Life In Oakland In Pittsburgh

I live in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh and I love it.  Everything I need is within walking distance; and that’s important when you’re a senior citizen, poor and don’t have a car.  I’m poor because it’s my own fault.  I didn’t find my niche until this year: blogging.  Well, some people never find their niche.

So, Pittsburgh, don’t cry for the Old Soldier.  I’ve just began to blog.  Check out my blog.  There are a lot of great articles, flash fiction and commentaries here.  Live life with passion, commitment and don’t forget to have fun.

Blogging’s Sweet Spot

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Flash Fiction by LaVonda Krout

A.K.A. Wham Bam Sam

A.K.A. Wham Bam Sam (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In the Glovebox

I bought the car from a greasy, gray-haired man in tight jeans . . . the worn outline of his Skoal can tracing the right front pocket. He needed a shave, a bath and an oil change.

“Yeah, she’s a beauty, isn’t she?” he said.  “Only 73,000 actual miles”

I thought, “Sure . . . and it was driven by a little old lady who only drove to church.”

Peering under the hood, I asked, “How new is the battery?”

Leaning in, his arm against mine under the hood he replied, “Well, the sticker on there is kind of ripped up, but if I remember right I got it in the winter of 2005. Should be good for quite a while yet.”

He was close enough that I could feel his breath on my shoulder and feel his gaze on the cleavage barely visible beneath my Oxford shirt.

Deciding I had provided enough titillation, I slammed the hood shut  and asked, “How much?”

“Well” . . . his eyes shifted, looking anywhere but at me, “she’s a classic you know. I don’t think I could let her go for less than . . . oh say $900?”

“This car hasn’t moved in months,” I said, pointing to the grass grown high around all four tires. “How about $700?”

He leaned away to spit a stream of tobacco juice at the scrawny cat lurking nearby. “$850?” he countered.

“How about $800 and you throw in those jumper cables and that case of oil over there?”

He scratched his head and said, “You got a deal.”

We shook hands, his was grimy and slick, mine dry and reluctant and I nobly resisted the urge to wipe mine on my jeans afterward.

The car started, I think to our joint amazement, and with only a slight miss on one cylinder. As an unexpected bonus, the ride home was smooth; apparently the shocks and suspension were in better shape than the rest of the car.

I parked in the drive, anxious to examine (and do a little heavy-duty cleaning of) the rough diamond I had bought.

The car had an odor of used motor oil . . . and old french fries.  In the glove box (which I am reasonably sure had never held a glove), I found: three packets of ketchup from McDonalds, numerous salt and pepper packets now solid with moisture or torn open and gritty, a dirty pine tree air freshener with a faint odor of disinfectant, an owner’s manual, the outside filthy and tattered, the unused pages inside pristine and slick, a tiny tin box containing red and blue tipped fuses already dead and corroded, a crumpled, many times refolded map of Tennessee with one completely worn through fold that cancelled out the cities of Nashville, Cookville, and McKenzie, a bottle of Visine with just a few drops in the bottom with the painted on label nearly scratched off giving the bottle the more appropriate name of “isine,” a cassette tape with no case titled “The Deed is Done” by Molly Hatchet, only the broken case of the tape “A.K.A. Wham Bam Sam” bearing a leering photo of Hank Williams Jr., and last and most certainly least . . .two small foil packets (guaranteed to be heat damaged and pinholed), with the evocative brand name “Ramses.”

I shuddered and went back into the house for the bleach.

********************

LaVonda Krout is a nurse, writer and gardener producing stories, healthy herbs and not-so-healthy hydrangeas in the hills of southern Indiana. She has previously been published in “Midwest Outdoors”, “Main Channel Voices”, “Centaur” and numerous publications and anthologies.

Flash Fiction by Robin Billings

Strain Free     

Early in summer, when it was warm enough I didn’t need a jacket at night, this girl I usually traveled around the bars with on Saturdays didn’t come for me. She had a date. So I drove to this place farther down the main road than the one we usually went to, this new three-story bar with a roof garden.    

English: Alexandria's waterfront, seen from th...

English: Alexandria’s waterfront, seen from the Potomac River. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

It was no good walking down that far in the dark that late, not even on the main road. It was a weird neighborhood like that, friendly enough in the daytime, but after dark, the nicey- nice covers came off, and being out alone after dark, you were asking for trouble. 

I talked to a couple of bikers on barstools I saw just about every week, whatever bar I ended up in, and I had a beer with them in the acoustic guitar room. Then I walked into the room in the back with these big black box speakers spanking out sound, and I talked to a few people standing around, and I kept on drinking. 

After a while, I was feeling like I’d been planted there for days waiting for somebody to find me, and finally, somebody did. I didn’t know his name. He said it to me there in the dark with the cacophonous whirling busy busy talk talk bar sounds all around us, but I didn’t hear it, and I didn’t ask him to repeat his name, please. 

And then he was driving my car in the dark and then we were on his bed in the fierce and immediate quickened way you can only feel when you have been transported, when you are so drunk so very drunk that time skips unimportant daze beats, and we were stripped warm naked and we were on his narrow line of a bed with the streetlight pouring in on us through his yellow blind. 

I started down his front, where the trough line lived at the line of the bones of his collar, and I started with my tongue and my fingers and I felt all the hollows and the curves of his skin and his hard bones down beneath them. 

He shivered when I did things to him. I liked feeling that shiver run down through him and on into me. 

The dark hairs started down near his belly. They were soft and easy to suck. I felt his hands move from my shoulders to the back of my head and they were holding onto my hair and they were grabbing for my hair and feeling for a thickness to hold onto as I went down the hairline on his belly. His legs moved in a soft convulsion, waiting for the feeling of my wet mouth to find him. So I found his legs and I fondled the inside of his thighs with my warm wetness and he opened up, he opened up for me and I moved up and found him there in the center of his body and he was ready for me to find him. 

He tried and strained to move from his side onto his back but I held him fast there so he could suffer a strong pulse of need for a while longer and make it stronger for us when it came. I loved him right then. 

After, I stayed with him through the night. The way he held onto me, the way he stroked the hair on the back of my head, with a soft stroke down, over and over, taking his fingers away at the tips of my hair, pulling his hand away, and starting again, and cupping the back of my head with his hand after, it seemed to me he thought I’d maybe stay longer. 

In the morning I climbed out of bed early and pulled on my jeans and my T-shirt. He watched me from his skinny bed. 

I whispered to him that I needed to go home for a while. He smiled and said he’d see me later, but I forgot to pay attention to the street sign when I drove away, and I didn’t know his name. 

—————— 

Brief bio: Robin Billings lives in Alexandria, Virginia, works for a large association across the Potomac in Washington, DC, and is working through edits on her first novel.

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