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Saturday, November 10, 2018

Enjoy Chapter 1 From My Novel, Beatlemaniac – a preview.


                                                                      Chapter 1





December 8, 1989

Oahu, Hawaii.

Alone near the dinner table, Yulie cringed and held her breath when the ragged screen door banged against its weather-beaten split wood frame. In silent gloom, her child, Davy, stared into the plate of last night’s canned tuna over rice. For nine long years, this of all days resurrected the worst upheaval forced on a living soul. And now, her youngster suffered horrible nightmares alongside five anguish anniversaries of his disgusting bloodline. He agonized over terrible dreams of people ripping out his father’s heart with razor-sharp fingers, and then turning on the lad, chasing him, yelling, “Kill the son.” Yulie tried consoling her little boy, saying his dreams were make-believe and only silly nonsense. However, each year the dreams grew bloodier, forever haunting his mind, and severely changed the way he developed. He always asked his mother what would people really do to him if they actually found out who his father was. “They will do nothing,” she assured him, “except feel sorry for you.”

     Davy’s disappointed gaze on the hot-scooped serving shifted toward Yulie, but only in pity, and returned to the unappetizing goop. His tightened, crumpled lips spoke louder than their defeated manner and reached her same conclusion. Both hated leftovers, but money problems long ago kept them from enjoying more.

     She tried to fake a smile. “Remember, Davy, your father cherished the Beatles as we do.”

     His piercing eyes lifted fast from the plate, bolted onto hers colder than Iceland, but all the same burned the woman’s flesh like scorching steam. “No. As grandma says, I wish Father never existed. I wish you’d married a Beatle. Father didn’t cherish the Beatles, I love the Beatles. I hate Father.” The boy dragged out his table chair with a rough jerk but refused to sit. “I’m glad he never saw me, Mom, and I never want to see him or his grave.”

     “You’re upset at today, not at Father.”

     “No. Everything wrong comes from Father.” He scooted his chair back in place and softened his tone. “I’m not hungry. I’ll wait till breakfast.”

     “Expect to fix yourself a bowl of cold cereal. I’ll use tonight’s dinner and make you a plump tuna with rice sandwich stored in the fridge for lunch. I have an early shift tomorrow and can’t upset Ms. Yoshida clocking in late.”

     “You shouldn’t let that rotten woman treat you like she does. It’s evil.”

     “I’m sorry you saw that, but try to overlook her faults; I do.”     

     “Good night, Mom.”

                                __________________________

4 Years Later, December 9, 1993.

County Courthouse conference room, Oahu, Hawaii.

“Please have a seat Mrs. Chapman; I appreciate you taking time from your employment,” said the young doctor.

      Her spine stiffened, upper teeth bit hard against her lower lip and like a shot, both arms folded tight under her breasts. “Davy’s father is Mr. Chapman, but I’m Ms. Tanaka, Yulie Tanaka.”  

  “Oh, my mistake; I apologize, Ms. Tanaka.” He waited for her to settle into the chair. “Mr. Lundy, our juvenile corrections director, called me in last night to begin behavior counseling for your 13-year-old son, Davy.” Her chin tilted south, forcing her eyes to stare at the ground, which threw an uneasy mood into the room. “Before meeting the boy, I read through the officer’s incident report, as a head start to find a method best suitable.” His pause lasted longer than customary.

     She raised her head. “And?”

     “His conduct showed severe bi-polar characteristics, but after hours of psychoanalysis, I can vouch that his hate stems from an abandonment disorder.”

     In shame, the meek woman accepted a facial tissue. “Yes, Doctor, Mr. Chapman left a solitary shadow of shame hanging over me and uprooted a rocky wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am romance. He deserted us during the fourth month of my pregnancy, and the denial of Davy by his father has multiplied fits of anger streaks to our son.”

     “Ms. Yoshida’s screams saved her bodily harm from the silver hammer Davy possessed during their heated conflict. Your boy’s public defender seeks a reduced six-month sentence, but I urge you to reconsider. The needed therapy for personal happiness may succeed if we’re given a full year and can rehabilitate his hostility. My staff and I will uncover any clinical disarray and redirect delicate emotions from his negative thoughts wedged inside his head. Moreover, the process comes free.”

     “That’s next to all I can afford, free, but must he live here for a whole year? Davy hasn’t slept in another bed besides his own until last night.”

     “He must, or our no-cost treatment disappears, Ms. Tanaka.”

     She rose to her feet while the mangled tissue again wiped her dampen eyes. “I understand.”

     “Good. I’ll make Davy’s arrangements with the public defender this afternoon. Don’t look so worried; this is a positive thing, and we welcome your visits from two to five p.m. Come release time, you will see young Davy well-grounded and able to serve society as opposed to engaging in violent criminal activity.”    

     “Thank you, Doctor, for looking after him.”

                              __________________________    



18 Years Later, Late March 2011.

Los Angeles County

To commemorate three decades of service to the Main Headquarters Library in Ash Lyn, California, appointed as CEO to the entire seven branches and three bookmobiles 20 years ago, Freda Kelly was ready to clean out her desk and call it quits.   

     50-years old, she seldom strayed from any goal, short or long, and looked forward to her $2,000 per month pension. With over $3,450,000 in reserves, she was ready to ignite her new dream.

     Fewer than five weeks and the garage sale will include my awful alarm clock, she told herself, and when the house sells, I’ll launch my patented reading program in Central America. Ten months ago, Panama’s Department of Education had learned that Freda’s new course, Getting Better - A Child’s Right to Read, could offer the equivalent of a day-by-day confidence booster shot to any child four through fourteen. For the last two years, not a week went by without her e-mail account filling with hundreds of testimonial triumphs from pre-school, elementary, and middle-school staff who admired her teachable recipe. Each message brought complete fulfillment. How these educators located her e-mail, though, remained unclear. Last August, Panama made a perfect offer suited for her career. Small group lessons from border to border, conducted Tuesdays through Thursdays, and when travel exceeded 100 miles from her new residence, the department would provide an automobile, lodging, and meals.        

      Unmarried, although several men pursued her, Freda decided in high school to serve others rather than devote her best to a husband with baggage, or to juggle a selfish family who resents giving away her time. Her success as campaign manager to elect Mayor Dave Chapman soared into shape as if a cakewalk compared to the four long years designing, planning, and editing her smart software curriculum. Since the program’s debut, the educated tool became a Godsend to teachers and a gold mine to its author.

     A home in Panama presented no problems for her thriving DVD business. Freda’s Getting Better web page directed all inquiries and product purchase dealings through a major manufacturer in Bombay, India prior to its one-year anniversary in 2010.   

     The ring from the phone broke her pleasant-life-abroad daydream, but Freda, conscious of being on duty, assisted the caller. “Ash Lyn Main Library, Freda speaking.”

     “Hello, Freda, I applaud and salute your 30 unsurpassed performance years to the city. Deeds proficient by few saved those you inspire to follow your example in leadership skills, for our future.”

     Unsure who this caller with a hinted Asian accent was, she said, “Why, thank you.”

     “I understand you reach discomfort with idle small talk, so let me disclose the reason for my call. I need to verify you received the $100,000 grant prearranged by the American Library Association in Chicago.”

     In all her years collecting donated funds from different reliable authority, never had a soul requested a verbal record. “We received the deposit Monday. Is anything wrong?”

     “Not at all; I wanted to authenticate its actual arrival and appearance.”

     Freda was baffled. “Authenticate its actual arrival and appearance? Who are you?”

     “Call me Pang.” 

     “Please forgive me, Mr. Pang, but I . . .”

     “Not Mr. Pang,” he interrupted her. “Just Pang.”

     “Alright, Pang, as I said the money is safe, and I have confirmed it, so if nothing else?” 

     “One important item, if you please. I necessitate the account number and its password that secure the main branch grant fund.”

     She channeled a defensive attitude. “I beg your pardon?” 

     “You heard me. Unless you cooperate, disturbed consequences will follow, so I suggest you conform.”

     A quartet of townspeople formed a line for service near the checkout desk, and each shouldered at least six books. “I’ve got a few patrons near the counter,” she said. “I’ll take your call in my quarters.”

     Pang agreed.

     After entering her office, she slammed the door with an inflamed temper and clenched her jaw. “Now, Mr. Pang, I mean Pang, why must you make such a doubtful demand?” 

     “You ask a fair question, indeed, justifiable of an immediate, precise answer. I alone shall remove either 20% from the grant fund balance under your care or 100% of the currency from your personal savings sheltered by Wells Fargo. You have 10 seconds to render its password and 20 seconds to divulge its account number, or say goodbye to three and a half million dollars and the cash flow it supplies for your abundant fortunes in India.”

     “Now look here, you son of a bitch . . .”

     “It appears you affirmed which account to defile. In my opinion, an unwise choice, but you are young and in another fourteen years earning wages with your current employer, money lost today will build back.

Regrettable that you still must sell your home, because how will you subsidize the expenses Bombay requires each week? At least, any apartment community should welcome you based on superb references, plus the library’s gratitude you’re staying on must feel nice.”

     “Why trounce on me, and how did you uncover my personal livelihood?”           

     “I’m privileged to have known just a little extra. Farewell, Freda.”    

     “No, wait,” she said, but Pang’s phone disconnected.

     In a rush, she logged her PC to the internet, and from her favorites list, double-clicked the Wells Fargo Bank website. Her heart pounded as the screen loaded its sign-in page. Afterward, she typed her username, password, and clicked go.

                                ____________________________



Finished with a morning customer, the strange noise beyond Freda’s closed door startled Cilla from her chair. Looking toward the sound, and to the other side, no one else showed concern. Cilla White, assistant director, moved up the promotion ladder quickly and was tickled pink to work alongside Freda.

     Not wanting to appear too inquisitive, Cilla fixed her gaze on the door, hopeful her boss would exit with a humorous reason. Minutes had gone by but not another sound. “I know,” said Cilla, “I’ll phone and remind her the Friends of the Library gratitude luncheon begins this Saturday.” She dialed Freda’s extension and listened to the rings in the next room. Bewildered at hearing the line ring after ring and no pick-up, she approached the door and knocked. Still silence. She entered slowly, calling Freda’s name, but saw Freda drooped face down, motionless, gun in hand and a bullet wound to her temple. Cilla screamed for help, and others rushed to the gruesome scene.

     A male volunteer commanded, “No one touch a thing and leave the room. Let the police handle this.”

    All Cilla could say was, “Why.” Freda’s PC monitor had darkened, and the screensaver had seconds until it rid the vital clue needed to solve the atrocious act. Just a slight nudge of the mouse might have told detectives the answer to Cilla’s question, but no. The screensaver gave up its exposure. If anyone was to revive the image now, first, her password required consent acceptance, and the monitor could reproduce what devastated Freda to take her life by the consequent display:  Wells Fargo account number 909-17-642: Transfer $3,459,783.44 to Ping Gou You Han Gung Ci Bank of Hong Kong. Transaction completed and accepted today at 10:41 a.m. local time. New Balance: 00.00

                                    ________________________                         

        

Inside a five-star hotel room, within an easy stroll from Ping Gou You Han Gung Ci Bank, the flawless apparatus plugged into Pang’s computer worked impeccable. Its inventor, Mr. Lee Wang Hue, guaranteed all along that his unique prototype device would pass the test miles beyond Pang’s belief. These units read computer language in English then transposed it to Mandarin, Min, or Hakka Chinese, and with great success. By sheer coincidence, to make banking easier for his grandfather’s sour memory, Hue learned of its incredible ability to expose necessary passwords when fed correct figures in an easy-to-follow order.

     “Now remember, Pang, if you fail to send my creation the exact last deposit amount, the password shall remain hidden. Each attempt requires dollars and cents, so stay alert your records furnish full discovery.”

     “Yes, Mr. Hue, my stats provide everything I need to make your creation and myself content. Please tell me once again the mandatory steps to success.”

     “Sure. First, you bring up the bank account website. Click username and type in the account number plus dot Q-dot number one, and hit enter.” Pang took immaculate notes as Hue paused. “The device will enter whichever code name used by this account number and perform a cut and paste-like command. Next, click password and type in the last deposit dollar amount plus dot Q-dot number two and again, hit the enter key.”

     Pang raised a hand in an apologetic gesture to wait a moment, and after scripting notes, said, “Thank you, please continue, Mr. Hue.”

     “The device will formulate the last deposit as authorized proof to access the account, and again, a cut and paste will fill in the routine password. The secret word continues undisclosed to the eye, but you are ready to withdraw from any checking or savings associated with the account holder. If password observance turns crucial for any reason, highlight the coded password, press the Alt key, and hit number 9 plus F9 together.”

     “What happens, Mr. Hue?”

     “My effective little charmer shall rewrite the code to English like it rewrites English to Chinese. Nothing hit or miss. If the user’s password has certain caps, they will show. If the user likes the number three for the letter E or the dollar sign for the letter S, they too will show.”

     Pang lifted himself from the leather chair and extended his hand toward Hue. “Mr. Hue, I accept our deal. Here are your contacts in Bombay. The Getting Better reading programs include three DVD packages, pre-school, elementary school, and middle school. The pitch for how you negotiate distribution rests in your hands. If you can enlarge your territory sales beyond China, you have my blessing. As I mentioned, the product has pretty much topped sales in North America, so no doubt you will advance an instant hero to India’s economics, and China’s education system. With your invented English to Chinese translator, you gain chance selling your proprietary product plus a reading DVD to every school in your country.”

     Hue examined the contact names for Bombay. “Our agreement pleases me, and I look upon you as my family. Although, forgive me, your face doesn’t appear to have traditional Chinese features.”

     “My mother was an Asian from Japan, but my father was Caucasian. Nevertheless, I also welcome you like family. Let’s celebrate with a traditional Geisha House meal. Rumors from Special Administrative Region predict they could be going in and out of style, therefore tomorrow might be too late. I must return to Beijing come the dawn.”

                                 _____________________________



THREE MONTHS LATER

Wednesday morning, minutes after five o’clock as the day began, United’s commercial jet engines finished their rotated spin parked at the LAX gate ramp. Tall, dark, and more handsome than most movie stars, 27-year-old Mr. Heath Wilson unlatched the overhead compartment and replaced the official documents, which robbed him of slumber aboard the outbound red eye flight from the nation’s capital. Even with little sleep, his prominent good looks suffered modest penalty. A smidgen of strain darted from his dark blue pupils, taking on a busy overworked proofreader appearance. But his five o’clock shadow, darkened by 12 hours of overtime, paid magnetic tribute to the firm masculine chin anchored below lips women dream to experience. The man’s abilities to perk up the opposite sex faster than a blood bank can change a vampire’s eyeteeth into fangs didn’t register a clue inside his own wits. He had suffered from self-confidence around girls during his final years in high school, and ever since, had preferred to let his work assignments drive and embrace every part of his passion.   

     Unbothered by the occasional bump from other passengers as they squeezed by, he took his time and assured each folder returned in episode order, convinced a precedent of sorts begged for the spotlight.

     With the double-locked briefcase secured in his hand, he reached for his carry-on luggage. Light travel made leaving the jet easy, and he proceeded toward the exit equipped to dismantle the horrified misfortunes plaguing this 99,000-count resident community.

     “Thank you for flying with us, Mr. Wilson,” said the airline’s angelic blonde-haired woman with hazel-gray Sophia Loren eyes, but much more beautiful.

     Reverence splashed across his face. “I should thank you for your concern, Tiffany, but if I fell asleep as you suggested, my eyes would have missed the enrichment of your loveliness.”

    Undenied loveliness surrounded this gorgeous Germanic, Anglo-Saxon goddess, built with an ideal figure, which curved in all the right places. Her luminous hair, falling just past the mid-length of her back, outweighed the look and feel of silk, and long sinuous strands framed her delicate face as if God knew He had outdone Himself in creating His genuine and utmost masterpiece.

     Her face flushed, self-conscious by Wilson’s tribute, and sensitive to the fact that the pilot heard his eulogized comment, she did nothing but smile. A smile both Wilson and the pilot relished.

     Intrigued by the minor tension and reluctant to yield, Wilson let fly, “I should have complimented you hours ago. When you blush, you become twice as beautiful.”

     “Yes, she does,” interrupted the pilot.

     Embarrassed, she mouthed the words thank you three times and held onto his left hand moving the last few steps to the outlet, where she continued her farewells until finished with the other passengers.

     Because the local car rental choices remained closed another two hours, Wilson studied the hotel panel lined with guest phones who promised shuttle service 24/7. Puzzled by which lodge operated near City Hall, he prepared to dial the long hospitality list and wondered how he’d remember the ideal place after his basic questions, such as rates, parking, room service, and any other upgraded perks.

     “Need a good advocate, Mr. Wilson? I’ve lived in Ash Lyn my whole life.”

     Pleased to see the beautiful angel, he perked right up and concealed his fatigue. “I’m in your hands, Tiff, but I have necessities.” 

     “Necessities like single, blonde, and hazel eyes?” 

     “I’m ah, speaking hotel features.”

     “I knew it,” Tiff said. “I’m testing the waters, and you passed.”

     “Passed?” 

     “You know. Curious if you’re the kiss-and-tell or the look-but-don’t- touch type.”

     He fumbled with his loosened tie to align it straighter. “I like to credit myself as the respectful type.”

     “How impressive.”

     “As impressive as the pilot?”

     “The flight captain?” she said, amused. “He failed.”

     “How so?” 

     “Let’s just say he kisses and tells and is the can’t-keep-his-hands-to- himself type. But enough of him, how about a place to stay I offered earlier?” 

     “Okay, I trust you.”

     “Excellent, explain your necessities.”

     With a hand placed near his chin, he responded, “I’d like something close to City Hall and secure parking for a rental. If the hotel has good food with room service, I’m indebted. Free high-speed internet and cable TV will help rebuff my all-work-and-no-play syndrome. And any rather particular features you believe will improve my stay.”

     “Is that a come on, Mr. Wilson?”

     “Please call me Heath.” His foot inched a step toward her. “A come on, never. I invite you to suggest anything I’ve missed.”

     “I know just the place, Heath. I can drive you.”

     “I don’t want to impose?”  

     “Quit with the guilt trip. Besides, I hoped we could get closer acquainted.”

    “Me too,” he said without a beat, surprising himself.

     Burrowed tight inside her car, with his seat belt locked in place, Wilson thrashed about to free his wallet. Tiffany watched the comical antic and within her chuckle, he held up his billfold. “Victory at last.”

     “What gives, if you don’t mind me asking?”

     “At least let me pay your parking.”

     “The airport permits airline employees to park free, goofy. Why can’t you accept it?”    

     “Accept what?” 

     “I’m a cheap date.” Laughter spewed from both and lightened their jitters. “So, Heath, what line of work do you do?” 

     “If I tell you, I have to kill you.”

     “Oh, confidential government top-secret type stuff?” 

     “I wish. Try confidential mortified top-secret type stuff.”

     She gave him a double take. “Oh, now you really have me curious, even if it means my doom.”

     “All right, but you asked for it. I research reporting news for Lacey Grief.”

     “Ugh, I can’t stand her.”

     “Get in line. But she pays well, and I travel a lot, so I spend little time in her presence, thank God.”

     “How do you put up with a few minutes in her presence? She acts like such a know-it-all, and so rude. Interrupts her guests left and right, and lordy, how she goes off to make them look stupid when she’s the one who comes across like THE DUMB BLONDE. Ding, hello . . . does that ring a bell for ya, Lacey Grief?” 

     “Whoa, calm down, Tiff. Don’t break a blood vessel over that witch spelled with a b.”   

     “I hate people who put themselves on higher pedestals.”

     “If Lacey didn’t, who else would? She confesses her biggest fan is her father.”

     Tiff raised her eyebrows. “Yes, a child only a parent could love.”

     “Let me share a funny incident that happened at the studio not so long ago. Maybe you will enjoy this sweet revenge tidbit against Mrs. Know-It-All.”

     “Do tell.”

     “Lacey, in the middle of invited input from her expert panel, wretched a losing battle with those who disagreed with her and cowered behind those who supported her stand. A caller enters announced because Lacey can’t turn the heated feud in her favor, and the viewer says how much he enjoys the show and never misses her program. She thanks him for his allegiance and says, ‘What’s your question, dear?’ Then the caller asked, ‘How much do you pay your guests for all the grief you put them through? I’m sure plenty, because 99% of the questions from callers who watch your show are passed to them. Your producer must live high on the hog to justify enormous sums for them to bail you out since you don’t feel confident to answer. I also notice you don’t listen, asking dumb questions by the score already verified for you and us during your show. I mean, come on, Lacey; please stop your boring questions we viewers can answer.’”

     “Oh, wow, I wish I could have seen that particular program,” said Tiff.

     “Sorry to say, I’m sure none of the TV audience saw it. Live television regulates a mandatory 10-second delay just in case someone live decides to mess with the standards and practices behavior code. A perfect example is Janet Jackson’s wardrobe mishap at Super Bowl XXXVIII in 2004.”

     “I remember.”

     “Anyway, the entire staff, Lacey’s guests, and many sister affiliates witnessed freak-out drama with Lacey Grief as the star. The incident happened so fast, shock turned to hysterics, impossible to control. Everyone crowed, and the e-mails from other associate stations jabbed just as hilarious. The program director had no choice but to cut to commercial and plead for everyone’s self-control, however, before reset from the sponsored break, our Camera 3 Operator zooms in on Lacey’s face, and from the video booth a voice echoes through the entire studio with these words. ‘Lacey, please grab a tissue; we see a long, unattractive booger making a floppy nuisance every time you exhale.’ Well, this even caused the program director to lose it. People fell to the floor in stitches they were laughing so hard.”

     Tiff sputtered giggles. “Please, don’t stop, tell me the rest.” 

     “The video booth ran another commercial because no way her live segment participants could maintain composure, let alone function without bobbled heads, shaken shoulders, and nose snorts.”

     “What about the famous pledge, the show must go on?” she asked.  

     “Oh, the show went on, but the executive producer gave the video manager orders to use a prior tape with similar subject content. I doubt viewers could tell the difference. Lacey took a few vacation days to repair confidence, and by the time she returned, common decency from the staff had closed the matter. But it’s a fun story to tell anyone who dislikes her.”

     “I agree. What reporting news brings you to Ash Lyn?” 

     Wilson hesitated. “You’re no doubt aware city workers received provoked threats by e-mail, correct?” 

     “Yeah, but isn’t that all they are, threats from dissatisfied residents about the cost of living? At least the local newscasts interpret them as such.”              

     “Yes, but to paraphrase Lacey, threats with or without action may lead to powerful TV ratings, pumped up with her exaggerated bylines, of course.”

     “I don’t believe her, Mr. Research Reporter, but remind me to send a thank you note for assigning you to my neighborhood.”

     He half-jokingly added, “You write it, and we both sign it.”

     Wilson noticed Tiff’s car decelerate as she announced, “Last stop, City Hall, two blocks safe and sound. Underground guest parking with security personnel, and a yummy superior hotel restaurant. Last but not least, cable TV includes free movie channels and high-speed internet.”

     Wilson clapped in approval. “I’d give you a standing ovation if I were a midget.”

     “If you were a midget, I’d be home by now.”

     “You wouldn’t go out of your way for a little person?”

     “Not true,” she answered, “who put those silly things in your head? If you were a little person, I’d still recommend this first-rate lodge, even escort you for transport.”

     “Then how would you be home by now?”

    “You’d be inside the hotel’s courtesy van.” She flashed her passenger an enormous wink.

     Wilson shifted, reached for his baggage, and asked, “Can I buy you breakfast?”

     “You mean dinner?” 

     “No. I mean breakfast, as in right now.”

     Tiff grinned a closed-mouth smile. “I eat breakfast at 7:30 in the evening.  Remember, I work the red-eye flight every Tuesday.”

     “You’re right, I mean dinner.”

    “I’d love to,” she said, “but I just have enough time to run a few errands before I get my beauty sleep. You also should get some rest and dream sweet dreams, if you can, for me. I gazed at you the complete trip, and not once did you put your paperwork aside.”

     He raised his shoulders. “A man’s got to do what a man has to do, although, I’m not responsible if you obtain added beauty and I can’t resist your smile.”

     She blushed again and jotted her number on a scrap of paper. “Yes, you can buy me breakfast. I set my alarm for 6:00 p.m. on Wednesdays.”

Please feel free to leave any comments or corrections and share these articles plus the blog's website with your friends, especially Beatles’ fans. You and they might also enjoy knowing more about my Love Songs CD and my novel, BEATLEMANIAC. Just click on the “My Shop” tab near the top of this page for full details.

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