Posts Tagged 'strip joints'

THE INSULT DIET PLAN: DAY 133

Day 133: Thursday, February 18, 2010:  Your desert menu is longer than a dictionary.

Severance Pay: Continued from Day 132 . . .

Candy tried the cigarette again and coughed mightily, shooting one more nip of vodka to get her mood right.

She walked unsteadily across the lot to Perpetual Motion, feeling fear and everything that’s been happening come back to sap her confidence, trying to show daddy who was really boss.

I’m showing him who’s a mess, she thought, stabbing the cigarette at her mouth coming into the club, looking around to let her eyes adjust when a musclebound bartender jumped the bar in one move and ran to meet her.

“You are she.”

“Candy stabbed her mouth, a spark almost hitting her left eye.  “What?”

“We’ve been waiting since earlier in this day.”

She dropped the cigarette and grinded it out.  “You know me?”

“Please,” he said, stepping close.  “Your name.”

“Candy.”

She saw the tear and backed up a step, this intense young man brushing at his face to step with her, crowding Candy near the condom machine.  “I knew you would come, Candy.  We’ve been waiting . . . please . . .”

She watched him disappearing fast into the club, waving for her to follow as he walked, yelling Victor’s name over and over.

She cautiously followed as eyes adjusted, the stage strangely empty with no music at all, and she could hear strange noises from a dark corner, like grunting and punching.

“Out you pig!” someone screamed, a shadow dragging another shadow across frazzled and stained carpet as she continued to follow this powerful little man, leading her up and across an empty stage to the back dressing area, where Victor stood very slowly from the prep area, arms extended as if Candy was a long lost daughter.

“Candas Kane of Californ-ee-aaaahhh!”

“Uh . . . Victor?”

He rushed to hug her like a long lost child, lifting her high off the floor as Candy forgot all of Big Jim’s advice.

“Candy Candy Candifornia!”

Victor began a very stupid dance for her benefit, swinging her around like a big doll as he sang, “Dream of Candifornicaaaaatiooooon . . . dream of Candifornicaaaaatiooooon . . .”

“Put me down, Victor.”

“Dream of Candifornicaaaaatioooooon . . .”

“Victor!”

He put her down and froze, afraid to make her angry.

“Where’s a phone, Vic?”

“You called me ‘Vic!’”

“Phone!”

“Office!”

“Show me.”

“Please,” he said, leading her out.  “This is all so exciting today.”

Victor  led her across the quiet club, sweeping his arms like a ring master.  “The dressing room will be a tanning salon, Miss Kane.  And all this . . .”  He spun around and nearly fell.  “Big gymnasium and health food things!”

“I’ll fucking kill him.”

The call came through as Bobby was interviewing a dancer named Gem, who could walk on her hands for ten minutes.

“That covers about two or three songs,” she said.  “They just tuck money into my talking snatch.”

“It talks.”

“I throw my voice.”

Bobby’s lamp squawked hello, and his phone started ringing.

“Hello, thank Christ.”

“What?”

“Candy.”

“Dad.”

“You’re alive.”

“Not for long.”

“Tell me.”

“I’ll get the electric chair after I cut your fucking eyes out.”

“Ha-ha!” Bobby covered the phone and looked at his new stripper.  “Sicilian.”

The stripper rolled her eyes.  The lamp said, “Got’cha.”

“See me in ten.”

The stripper left, and he interrupted a long tirade of profanity.

“Whoa there, honey.  Come up for air.”

“I’m putting Victor on, before he builds a shrine in my honor.”

“What the hell are you talking about?”

“Maybe he can explain.”

“Victor?  Hello?”

“Mister Kane.”

Please, Vic.  You know it’s Bobby.”

“It’s Candy’s club now, but I beg of you -”

“It is?”

“What?”

“My daughter’s club?”

“Forever.”

“Well, Victor.  This is very good news.”

“It’s the best news in a terrible world, Mister Bobby.”

“Bobby, Vic.  It’s Bobbyyyyyy.”

“In a place where the pain of humanity and suffering has gathered to offend itself, and where small children cry for drunk fathers that never come home to tuck them in from work, and where the angry hockey woman comes like an angel to set things right -“

“Hey Vic?”

We will turn this bloody tide the other way through health and fitness.”

“Victor!”

“Yes Bobby mister?”

“Put my daughter on.”

“Dad?”

“Get out of there now, hon.  Don’t be obvious or anything, just run screaming like hell for your fucking life.”

“I figured something out.”

“You better, because a shipment of heroin hit Hartford last week, and we’re hearing stories about serious brain damage.”

“No dad.  He mentioned a hockey lady.”

“Among other things.”

“I know the hockey lady.”

Bobby heard Victor yelling happily in the background.  “Honey . . . what the living hell is going on out there?”

“I’m going to let you wonder for a while.”

“No!”

Candy hung-up, smiling at Victor.  “Your angel came in white, huh?”

“Black and gold!”

“So it wasn’t a visitor’s jersey.”

“The old Boston Garden!  Home ice!”

“And the magic number.”

“Four!”

“Thanks, Vic.  I’ll be taking the club now.”

To be continued . . .

THE INSULT DIET PLAN: DAY 124

Day 124: Tuesday, February 9, 2010Every ink blot test reveals another cheeseburger.

Severance Pay: Continued from Day 123 . . .

Over 2900 miles east of Bobby, the McCrory household was undergoing a change of routine, Janelle and Ferg watching Fiona get Rhiannon ready for school like a drill sergeant overseeing muster.

“Hat,” she said, and Rhiannon grabbed her knit hat, reporting that gloves were already in the backpack, along with a snack and homework.

“Nunchukas,” Fiona ordered, just to get a look out of her parents.  “Samurai sword.” 

Rhiannon joked how she was going with an automatic weapon today.  “Something that matches my skirt, like a Baretta.”

“We gotta talk,” Janelle said, watching her sister-in-law. “Today.”

“I had nothing to do with that, Janelle.  The girl reads anything that’s not nailed down.  I was getting my hair done last month at Rona’s Hair Styling?  I didn’t notice the Playgirl magazines until it was too late.”

“Big mistake, Aunt Fee.”

Fiona nodded.  “She got a quick anatomy lesson.”

Janelle shook her head.  “No, they overcharge.

“Oh.

“Plus, we gotta talk about sleeping arrangements.”

“Ohhhhhh . . .”

“Yuh.”

“Ahh.”

“Ahh.”

“Okay Rhiannon!  Let’s get out to the bus!”

And Rhiannon kissed her parents good-bye, as the family huddled and planned a new and uncertain future.

-  -  -

1:00 PM: Hartford, Connecticut:  Big Jim watched his guy bringing a gorgeous blonde across the club toward his bar, Jim being called big because he was so damn small, but always acted very big.  His other name was Jack Russell, but only dog people got the joke.

“You’re hired,” he said, thinking she was there to dance.  “Tips get split among the girls.  There’s no competition . . . oh.”

He looked closer.  “I know you.”

“Candy Kane.”

“Candy.”

“Kane.”

“Bobby’s girl.”

Candy pointed a finger and pretended to shoot him. 

Jim waved his guy off.  “Remember me, Candy?”

“Gin and tonic.”

Big little Jim was nodding, sizing her up.  “On the rocks.  I asked Bobby how he found such beautiful bartenders, and he filled me in on his little girl, all grown-up and out of school now.”

“I was learning the club, and you were out there meeting about east coast business.”

“I heard you learned a little too much on that coast; a little too much on this one.”

“Really.”

“You learned a pole out there, and the Ukrainians out here.”

“Dad’s been calling you.”

“Stick around and listen for the phone.  It won’t be long.”

Candy smiled.  “I really got him, huh?”

Jim watched her closely.  “Is this what they teach you in business school?  Piss everybody off?”

Candy shuffled uneasily, looking around.  “He played me like a child.”

“Hey honey?”

She looked his way and thought of a younger Robert Di Nero.  “He’s looking out for you.  Is such a thing criminal today?”

“He lied to me, Jim.”

“And what did he tell you?”

Candy gathered herself and faced him down.  “He told me these people took over, and I was supposed to come out here and see if they would relent the club.”

“Relent the club.”

“Yuh,” Candy was nodding quickly, driving her point home.  “Give it up.”

“Can I let you in on a little secret?”

He gestured for her to huddle close, looking around to make sure they were alone.  “If they took that bar over by force, and you came out here trying to work a deal, they would relent your head from your fucking body.”

Candy looked like a very angry little girl.

“Candy, honey.  The lease they had with your father was running out, and he made a deal to hand you the keys; lock, stock, and barrel.  I don’t know why he didn’t just send you out here to do it, without running a stupid game.”

“Because handing me the keys is no kind of challenge.”

“And you’re a stubborn fucking Sicilian like your mother.”

“See the black roots in my hair?”

“How did you guess the deal was rigged?”

“Call it a hunch.”

Jim smiled. “He must’a shit when you said a raid was coming.”

“The call was immediate.  They ran out of there like angry hornets.”

“Huh,” Jim started.   “Proving your hunch.”

“Stirred the hive up pretty good.”

“Thing is . . . those guys are nuts.”

Candy straightened-up from the bar.  “Like . . . how nuts are we talking?”

“Payback nuts.”

“But they’re leasing.”

“They didn’t teach you about survival in that Russian country, during this cold war era?”

“The cold war’s long over.”

“Says who . . . a tumbling wall?  You see any more businesses flocking to Moscow these days?”

“We uh . . . only studied the exchange rate.”

“In money or blood?”

“But the contract . . .”

“Contract?”

Candy waited for it.

“Candy, it’s not about money or anything like that, it’s about disrespect and fucking them over.  Even the cops hate to mess with these guys, and they have a street code harder to understand then Russian Roulette.  Why do you think we had a cold war for so many years, and things are back to shit?  Nobody understands the motherfuckers.  Presidents go to China before they go to Russia, and those Ching Chong bastards sell their own mothers for a stinking gall bladder.”

“Archie Bunker is in the house.”

“Gimme a minute; I’ll get back to Sicilians.”

“Great.  So now what?”

“Now what?”

Jim looked around.  “Now you kiss ass like Bill Clinton, after putting cigars into other women’s ash trays.”

She balked at that one.

“Call your dad, Candy.”

“Errrr,” she growled, looking away.

“Call your dad.”

“He went behind my back.”

“Then go to the Ukrainians.  You never use business for revenge, and you never use the Ukes.”

She looked at him with a question mark on her face.  “Funny how that rhymes with nukes.”

“You wanna learn some foreign business?  Go ahead and tell them everything, then call Bobby from the Motion.  That will impress people.”

“Serious?”

“You get in trouble, give me a call.”

“You think this is best.”

“I know nothing else, except to call and kiss daddy’s ass.”

“Shit!”

“Go.”

“I’ll see this guy . . . Victor?”

“Listen . . .”  Impatience was seeping through as Jim leaned closer.  “You strut in there like that big dike Sylvester Stallone married . . .”

“Bridget.”

“Right.  You have some drinks and go in there like you own the place, talking loud and looking them right in the eye, got it?  If I send people then it’s gonna get messy again, but if you go in there like ‘I did this and I did that and it was all my fault; I was just mad at dad and screwed up,’ and you shoot a vodka down and smoke a Camel, then everything will be fine.  Trust me.”

“Otherwise.”

“They love conflict, Candy.  They love conflict and sadness and depression and Chekhov, but  they spot weaknesses like sharks to blood.  This is your challenge for real now.  You must speak of family troubles and sadness, but you must also be incredibly strong.  The cherry trees are dying.  Your father is mean and stupid.  Get into character, and do not waver.  You cannot waver.”

“I have no idea what you just said.”

Jim held a finger up, ignoring her.  “You must not waver.”

“Look,” Candy said, reaching out.  “My hand does not waver.”

“Wait a sec . . .”

“C’mon!”

Jim snapped his fingers.  DiCaprio in The Departed.”

“Bingo.”

“You go girl!”

“Oh Christ,” Candy said, ordering a Chardonnay.  “You just ruined the moment.”

Jim looked around.  “I’m so out’a touch today.”

To be continued . . .

THE INSULT DIET PLAN: DAY 104

DAY 104: Wednesday, January 20, 2010:  You don’t reserve seats; you reserve sections.

Continued from Day 103 . . .

“Holy shit,” Candy said, watching a forest green, rusted Suburban careening into the parking lot, black smoke puffing from a clanging exhaust, sparks flying out from underneath. 

“My man!”

“You’re kidding.”

Ferg blinked his lights, thinking it was perfect.  He had already explained to Candy how Frenchy worked in the mob-controlled trash business years ago, always swearing how he knew every strip club owner in the state on a first name basis. 

She nodded in agreement. “Trash was always big-time mob.” 

“And this is one of those guys who gets away with everything,” Ferg said, watching Frenchy ease the lumbering truck toward his tiny Hyundai. “Like some kind of blessed star is covering his ass.”

“I saw a couple in school, but there was always a trust fund or something bailing them out.”

“Not this one.”

Ferg lowered his window as the Suburban parked, and Frenchy’s window stuck halfway, causing him to pound it down a few more inches, cursing loudly.

“Evening, Frenchy.”

“What the fuck!?” Frenchy wailed, using his favorite vernacular.  “What’s going on, bro?”

“Frenchy, meet Candy.”

Candy waved from the passenger seat as Frenchy tried to focus, then gave a big thumbs-up.  “Yo my ho!  Ferg’s moving fast these days!”

Candy’s smile froze in place, along with her hand.  “Gosh . . . thanks . . . I think.”

Frenchy laughed, but at another voice in his head.

“Candy’s gonna scoot for a while, and we’re going to go get trashed.”

Frenchy looked serious.  “Dude, you won’t believe what’s going on at work, since you left.”

“I left yesterday, but you can tell me in a minute.”

Frenchy was confused, until Ferg’s words could be processed. 

“Oh!  Right!”

Ferg struggled to get out, as Frenchy had parked too close.  He awkwardly made his way around the big Suburban while the drunk crew chief continued staring at Candy.

“Why isn’t she getting out to drive?” he asked.

Ferg took his seat, brushing beer cans and Happy Meal toys to the floor.  “She’s waiting for us to go.”

Frenchy kept staring, mumbling, “Oh.”

“Frenchy?”

Frenchy continued to stare at Candy, who waved again.

Ferg put his mouth close to Frenchy’s ear.  “She won’t move until we go, because you’re staring like a fucking freak!”

Frenchy broke out in drunken laughter, slamming the shift lever into reverse, mumbling “Bitch,” as he nearly rammed a small truck, then lurched forward to the sound of blaring horns, right back to where he had started.

“She gets that a lot,” Ferg said, watching his friend closely.  “You’re off to an early start.”

Frenchy laughed.  “Kids are with Grams tonight.  The wife is off bowling.”

“Let the lions run free.”

“Egg-zactly!”

Frenchy struggled with the shifter a few seconds, finally finding the big white “R” as Candy watched nervously from the Hyundai, cringing when he nearly took out the front end.

Frenchy started to tell Ferg about fixing the office window earlier – on the phone – but Ferg had cut him short because Frenchy would talk you to death.  Now the big drunkard was unloading, saying, “Dude, dude!” crossing the broad expanse of parking lot to Perpetual Motion.  “Work is going crazy since you left, and Rourke swore me to secrecy on the window!  He promised a couple kegs of Heiny to keep mum, and a huge raise when my review was due.”

“That’ll almost make up for all the times they procrastinated.”

“Fucking aye!  It looked like Here-o-sheema in there!”

Frenchy bent over with laughter, almost taking out another drunk as he entered the extended lot, bouncing through deep, frozen ruts to finally park.

“There’s all kinds of shit going down, bro . . . Randy’s running around in a bad mood, the Nazi’s eyes are buggin’ out more than usual, Rick looks like a mess, and Uncle Fiddles is getting his ass kicked for some unknown reason.  Environmental has been snooping around, asking what the hell happened, and cops even came to check things out, but left in a hurry.  You dropped a fucking A-bomb on their ass!”

The spark of excitement caused Frenchy to remember where his skunkweed stash was hidden, scrambling to scoop a fat, crumbling joint out from under the seat, beer bottles clanking loudly.

“Cops aren’t good, Frenchy.  I hope there’s not a warrant out.”

“It’s all hush-hush!” Frenchy yelled, sparking the joint.  “What the hell did Rourke say to piss you off so bad?”

“He offered a severance.”

Frenchy inhaled and held the smoke, offering the joint to Ferg, who waved him off.

Finally exhaling, Frenchy started coughing, ending with “Say what!?”

“Severance,” Ferg repeated, tasting sweet clouds of skunk.  “Severance and a gag order.”

“How much?”

“Don’t care.”

Frenchy reared back in exaggerated shock.  “Well excuse me, Mister Howard fucking Hughes.”

“Money’s not the point, Frenchy.”

“Screw that!  Sign the paper, take the money, and say what you want anyway.”

Frenchy was laughing loudly at his own words; Ferg disappointing him by opening the passenger door, prompting Frenchy to pinch his skunkweed out and stash it back under the seat, along with unfinished Budweiser.

“Whoa, whoa, whoa,” he mumbled, stumbling to catch-up, kicking a beer can. “Can’t let my sugar daddy get away!”

Ferg moved fast, leading Frenchy to a hulking fireplug doorman just inside, where darkness overwhelmed them like spelunkers rappelling into deep caverns.

Ferg dropped a twenty to get them through, and Frenchy started jiving to loud stage music, bopping back and forth in his heavy winter coat, eyes bulging at the runway girls, sliding down poles and thrusting their asses for dollar bills.

Ferg was glad to see that up-front stage seating was full, and they dropped back to a corner table, where most of the club was in view.

He motioned a girl over to keep Frenchy parked in place, offering to get them well drinks as he circulated slowly, taking stock of everything and everybody.  It was the first time he had been there since last Christmas, when he was much closer to Frenchy’s condition, and now things stood out that he hadn’t noticed before:

Black security mirrors along the wall in back, and behind the stage.

Several ceiling cameras near recessed lights, covering every angle.

A powerful looking barback with shredded arms stuffed into a tee shirt; short brown hair slicked with gel, stocking drinks and hanging close to scantily clad barmaids, who were busy filling drink orders for waitresses, and waiting on bar patrons.  His eyes were everywhere, and when he finally said something, it sounded Russian and aggressive.

Ferg ordered gin and tonic for Frenchy and Seven Up for himself, arriving back at their table just as Frenchy’s mouth came off a tiny stripper’s rouged areola.

He plopped three more twenties down as Frenchy started gyrating ample hips into the dancer; a move that sent Ferg away with inspired haste.

 Up by the front door, Ferg stepped past a private booth room on his left and slowly walked out, saying  “Fresh air,” to the fireplug doorman in a suit, showing his face before leaving, punching numbers in a small cell phone as he crossed the lot for privacy.

On the other end, Candy started with Mission Impossible; “Da!  Da-daaaaa-da. . . Da!  Da-daaaaa-da . . .“

“Cute.”

She tried the flute part but failed miserably, opting to ask how everything looked.

“All kinds of sneaky mirrors and cameras in the ceiling.  Dark as the ocean floor, with lots of leering drunks.”

“You’re making me homesick.”

“Barback looks quick . . . spews some kind of Slavic language.”

 “Built like a fighter?”

“Big guns and a full barrel.”

“Textbook set-up.  Believe me; he sees everything”

“Yes.”

“How’s Frenchy?”

“Little head’s in control.”

“Nice.”

“In person . . . not so much.”

“I bet.”

“So now we study a little more, and begin Phase Two.”

“Da!  Da-daaaaa-da. . . Da!  Da-daaaaa-da . . .“

“You took a hit.”

“Two small ones from a bat pipe.”

“You and Frenchy.  Jesus.”

“Can you say, designated?”

“I will take so much advantage of you tonight.”

“One hopes.”

“One better stay focused.  The moment of truth approaches.”

“So it does.”

They hung-up as Ferg circled back, keeping his eyes open and nodding to the fireplug going in, finding Frenchy lost in the eyes of another . . . for twenty more dollars.

“She wants to go in the booth room!” he yelled, causing several nearby patrons to cheer.

“Of course she does . . .” Ferg peeled off some bills and pressed them into Frenchy’s waiting hand.  “Does she know your buddy?”

“She knows Big Jim the owner, only he’s not running the show anymore.”

“No?”

“He’s running Hartford, but still has a hand in this.”

“Good to know.”

The stripper turned and said something to Ferg as she disappeared with Frenchy, but he couldn’t understand a word, as if the cold war never existed.

He took a seat at the table and watched everything, noticing a spot in the stage curtain where strippers could be seen getting ready, with another athletic employee hanging out, showing biceps.

The speakers were pounding out one song after another, Fergus wondering just how far he had drifted since Friday morning, throwing that damn chair through Rourke’s office window . . .

-   -   -

Over 2900 miles away, Bobby Casseolla, aka Bobby Shenanigans, aka Bobby Bonia, and finally, Robert P. Kane, ignores the pounding music through office walls and answers a phone resembling one of his strippers; the receiver a naked woman laying face-down on a furry bearskin rug cradle.

He listens closely to his daughter’s voice coming from the naked woman’s tiny plastic head; popping cocktail peanuts into his mouth, crunching them slowly, savoring the salty taste.

“Hey dad!”

“Candy!”

“How’s tricks?”

“Never ask,” he says, in an opening exchange they’ve been using for years.  He runs a thin hand through thin hair on top of a thin skull.  He is using the exact same brand of hair dye that his daughter uses, but its color is far from blonde.

“I’m gonna bring ‘em down,” Candy says.

“Oh you are, huh?” he asks – suppressing a laugh – digging for more peanuts. 

Listen to my smart little college kid, he thinks.  Gonna take out the crazy ‘krainians.  “Where are ya, babe?  Partying?”

“Calling a raid on their skanky Slav asses.”

Bobby starts choking on a peanut and tries to relax, coughing out, “Wha-What?”

“The cops are gonna bust ‘em any minute now, dad, just like Christmas lights in Time’s Square!”

“Shit!” Bobby says, then, “peanut in my throat honey, wait a sec,” and he’s coughing up the tiny legume, pressing a special red button under his desk like crazy, trying to get Sonny Fixit in there right away, desperately searching through a long security mirror facing the club . . .

“You okay there, dad?  Don’t go dying on me . . . it’s not your poor tongue acting up again?”

“Yuh, yuh . . . no!  I’m fine . . “

“That’ll shake ‘em up, huh dad?  Then I’ve got some other people to keep the heat on . . .”

“Jesus, Candy!  You don’t waste any time!”

“. . . and uh, no!  I’m bringin’ ‘em right down, daddy-o!  I figure the raid will shake ‘em up a bit, and then these people I met . . .”

Bobby sees Sonny coming fast now, like a ship breaking ice for explorers or whatever the fuck he saw on Discovery the other night, Sonny parting crowd seas with ruthless abandon, knowing Bobby was watching every move, buzzing him through the door, loud music pouring in for a few seconds to drown out his crazy daughter on the pornographic phone . . .

“. . . and by that time, we’re going to own it outright, and . . .  what was that noise, dad?  Sounded like a stereo blasted on for a sec . . .”

She’s teasing him hard now, knowing that her father is about to cup the receiver -  there’s the silence – and tell somebody to call Perpetual Motion right away, because his dumbass daughter has pulled a Sarah Palin and gone rebel, all hell about to break loose with the deadliest bunch of Slavs ever created without genetic engineering.

Sonny jumps on another line, speed dialing  Connecticut and talking rapidly as Bobby listens to his daughter ramble on like a little school girl, making very big waves on the other coast, Holy Mother of Good God Almighty.

I really didn’t want kids, Bobby thinks, half-listening now.  One Happy Ending in the wrong place at the wrong time in the wrong orifice, and I’m fucking screwed forever.

“. . . really ran it into the ground, dad.  You should see the kind of dive it’s become . . .”

It’s a strip joint, Bobby thinks.  Name one that isn’t a dive, you brilliant goddamn business major.

To be contunued . . .

THE INSULT DIET PLAN: DAY 103

DAY 103: Tuesday, January 19, 2010:  You tried the subway once, and blocked a tunnel.

Continued from Day 102 . . .

Saturday Night:

A small and quiet four-door Hyundai Accent hums along Interstate 84, an attractive couple dressed casually, listening to Linda Ronstadt singing Spanish opera, their manicured hands grasping bottled water, the light blue sedan slow and conservative in the far right lane, passing a huge billboard with lovely script writing, Exotic Dancing, showing attractive legs facing an illuminated city . . .

“Nice.”

“Fucked-up.”

“How so?”

“Well,” Ferg explained, sipping water.  “Connecticut is always touted as the cradle of understated WASPiness, with some kind of tree dropping called a “nutmeg” in its symbolism, and a motto referencing the 80th psalm, about planting vines and casting out heathens.”

“What motto isn’t?

“Okay . . . sure, but I know a lot of people here who look down their noses at neighboring states like Rhode Island and Massachusetts.  Guys I worked with would scoff at all the corruption down in Rhody when Mayor Cianci went to jail, or laugh at their liberal prostitution laws, and all the time they’re looking down, you’ll see massive billboards for sex shops and titty bars way out here in the hills, or encircling Hartford.  Don’t even get me started on Governor Roland . . . oh, wait . . . he found Jesus in prison.  He’s completely healed now.”

Candy was giggling, sipping her water.  “Wow . . . don’t sweat it, Ferg.  Hypocrisy in business was a full course at USC.  It’s hardwired into certain cultures.  You wanna be totally honest and forthright, get a time machine back to indigenous tribes, before whitey crash-landed looking for India.”

“Thanks for the history lesson.”

“Someone’s in a mood.”

“Hypocritical bastards . . . just getting my game on, baby.”

“By getting angry?”

“Adrenaline cleans the blood.”

“Wait . . . I know!  Young Nick Nolte as a twisted Vietnam Vet, moving heroin for his friend from the Golden Triangle . . .”

“Damn!”

“. . . Who’ll Stop the Rain?”

“Yes!” Ferg slapped the small steering wheel.  “Can we go to your room now?”

“Whoa tiger; back to hypocrisy.”

“Damn.”

“Here’s your sister popping my life open like a tuna can, while you’re falling apart at the seams.”

“Sort of.”

“Chair through window, gun in face . . .”

Ferg was silent, watching the highway.

“You wanna say Mafia Princess, fine.  I come back with stupid, stubborn, angry mic.”

“Touché.”

“With a ninja sister watching your daughter, and having her punch sand buckets.”

“Double touché.  I have no retort.”

“So we’re on a roll together, you and I.  Let’s just keep it cool and be investigators, like crazy Fiona.”

“You also called her a dwarf.”

“She attacked my hair.”

“Not physically.”

“It’s still early in the game.  However . . . ahem . . . every single thing she said about business was extremely observant, and I’ve been blinded by emotions.”

“That’s called love.”

“Drop yourself for a minute.”

“Kidding.”

“Good.  My dad has always been an underhanded bastard that stacks the deck, and Fiona put some light on a few things I’m worried about, like the new owners out here.”

“Ukrainians?”

“Are they really new owners, or is everyone in on this little test?  Are they just new business partners, and everyone knows I’m out here?  You know . . . let’s give Candy a feel-good exercise?”

“Ahhh.  The Flashdance scene with Jessica Beales and her rich boyfriend.”

“Oh Christ, let me think . . . the line was, “Friends on the committee, Nick?”

“Movie trivia rocks.”

“Well . . . get your ass out of the theaters for a minute.  Even though my dad’s been nothing short of a pimp, hustler, gangster, and a philanderer, he has become something much, much different in the last few years.”

“A drug addict?”

Candy raised her voice.  “A father WHOOO – in a very TWISTED WAAAY – looks out for his little daughter.”

“An ongoing theme lately.”

“Apparently, yes.”

“Not with the guy you’re gonna meet tonight.”

“Briefly, right?”

“I’ll keep it short.”

“Thanks.”

“The guy was my crew chief.  Came in every morning smelling of booze and lighting joints all day, screwing-up while I covered and convinced him to make an effort, beating his kids and keeping them up all night.  Fun stuff that made time pass very, very slowly.”

“Don’t you miss it?”

“Perfect wing man, for a strip club patron.”

“Yes.”

“He was giving a big party for some poor neighbor he didn’t like once, who happened to love the grape juice coming out of his little backyard vineyard.”

“Oh-oh.”

“So Frenchy gave him a special “reserve” bottle he pissed in.”

“You’re kidding.”

“Gave it to him like a big deal, right in front of his kids and everybody.”

“Classy.”

“His idea of quality time is getting wasted and playing guitar hero with his kid until after midnight.  One morning I said, ‘Damn, you guys must be great guitar players by now,’ and he tells me the game has nothing to do with actually playing.  Turns out it’s glorified air guitar, so they’re just stroking away.”

“That’s what men do.”

“Nice image, thanks.  The guy’s a crew chief with a degree in civil engineering . . . it gets even worse higher up.”

“I can tell you really miss it.” 

They drove further west, Candy letting out a long sigh as Linda Ronstadt sang of sorrow and fast horses.  “So tell me,” she finally said, watching the road. “Does my fake blonde hair bother you?”

“Everyone’s trying to be Irish.”

Candy laughed.  “I’m going to let black come back.”

“Have a little war in your hair, and let darkness rise up to the light.”

“Why don’t you just shut-up and watch some exotic dancers.” Candy made swishy noises with her water.  “See what else arises.”

Ferg turned up Linda Ronstadt, and ten minutes later they were parked by a sandwich shop, across the vast parking lot to Perpetual Motion.

A drunken French American drives erratically in his beaten Chevy Suburban, stoned and puffy eyes on the uncertain road ahead – which he’s pretty damn sure is Route 84 West – but keeps checking blue road signs to confirm, then forgetting within minutes, fighting off traffic which seems to be intruding from all sides, dodging and honking as he spills Budweiser and struggles to focus . . .

“I’m bigger than you!” he shouts at a little foreign car passing on the right.  “This thing’s a fucking tank, bro!”

Pale faces gawk from windows, turning quickly away as the man called Frenchy starts punching his horn, flipping his middle finger at the alarmed driver, who is desperately accelerating to put space between them, Frenchy kicking his big gas pedal to give chase before something tugs at his struggling consciousness, Ferg warning him earlier on the phone, “Be careful on the drive out.  Don’t act stupid till we enter the club,” knowing Frenchy all too well.

“Don’t act stupid,” Frenchy repeats, trying to remember where he stashed a fat joint of potent skunkweed.  “Be cool, and it’s free drinks and lap dances all night long . . .”

His family roots are in Northern Maine, but he always refers to his lineage as French Canadian, trying to distance himself from backwoods trailer people for very good reasons.

Not that it makes any difference . . .

A cell phone rings, buried among fast food wrappers, beer cans, and old racing forms as Frenchy digs like a Jack Russell, swerving to almost take-out a Mini Cooper . . .

“Goddamn Limey junk!” he yells, finding the phone.  He punches the wrong button and loses connection, but it plays disco music a few seconds later, Frenchy hitting the answer button with slow force, reading the survey manager’s name on his small screen before speaking.

“Rick!  Whazzup my big bad boss man!?”

Rick cringes on the other end, picking at a salad in his kitchen alcove, fighting a losing battle with weight.  “Frenchy.  You sound . . . very happy.”

Frenchy laughs way too long and loud, finding space on the highway now, but still riding inches off the left guardrail.  “I’m on the move and in the groove,” he says, trying to suppress a coughing fit.  “I’ll see Fergus in about twenty minutes or so, depending on traffic.”

Now it’s Rick’s turn to laugh, thinking of his cool little scheme to learn things without an actual phone call to Ferg.  “Attaboy, Frenchy.  Just have a good time and see what’s going on with the mad Fergenheimer.   Ask him about work and see where it takes you.  Something’s going on with that boy, and it’s not very good.”

“Gotta trust ol’ Frenchy here, bro!  That boy be-lieeeeves in his crew chief!”

“I’m sure he does, and I’m counting on you.”

“Damn straight!  I’ll save a lap dance for you!”

Rick cringes, hoping he doesn’t get dirty with that hot little girl from Waterbury.  “You do that, Frenchy.  Let your snake outta the hole, and I’ll find easy work for you come Monday.”

Frenchy starts laughing so hard, he never hears Rick disconnect.

To be continued . . .

THE INSULT DIET PLAN: DAY 102

DAY 102: Monday, January 18, 2010:  You tried a liquid diet once, and caused a drought.

Continued from Day 101 . . .

They all met later at the house, congregating in the kitchen as Rhiannon continued her Wizard quest for tunics and potion on a laptop in the living room, Hannah Montana trading barbs with friends and family on the television.

“The only glitch was assault and battery,” Fiona said, working another herbal tea.  “And since the victim’s last name was Kane, and the location was a titty bar in L.A., I’m dying to hear this one.”

Candy didn’t hesitate, both her and Ferg nursing a can of Coors light at the kitchen table, saying,  “I’m up there on stage trying to prove my point after having a few pops and framing my college diploma . . .”

“Nice by the way,” Fiona said, interrupting.  “Very impressive.”

Candy was frozen with her mouth open, then nodding to continue as Ferg watched with raised eyebrows.

“. . . ah thanks.  I think.  So I’m up there grinding and dancing and pulling all the nasty moves I saw a hundred times sneaking around my parent’s business ventures, slumming behind their backs with friends and wouldn’t you know!  Here comes daddy right on cue with steam coming out of his ears, yelling like crazy as I spin on the pole and lean back like a seasoned gymnast, but he’s grabbing at my hanging hair to cause a very nasty fall . . .”

“Jesus.”

“. . . and man was I ripping about all the bullshit by then, with his failed marriages and Hollywood wannabe lifestyle, catering and sucking-up to the Charley Sheens and Billy Idols, nothing but a glorified pimp trying to be a rock star, and giving me the shake every chance he could, leaving me on my own to figure things out.”

Fiona smirled.  “Don’t hold back or anything.”

 “So I drop-kicked that motherfucker clear into Bakersfield.”

“Yes!”

“I got up off that sticky stage floor and drove a “fuck-me-pump” so hard into his chin, two inches of daddy tongue flew clear across the stage.”

Fiona threw a power salute.  “God damn!”

Candy nodded and swigged her beer, feeling a bond with Fiona grow tighter, Ferg tapping her bottle to repeat his sister’s response, giggling like a child.

“And now,” Candy said, clunking the beer down.  “We love each other.”

“Why not.”

“That’s so L.A.”

“Does he talk funny?” Ferg asked, readjusting his seat.  “Like a mmmmmpha urrrrrr?”

“He’s getting better.”

“She used to wear a Trojan,” Fioana added.

Ferg stared at his sister.

“Master’s degree in business, from the University of Southern Cal.”

“Oh . . . that Trojan.”

“Full ride, full honors, fully-loaded for bear.”

“You didn’t need my assistance at all,” Ferg said, coming back into focus.  “You let me handle that security dweeb just to see what would happen.”

“I traded a lawsuit for an outlaw.”

“No such thing,” he said, sipping beer.  “I’m just a tree hugging environmentalist.”

“So now it begs the question,” Fiona said.  “You let Ferg step into that mess because . . ?”

“He stepped in himself.”

Ferg raised his hand.  “Concur.”

“Ahh.”

“Ahh.”

“But . . .”

“Yes?”

“Ahh . . .”

Candy smiled.  “We’ve already been there, and . . . you’re here on business.”

“My own terms.  Dad can cut this club loose with a loss, but if I get it back . . .”

“You show him up again, and have your own business venture.”

“Tanning salon and gym.  You guys need some color out here.”

“Business.”  Fiona put her tea down and started jabbing a finger at Ferg, pretending to block the gesture with her palm.  “Hellooooo . . . unemployed?”  

Candy bopped to music in her head and sang, “I may use a little muscle to get what I need . . !”

“Uh-huh.”

The women stared at each other.

Fiona retrieved her tea.  “Here’s my feelings.”

“Can I predict?”

“Please do.”

“Leave it out in the street, don’t bring it near the house, and get yourself another place to stay until time proves different.”

“You really are a business major.”

“I’m all business.” 

Ferg?” Fioana asked, looking at her brother.

“She’s booked at the Comfort in Sturbridge right now.  Avis dropped a new car earlier.”

“And you kids are going out tonight?”

“We’re incognito.”

Candy beamed.  “It’s a recognizance mission!”

“Well then, I won’t be hearing the house shake at say . . . 3 am.”

Ferg beamed.  “We’ll be taking the Hyundai tonight.”

“And you have a room in Sturbridge.”

They beamed together.

Fiona beamed back.  “Groovy.  Can I rain on your parade?”

Ferg leaned over to Candy.  “This is always the good part.”

Fiona held him with death eyes for a beat, then continued.  “Business major out to show daddy . . .”

Candy was still smiling.

. . . lots of emotion here, and a big college degree . . . very big . . .”

She was still smiling.

. . . real life experience consists of . .?”

The smile faded a little.  “I helped run a summer camp for kids in Northern California, and also a sunglass hut near the beach.”

“And now you’re out here to prove something by ousting a bunch of Ukranians that took daddy’s club in Connecticut.”

The smile was almost gone.  “Tall order for a kid outa school?  Is that what you’re saying?”

“Well let’s see.”

“Bring it.”

“Just how many clubs does your daddy own, exactly?”

“Sixteen.  His sweet sixteen.”

Fiona hesitated .  “Right.  Wow.  And where would they be located, exactly?”

Candy’s face was starting to frown.  “Uhhh . . . California, Arizona, Nevada . . . that’s the western branches.  The east has New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts.  And Oh! Connecticut!”

“Just the one?”

“Two!”

“Good . . . you won’t have to drive so far.”

Now Candy was definitely frowning.  “But we only care about the one.”

“The term ‘we’ scares me, and no, you don’t want to focus on just the one.”

Fiona crossed from the counter and joined them at the table, putting her tea down gently, staring silently at Candy.

Candy was no longer smiling or frowning, just waiting; gears in her head turning madly.

“I’m going to really reach on this next one.”

“Shoot.”

“Your last name.”

Candy swallowed.

“There was an asterisk in the files, indicating a name change.  There was also a link I didn’t pursue, because two detectives were hovering around, and it’s none of their damn business.”

“Thanks.”

Yet.”

“I told you my dad was a Hollywood wannabe . . . so he found an easy, recognizable name.”

Dropping . .?  Fiona was showing impatience.

“Dropping Casseolla.”

Fiona looked at Ferg, who looked at Candy.

“Mafia princess?”

Fiona smirked. “Lookit the black roots in her fucking hair.”

Candy was frowning in a major way; Fiona trying not to laugh.  “Take your time,” she said.  “You have five minutes to answer the exam questions.”

Candy stared from brother to sister and back, fighting a very strong urge to walk out and take what little pride she had left, but a familiar voice broke through the anger, and she had been hearing that voice a lot in the last couple of years, slowly becoming a much louder voice, getting her through the toughest times any broken home kid could have.

This bitch here is a very effective gate keeper, screening people for good reasons, and one of them is sitting in the other room.  Every little thing she’s said so far is absolutely true to a fault, and she will never back down from her mission in life, to protect this household and family.  If I can just step around pride for a minute and hold down my Sicilian urge to slit her cute little throat  . . .

“I’ll take your advice to heart and look at my observations closely,” Candy said, fighting her temper.  “You did a real Crackerjack job of looking me up and putting pieces together, but personal attacks are another matter, and if you don’t like my hair job, then maybe you should take a good look in the mirror, you fucking dwarf.”

A pin would be very loud as everyone squared-off, but Candy wasn’t through, turning to Ferg.  “I’m not dating your sister, but she’s starting to drive me away, if any of that matters.”

“A dwarf?” Fiona asked.  “A fucking dwarf?”

“You’re very short.  You have to admit.”

Fiona was nodding, shaking her head with a scary intensity as Ferg held a hand up.  “Candy . . . we need to go for a drive,” he said.  “Right now.”

Fiona was looking at the kitchen wall as if it were alive, pointing to herself and whispering, “A dwarf . . . did she not call me a fucking dwarf?”

Ferg was urgently rushing Candy out the door, nervously looking at his sister, when Candy threw one last dig.

“You can kick my ass, girl, but you’ll never get any taller.”

“Run,” Ferg said.  “She has throwing stars.”

To be continued . . .