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“The Wake”: from the Autobiography of Mike Keegan (Written Posthumously by the Author) Part I
- pford001
- General Fiction / Humor
- 12 views
- 10 years ago
- Mild Language
Writer Notes
For Mike Keegan, death could be no worse than getting up in the morning.
Listen to the Reader
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Recording removed.
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By: Corrie
Show Comment
I like this. It is typical of pford001. So is this a piece to a longer story? Or is it a stand alone? It doesn't kinda just peter out. I also think this is a little bit autobiographical to pford001...staring at ceilings for an hour in the middle of the night, bizarre dreams, wanting to stick an ice pick in the eye... Can't really thing of anything else to add. Is this something from awhile ago or is it something new?
“The Wake”: from the Autobiography of Mike Keegan (Written Posthumously by the Author) Part I
By: pford001
It started with the phone call.
When he thought about it later, he decided it was the phone
call that broke the camel’s back. And not to mix
metaphors, but the phone call from his mother was like that
last dirty tee shirt tossed onto a pile of laundry that sent
the whole heap spilling to the floor. There were other
possibilities, sure. But if he’d had to make a bet, he
would have said the phone call did it.
His telephone rang in the middle of the night and, when he
picked it up, his mother told him they had found the big
German shepherd, Roughage, hanging from the fence by her
collar. His father had not been sure, but he thought the dog
had committed suicide.
Mike Keegan had just fallen back to sleep after staring at
the ceiling for an hour and wondering what the hell was wrong
with his life. He had first dreamed he was standing in the
bushes outside the Dunkin Donuts near his home. He was naked
except for his glasses, and he’d been nagged by the
feeling that he ought to go inside the store because people
who worked there might think him rude for watching through the
window. When a loud, insistent buzz forced its way into the
dream, he thought that it God signaling him to get out of the
bushes and go home. When he realized it was the phone, he
groaned and reached for the receiver.
His mother’s befuddlement foamed out of the
earpiece.
“Do you think she was depressed?” the woman
asked after telling him what had happened.
Only a woman whose coffee looked and tasted like gravy
would call a man in the middle of the night to ask if a German
shepherd could be depressed, Mike thought, and he continued to
groan while she talked about his father’s phlebitis and
the liver spots on the backs of her own hands.
It was three o’clock in the morning.
“Ma, please. I gotta get up for work in a few of
hours.”
“Michael Evander Keegan, are you so put upon by work
that you don’t have a few minutes to talk to your own
mother?”
“What the hell is he bellyaching about now?”
Mike heard his father in the background.
“You see,” said his mother.
“That’s all it takes to upset your father. As if
he weren’t distraught already. Now you’ve gone
and made it worse.”
“I didn’t DO anything!” Mike insisted.
“Why are you raising your voice? Is it too much to
ask that you show some concern for your father, and for the
family pet?”
“I’m sorry,” he said.
“I’ll bet you are. You always think about
yourself, but never your father and me. And poor
Roughage…”
His mother began to weep, and Keegan thought about putting
an ice pick through his eye.
“Ma, I have to go. I’m sorry about the dog.
Tell Dad—”
The phone clicked in his ear.
He threw the handset across the room and draped a forearm
over his eyes.
By day, he was an accountant, one of an infinite number
who haunted the business district and roamed the innards of
the city government. But in his heart, he was a writer,
plying his trade at night and on weekends. He had completed
only one book thus far, and thus far he had had no luck
finding an agent or a publisher. He had thought that his
title, Cooking with Hitler, would be a sure-fire attention
getter.
It was not so, however.
Of the three publishers who bothered to answer his
inquiry, two had mistaken the book for a humorous take on der
Fuhrer, and the third had told him his idea showed such poor
taste that he need never contact them again.
Two little known facts about Hitler were that he was a
superb baker, and that he often served strudel made with his
very own recipe to members of the Nazi high command when they
gathered at Berteschgarten. In the months between the Battle
of Britain and Operation Barbarossa, he had combated the
mounting stress by focusing on his lemon wedges. As
preparations for the invasion of Russia moved into high gear,
he had become so frazzled that he put aside desserts
altogether and threw himself into roasts and poultry with a
gusto that no one had seen since the burning of the Reichstag.
Michael was no Nazi sympathizer. Oh no. He simply
appreciated the cosmic irony of the world’s greatest
murderer longing in his heart of hearts to win the Dusseldorf
Bake Off. If that wasn’t material for a book, what was?
Michael had labored two and a half years to document the
German leader’s endeavors, and when he was done, when
the completed manuscript was in hand, he’d presented it
triumphantly to Candace, his girlfriend, and she had given him
a stricken look and then gone to bed without speaking to him.
Candace was gone now, of course. She had moved out two
weeks ago, but not because of the book. She had packed her
things and left two days after Michael came home with a letter
from the Human Resources department at his firm. The letter
said simply that his position (along with twenty-three others)
was being eliminated. There were details about his severance
package and a promise to help him locate and transition into a
new blah blah blah blah. He had not yet told his parents
because, well…because they were his parents. His
mother, who cared more about the dog than she did him, would
blather on for days about how she had told him to at least try
to get into medical school because no one ever heard of a
doctor being out of work. And his father, who had the
dangerous habit of drinking beer while he fed the wood chipper
in the backyard, would grumble in agreement to whatever she
said because it was easier than thinking about the thing for
himself...
Comments
WQAdmin
pford001, you have a way, here, of capturing the human condition through character speech and behavior. We all know these characters because they are us. And certainly we can laugh and identify with any adult child of these two parents.
That being said, now that "we" are in the story, our sympath...pford001, you have a way, here, of capturing the human condition through character speech and behavior. We all know these characters because they are us. And certainly we can laugh and identify with any adult child of these two parents.
That being said, now that "we" are in the story, our sympathies surrendered to it, you can take us anywhere you want and we'll gladly follow. This is the craft of a good writer, and you demonstrate that technique quintessentially.
The "depressed German Shepherd" is inventive as hell -- at once tragic and hilarious -- and provides an undercurrent of tension, lending a twisted, glad guilt to our participation.
I appreciated the "blah blah blah blah". You knew we didn't want to read the perfunctory letter, so you didn't make us. And knowing this about us gave you more authority as the story teller. Nice job there.
I also love love love your daring in the cumulative sentence, specifically from line 92 to 96. You're exercising your literary skill there.
I had a little trouble pronouncing some of the proper names, "Roughage" and the German stuff. But I see this as a positive, too. We all like to read slightly above our capabilities. We think we're learning something. haha
Typo on line 25.
Anyways, can't wait to see where this is going... DO CONTINUE!!!
That being said, now that "we" are in the story, our sympath...pford001, you have a way, here, of capturing the human condition through character speech and behavior. We all know these characters because they are us. And certainly we can laugh and identify with any adult child of these two parents.
That being said, now that "we" are in the story, our sympathies surrendered to it, you can take us anywhere you want and we'll gladly follow. This is the craft of a good writer, and you demonstrate that technique quintessentially.
The "depressed German Shepherd" is inventive as hell -- at once tragic and hilarious -- and provides an undercurrent of tension, lending a twisted, glad guilt to our participation.
I appreciated the "blah blah blah blah". You knew we didn't want to read the perfunctory letter, so you didn't make us. And knowing this about us gave you more authority as the story teller. Nice job there.
I also love love love your daring in the cumulative sentence, specifically from line 92 to 96. You're exercising your literary skill there.
I had a little trouble pronouncing some of the proper names, "Roughage" and the German stuff. But I see this as a positive, too. We all like to read slightly above our capabilities. We think we're learning something. haha
Typo on line 25.
Anyways, can't wait to see where this is going... DO CONTINUE!!!
- October 7, 2014
- ·
Corrie
I like this. It is typical of pford001.
So is this a piece to a longer story? Or is it a stand alone? It doesn't kinda just peter out.
I also think this is a little bit autobiographical to pford001...staring at ceilings for an hour in the middle of the night, bizarre dreams, wanting to stick an ice pi...I like this. It is typical of pford001.
So is this a piece to a longer story? Or is it a stand alone? It doesn't kinda just peter out.
I also think this is a little bit autobiographical to pford001...staring at ceilings for an hour in the middle of the night, bizarre dreams, wanting to stick an ice pick in the eye...
Can't really thing of anything else to add. Is this something from awhile ago or is it something new?
So is this a piece to a longer story? Or is it a stand alone? It doesn't kinda just peter out.
I also think this is a little bit autobiographical to pford001...staring at ceilings for an hour in the middle of the night, bizarre dreams, wanting to stick an ice pi...I like this. It is typical of pford001.
So is this a piece to a longer story? Or is it a stand alone? It doesn't kinda just peter out.
I also think this is a little bit autobiographical to pford001...staring at ceilings for an hour in the middle of the night, bizarre dreams, wanting to stick an ice pick in the eye...
Can't really thing of anything else to add. Is this something from awhile ago or is it something new?
- October 10, 2014
- ·
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