by Philip McCullough, © 1997
Weasel Peregrinations After the bong session, a knock at the door of Takimodo’s posh downtown Bangkok suite brought one of those instantaneous phase shifts you get when you are really baked, I mean on a chronic marijuana chronicle, this one from the calm, sedate realization that, hey, I’m pretty cooked, to an ultra-sharp fight or flight dollop of paranoia. Whenever this sort of cognitive event occurred, it always brought to Takimodo’s mind the fact that they always seemed to need long, rambling sentences to describe them. The alcohol, blunts, and craziness of the past two nights, goin’ strong and hard until just a couple of hours ago, made3 description even harder, but he thought he could feel the burn out washing over him like zigzag cigarette smoke rising with the last few square bubbles of flat champagne in a cubist painting. All this was processed in parallel by Tak’s brain to the panic induced by the simple raps of knuckle on hardwood. Takimodo often felt left behind in non-existent conversations like the one that followed in the silence after the knock so he asked, ‘ Are any of you expecting anyone?’ He looked in the direction of his three companions who looked to be, well, he didn’t quite know how they looked to be. Hans downed another shot of Glenfiddich, chased it with half a Carlsberg, raised his laser blue eyes, flashed them at Tak and jeered, ‘Ja! Da boogeyman. Like in da vairy tales vee dell do liddle kinder. Of course you could relate do deze tales due to your dendency tovards younger mostly mammalian species.’ Tak reached for his silver monogrammed cigarette case on the plate-glass coffee table in front of him. He clicked it open, took out a Nat Sherman, stuck it in his mouth, and began to hunt for a light. He was grateful for the greasy cardboard fast food containers and the butts and beer dregs that littered the semi-reflective surface for giving him time to think as his hand traveled around them to the other side of the deep dark garbage jungle, moonlit as the four of them sat in the wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling, glass on two sides, high-rise panorama. Wait, I’m messed, thought Takimodo, what the hell does the view have to do with anything, as the paranoid-sounding guitar went from light acoustic finger picking on the neural strings of his mind to a reverb-cranked, peddlepushing, conductor-cranking power chord. Takimodo pictured himself reliving the moment of the knock, only at the moment it happened he decided to pick up his guitar from behind the mod leather couch and the knock was nixed from that night’s itinerary. That would have been much more copaesthetic. But no, the knock… His hand finally made it back from its jungle journey and wearily lit a cigarette. Must get back on track. He had almost derailed amidst last nights detritus. Must reply. Must reply. This became the mantra of the moment. ‘Will you just shut up, you fucking fool! And must you mock my, shall we say, proclivities?’ Takimodo spat out, playing his vocabulary card before playing what could be a pair of deuces or a straight flush. He had been dealt his language ability through a combination of natural aptitude for languages and his father’s term as the Japanese ambassador to the United States.
Duke and Elvis, Takimodo’s other fellow festers, glanced at each other. Hans directed his blue lasers at the ceiling. Takimodo could almost see his gaze roving around the stucco like giant Hollywood spotlights scraping the heavens as he exhaled a giant drag from his cigarette. The only problem Takimodo had dropping this card was related to the fact that he didn’t know what suit was trump. Seeing as his metaphor began with poker, he still wasn’t sure whether he had won the jackpot or started jonesing like a compulsive housewife robotically feeding the slots in Vegas. He started repeating another silent mantra. Must follow up. Must follow up. He wondered all the while if this derailment was going to one for the HazMat crew, wandering around his dendrites in hermetic silver suits, staring at his idiocy from behind tinted polymer face-plates. Takimodo hadn’t expected his first power challenge to come in this game’s guise. It was so electric, he could almost smell the vibes in the air. And the longer he waited, the more crushing everything became, gathering intensity on orders of magnitude. Then it came to him. He had to finish the vocabulary hand. None of the others knew about his stint in an American high school. ‘Here, one of you can use my interface to look up proclivity while I go answer the door. I guess we’ve kept whoever it is waiting long enough to qualify as fashionable.’ Takimodo tossed his UI into one of the fast-food grease buckets as he started to move toward the door. Hans waited, and waited some more, until Tak had almost reached the door. Then, never once looking down from his ceiling view, Hans said, ‘Proclivity. A tendency toward certain types of behavioral patterns.’ Takimodo almost hesitated but quickly and surely he and his reflection reached out and grabbed the doorknob on the right door of the pair of polished steel portals from which the age-old knock had emanated. I’ll have to put Hans on pause until this scene plays through. Tak knew that Hans had been on a few of those slightly passé, fully deductible European sex junkets to Bang ‘City of Sin’ kok before the former had hired the latter away from the German version of one of those American grocery store checkout tabloids. Contributing editor Hans Friedman was playing his hand now because he realized from past experience how dangerous Bang-kops could be. If it was a cop (cops?) at the door and Hans upped the ante while the rusty badges were grilling him, he could end up in jail. Even though these guys took American Express to grease the wheels of the free market economy, Takimodo guessed he wouldn’t have much luck with his platinum plastic if the fuzz had already had sticky contributing editor claws all over them. His Achilles heel was that he had let himself get into cash flow problems, while even though Hans’ liquidity was by no means larger than Tak’s, there remained the possibility that the three of them together could put more money into the pocket behind the tarnished badge than he could ever hope to put together at this moment. Takimodo’s hand had been turning the doorknob for an eternity of pure motion in his mind. Then the cannabanoids rotated in their neural receptor sites, time swelled and instantly the door swung open to reveal a weasel peregrination, two of Bangkok’s finest. They were both short and very slick. Their badges, however, shone brightly in the expensive sunset that rolled into the foyer from the main room like a Rolls Royce Silver Phantom at a coronation. This confused Takimodo momentarily until he saw the
metaphor’s little trap. Shiny, rusty, who cares? I gotta deal with these assholes. This train of thought was beginning to seem accident-prone. ‘Yes, what can I do for you fine upstanding gentlemen this marvelous evening?’ Heavy on the powerful sarcasm because the cops wouldn’t understand English well enough o grab from the edifice of interaction.