about that Jesus theory, I have a new idea
about that."
Smirking, Milosz slowly asked "Now what would that be?"
"Well, Jesus was half-alien. Mary was abducted by aliens,
they impregnate her, erase the memory and insert one which will
make her think it's God's work."
"So they just messed with our heads?"
"Yeah, I bet it was some sixth-graders science project, I
bet he got an A. After which, whatever government was running
the country decided such projects are unethical, so all they do
now is watch us."
"You are the same freak as always, so I'm guessing, no women?"
"Nope, I'm a loser, I can't get a date, I can't get anything."
"There are plenty of young Bulgarian women looking for work
here in Warsaw, I'm sure you'd make a fine employer."
"I wouldn't steep that low, no, I've just lost the killer
instinct I had in my younger days. How about yourself?"
"I broke up with my woman a month before we were to get married.
Actually she broke up with me. That was two years ago. We had
been going out for four years, somewhere in the middle of our
relationship things just changed suddenly. She became more distant.
I still keep in touch with her. I always hope
maybe she'll
change her mind? Ah, it doesn't matter. Four years of my life,
wasted."
"Sorry" I uttered knowing it sounded a bit to appropriate
to be appropriate.
"So what are you going to be doing now?"
"I'm going to go register the company I work for, tommorrow"
with that I picked up a Lech beer, toasted it with Milosz, and
we went out on the dance floor.
After ten minutes of dancing we realized that we might be to old
for this type of thing. Not that we were out of breath, but most
of the available females where in their late teens, or early twenties.
Milosz and I were pushing late twenties. We took a seat and just
talked. We must have had ten beers a piece by the end of the night,
it was three and the petite waitress came up to us.
"I'm sorry boys, but we're closing."
"We'll leave" I said "but only if you walk us home."
She smiled and promptly said "I'm sorry, I can't, I wouldn't
have a way back home."
Being as drunk as I was I prompted her "You wouldn't have
to go home, you could just stay in my hotel room."
She smiled once again and answered "that won't be necessary".
"Do me one favor" I said.
"Yes, what is it?"
"Well, I seem to have forgotten my phone number, could I
borrow yours?"
"Not bad." She voiced "better than the 'do you
wash your pants with windex, because I can see myself in them'
but not quite as good as 'do your feet hurt? Because you've been
walking all over my mind all day'. So, what are a bunch of nice
over the hill guys like you doing in a teenage haven like this?"
"Over the hill!" Exclaimed Milosz , "Hey we're
still in our twenties! We belong here."
"No, you belonged here five years ago" she chuckled.
Milosz then swiftly said "Do you know that you've slept with
both of us numerous times?"
"That's news to me, I usually sleep with myself."
I quickly cut in trying to make the best of the situation "He
is reffering to a theory I've developed."
"We'll have to discuss that theory some other time."
She then took a piece of paper, wrote her name and phone number,
and handed it to me. "Now, if you guys don't leave now, I
won't go out with either of you tommorrow."
We looked at each other, realizing this was more than a fair deal,
gave her a goodbye kiss on the cheek and qucikly removed ourselves
from the premises. We got in the taxi and Milosz asked "Does
that mean she wants to go out with both of us?"
"I doubt it's a real number, but considering she gave it
to me, I think she meant me."
"Well she only gave it to you because you forgot yours somewhere."
We got the giggles like a bunch of kids for the rest of the way
to the hotel. I got out, told Milosz tocall me early the next
day, and headed for bed, another hangover to deal with.
Life isn't simple, everything isn't easy. Money, fame, all
the stars say they don't want it. They say it intrudes on the
private lives that they lead. Well, why do they keep making films?
Isn't the star himself bringing upon himself the actual thing
which he swears to dislike? It's because they lie, like everyone
does. They have something great and all they can do is try to
find something wrong with it. The thing everyone wants more than
fame, money, and sex
is sympathy. Sympathy. That's the word.
The stars want sympathy for the invasion of privacy they expieriance.
NBA owners want sympathy for what they have to go through emotionally
during the playoffs. Dictators want sympathy because of the horrors
that they allege western countries unleash on them. Does everyone
deserve sympathy? I don't, I like sympathy, but I don't deserve
it, neither does anyone asking for it. Sympathy is deserved and
reserved for those who don't know they deserve it, and don't want
it. Simple as that. Today was a day I wanted sympathy. Oh what
a life I had to lead, I had to wake up and talk to people. I had
to sign papers, I had to converse, I had to sweat, I had to live.
Sometimes you just don't want to live, not necessarily suicidal,
but you would rather not exist in a particular moment.
Stress is mental, you, not your work, your children or your wife
bring it upon you. It is your drive, your thought, your goal to
end problems that brings upon the stress, don't blame anything
on it. You can end it simply by realizing what it is: meaningless.
How so? Well, twenty years from now you'll know that worrying
about where your son or daughter are at three AM didn't change
whether they came home drunk, sober, or in a body bag. You'll
know that what you do the next day doesn't depend upon what you
stay up all night thinking about. What you do creates results,
not what you think you should do. Or not what you think you should
have done. I should have studied more, I should have excersized
more, I should have read more. Well, that won't do you any good
now. Maybe I should have told my daughter about pregnancy? To
late now, instead of thinking about the past, plan for the future.
That would be my answer, don't dwell on lost opportunities. To
me unfortunately, this is a lost idea. I belong to the masses
of morons that continue to defy logic. I dwell, I dwell long and
hard. Yet what should I dwell about? I had a great job, great
friends, to many a great life! I also have a great loneliness.
Yes, what could have been? Where is she now? What is she thinking
about? What could I have done to make things different? I replay
events in my head, over and over. Should I have kissed her at
that moment? Should I have given her something? Should I have
SAID something? All I could do is dwell, and dwell I did. The
last years of my life, all did was dwell. When I didn't dwell,
I faked I wasn't dwelling. I was Custer during his last stand,
thinking of what I could have done different. Maybe nothing, maybe
fate was on my side? Even if I didn't know that it had dealt me
the proper cards. Maybe I had a winning lottery ticket stashed
among my memories. All I needed to do was to find it. Still, I
had never even believed it was there, nor do I plan on retrieving
it. This, Vogt, was the life you had left. Not a thing to be remembered
by. Stop, the phone rang, my incongruous thought process was halted
for the moment.
"Hey, you told me to wake your ass up, it's nine." Milosz
sounded like a little happy jitter bug, it made me feel sick.
"Yeah, I'm up, ready to do my thang." I answered rather
sarcastically.
"Whow! Whose mister grumpy this morning?" Milosz asked
in an all to mocking manner.
"Go to hell, I'll see you at the milk bar in an hour."
I answered while rolling off the bed onto the floor. Milosz agreed,
but I didn't reply with a goodbye, I just looked at the dusty
old ceailing. Dusty? How the hell does a ceiling get dusty? I
never really checked to see if the botton of my desk was dusty,
because I presumed dust reacted to the laws of physics. Unless
dust was lighter than air, which I don't believe it is. I'm sure
my senior year physics teacher would have simply said "static
electricity". Everything that defied the laws of nature was
because of static electricity. Electricty that was static held
by nothing on something created by something. I knew my definitions
all to well. It was more than dusty, it was slightly yellow, even
though I could still smell the fresh paint from the outside. I
could tell these smoking rooms needed a mere two weeks to get
the tint that every smoker knows his lungs have. I wasn't going
to dwell on it. I got up, the room was moving side to side, just
like a boat. Yes, it was just another day in paradise.
"I got up out of my f***ing bed, I put my pants on, I put
my gun on, cause brother's out here is trippin'!" Nothing
like some good ole' Bodycount to get me going in the morning.