(Usual author's note: Once again, nothing here is to be taken seriously, this is just a half-assed story I'm finding fun to write. I'm in a bit of a rush again so the typos might be bad. Yeah, it's best you read Chapters One and Two to get an idea of where this might be going.)
Chapter Three
Mitchell continues to choke on his
martini long enough to draw the attention of the brunette bartender
that handed him the drink. “Is he going to be okay?” she asks me
visibly concerned.
“Yeah unfortunately,” I say back
dismissively. The brunette looks back at me unsure of what to say,
then realizes maybe it's best she be as far away as possible and goes
to the exact opposite of her confined work space.
And suddenly, Mitchell stops coughing
and straightens up almost as if he was playing the whole thing for
effect. After taking a couple of quick breaths and doing the typical
male self-pat down like making sure he hadn't dislodged his Italian
tie or somehow lost his Rolex watch he looks over at me.
“Always good to talk with you Eric,”
he says dryly before walking away.
“Back at you, Mitch,” I say turning
away from him while taking a long, pleasurable sip of the beer Carter
Jones indirectly bought for me. I watch the old and disgruntled man
walk off and give him a hateful smile when I see him glance back my
way as he takes a seat at a table alone.
The mutual hate my dad-in-law and me
share for each other is well constructed edifice. Mitchell's comes
from a combination of things but primarily rests on the fact that I
am not Skip Everette, his daughter's first husband who even now
shares sweet nothings with his prison cellmate, Sleazy Kyle. See,
Mitchell's son, Simon, turned out to be such a Brobdingnagian asshole
whose only apparent redeeming quality, according to his wife who
seems to liken this one trait as being on par with the creation of
the polio vaccine, was that he always leaves the toilet seat down for
her. Then again Simon's wife, Anna Jones, true love is her
five-thousand square feet lake house, bright red Corvette, and a box
of jewelry so large it could be used as a buried treasure prop for a
pirate movie.
The one hangup in this unrestrained
capitalistic/crass consumerist couple was the fact that no matter how
hard Anna and Simon say they were trying, they simply seemed
incapable of conceiving a child. That of course assumed Simon could
actually put down his cell phone for the require five to seven
minutes to concentrate on something other than the fluctuating stock
market and how it would affect his monthly bonus and that Anna could
stop shopping long enough to spread her legs. Whatever the case,
their lack of producing offspring so bothers my macho dad-in-law that
it allows me to constantly rib him that Simon couldn't get a woman
pregnant in a room full of childless ladies obsessing over their
ticking biological clocks. Truth be told, if they should ever have a
child the first chance I got I would examine this improbable
offspring for the number “666” somewhere on his or her forehead.
After college, Simon became an
investment account manager and like the vast majority of everyone
else in his career field, this required him to believe that since he
spent his waking hours playing, often dangerously, with other peoples
money that it made him far superior to the rest of the human race. It
should say something that in a family already having snobbery encoded
their DNA that even they couldn't really stand to be around Simon for
longer than ten minutes.
Where my wife's first husband comes
into play is that when Chloe brought Skip home to meet her parents he
instantly fell in with Mitchell who quickly came to view the younger
man as his true son. Almost from the moment of Skip and Chloe
returning from their honeymoon, Mitchell would be at their apartment
so the two guys could ride off to play golf, fish, or just hang out
like old college buddies.
Back when Skip was busted with a half
kilo of cocaine in his car as well as the chick who he was having an
affair with sitting in the passenger seat next him, Mitchell at first
refused to believe the allegations. Once the facts were unavoidable
he pleaded with Chloe to not divorce Skip, saying that the man just
made a small mistake. Chloe told me she was so shocked by this
request that she didn't speak to her father for over a year. The true
nature of Mitchell's near obsession with Skip was revealed to me not
long after Chloe and I were married. It seems the two regularly
exchange letters with Mitchell going as far as to sending him care
packages.
My share of our mutual hate was
something I fought against for the first three years of my marriage
to Chloe. I did my best to show Mitchell how much I cared for his
daughter, engage him in simple conversation, and when that failed,
just show him some basic respect. That all ended on my daughter
Izzy's first birthday. We were less than an hour away from the time
most of the party guests would have shown up and both Mitchell and I
were standing on my backyard deck pretty much ignoring each other as
I cooked burgers on the grill.
As usual, the silence between us had
long since moved beyond the awkward when Mitchell decided to go walk
around the yard. As Mitchell was going down the steps, he somehow
stumbles and falls hard to the ground. Being a decent human being, I
rush over to offer my hand to help him up. While Mitchell didn't
exactly slap my hand away, he did ignore it completely and try to get
up by himself, only to go off balance again and fall back down. I
just watched from a distances that time, and it was then a wave of
overwhelming anger sweep over me. I like to think of myself as a
compassionate human being but at that moment had Mitchell's falls and
then his struggles to finally stand back up caused a heart attack I
can't say that I would have done anything to help or even call for
assistance.
After my dad-in-law finally got to his
feet, I walked over to the edge of the steps leading up to the deck
blocking his path. “Tick-tock old man,” I say to him, “watch
how you treat people, especially those married to your only daughter,
you're getting old and the Grim Reaper could be around the next
corner you turn. You never know who will be with you when he shows
up.”
Since then Mitchell likes to keep a
respectful distance from me. The only reason we even exchange cold
and insincere greetings is because his daughter still loves him and
Mary Jones, his wife, worships her granddaughter Izzy.
My dark thoughts are interrupted when
the four-member band strikes up another tune, this time AC/DC's
“Highway to Hell”, a strange selection until I see Brad's total
redneck of a dad, Stanley Parker, stripping off his coat and shirts
to dance around bare chested. Stanley's bald head already shiny from
sweat and ample belly fat that jiggles like a massive mound of hairy
Caucasian Jello causes everyone to clear out space so he could pursue
his impromptu artistic impulse.
Much to my surprise, Carter Jones, who
I hadn't seen since Chloe and I arrived, appears out of nowhere and
starts dancing with Stanley. A huge uproar occurs as Carter walks
onto the dance floor and strips off his shirts joining the father of
the man about to marry his daughter. Carter is the total opposite of
Stanley, tall with an athletic body of someone half his age and a
head of silver hair that absolutely refuses to be dislodged from its
expertly styled placement.
From my comfortable position at the
Tiki bar, I watch the two men gyrate and jerk in front of the band in
what seems more like mutually supporting seizures instead of graceful
artistic expressions inspired by music. Without any prompting, more
of Stanley's clan decided to join the talentless two and it is clear
to me a mob mentality is forming, which is reinforced by more of the
Jones' who refuse to be outdone.
Comfortable with initial tinglings of a
beer inspired buzz, I couldn't help but be amazed at the sight
unfolding in front of me. The Jones and Parker families couldn't be
more different, the former coming from a long line energetic upper
middle class achievers for whom success in life is damn near a
mathematical given.
Where as the latter come from a poor
working class background where success in life is usually measured in
how close someone comes to retirement age before heart disease or
cancer takes them away to the afterlife they have been told was the
true reward for hard work since childhood. I wasn't judging the
Parkers', far from it, my own background was quite similar to theirs
its just that my life experiences have allowed me the chance to see
outside what is usually a narrow and quite limited existence.
In most instances, these two
desperately dissimilar groups would have absolutely nothing to do
with each other outside a strictly employer/employee relationship.
While many in twenty-first century America still clings to the idea
that the socioeconomic ladder is wide enough to allow people from the
bottom to climb up and join those far more privileged, all the data
and trends say it's largely an illusion.
If you think too long about the
situation it becomes darkly funny. Both the upper middle class Jones
and the blue collar Parkers have no idea that in the long term they
are quite screwed. Yeah, the Jones clan are overwhelmingly college
types who make their livings in comfortable white collar surroundings
but theses positions are all highly specialized, subject to the
conditions of the overall economy. In others words, when the country
goes into recession and the economic threads that tie everyone
together start breaking they could quickly find themselves like the
now extinct dodo bird. For the Parker, their lives depend on jobs
that can either be shipped entirely overseas or subject to severe pay
and benefit cuts in an effort to make them competitive to those
businesses that listened to the siren call of countries that have
near slave labor conditions for their workers.
The biggest problem is of course is
that neither the Jones nor the Parkers see the handwriting on the
wall. For the Jones, everything is all peachy keen in America with
the only problem being those they view as “takers” who waste the
hard earned dollars they are forced to pay in taxes. They believe
that while they do not sit atop the peak of the economic mountain,
they are high enough to believe that their lifestyle will continue on
like it is now forever. On the other hand, those like the Parkers
view education on anything outside their idiot savant-level
profession with suspicion. They have a child-like view of the world
shaped by simplistic slogans and take refuge from things they don't
want to understand with their Bible and guns. As an informal student
of history, I know enough to understand everyone from the ancient
Egyptians to the arrogant lords of the nineteenth century British
Empire believed the same thing, right before they were dethroned as
the rulers of the world.
I gulp down the remainder of my beer
and ask for another when I realize that in the end it is not the meek
who will inherit the Earth, but the shits like my investment manager
brother-in-law, Simon Parker. That thought by itself would be enough
to send most rational people running off screaming into the night.
But all that is beside the point now,
the band has ceased their mediocre rendition of AC/DC and moved onto
“Volcano”, again by Buffett. A conga line starts forming, which
prompts me shed my own sports coat and polo shirt and and go grab my
lovely wife away from her cluster of cousins and friends and join the
rapidly growing formation. Chloe is in front of me and my hands are
drawn to her shapely butt, which is already moving to Jimmy's easy
rhythms. She looks back at me and gives me that special smile that
says I will get really lucky tonight. I say a small prayer of thanks
to a silent god that my mom-in-law will be taking care of our
daughter tonight, because my wife and I just might be making her a
sibling.
2 comments:
Hahaha...I like the way you describe the various characters! Have to admit, I had to google "Brobdingnagian."
That ending made me laugh - ha!
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