Newsletter
Howdy folks,
You may recall that the last newsletter ended with news of my
shoulder surgery, and Shirl's happy prognostication that I would be
ready to pull lawn mower starters by spring. Not happening. The
shoulder still feels like there's an outraged mouse sewn in the
joint trying to chew its way out. Jeez! I even have to be careful
when I pick up our cat Panther. He starts licking the incision.
I should have known something was wrong right from the start when
the doctor told me that a Veg-O-Matic and Ginsu Chef's knives were
the newest surgical innovations. But fool that I was, I believed Dr.
Frankenshlash. I wasn't overly concerned when I read the rehab
prescription that he sent with me to the physical therapy center.
Given "physician's scrawl," I couldn't read much, but I recognized a
word here and there. Words like "inflict" or "infect" and I could
make out "screech" or maybe it was "scream." One line really puzzled
me. It said something like "much a goony" was good. What did goony
birds have to do with my shoulder?
I learned what "a goony" was at the physical therapy center. As I
sat in the waiting area, I heard this pathetic shrieking from an old
woman. "O god! O please, miss, please stop! No more pain! I promise
I'll never get sick again, if you just stop!" I put down the
magazine I was reading. Then I heard this screech from someone
else…a guy I think. "Nooo. Don't pull like that. Ahhhh! I'll
confess." Another gruff voice said, "We don't want any confessions."
The screecher offered, "Then I'll convert!" Then, there was just the
sound of gibbering sobs.
I suddenly recalled that I'd parked my car not near a fire
hydrant, but on top of one. I almost made it to the door when my
therapist caught up with me. She beckoned, "Walk this way." Her name
was Igora and as she stretched me out on a rac…ah…table she told me
that her brother was a supporting actor in a lot of 1930s horror
movies. In fact, Igora told me that she had her own thespian
aspirations. As she took my arm, she told me that she was
auditioning for a role in an upcoming remake of Ben Hur starring
Danny DeVito. Igora wanted to be one of the galley slaves. For
practice she worked my arm like an oar. Oh my shoulder, popping,
scrapping, snapping! When she reached ramming speed, I was
shrieking, "I'll confess…I'll convert."
So, three days a week I go in for physical torture, only to come
home to the psychological variety. Shirl the romance writer is now
also Alexa Hunt the thriller writer, but I suppose she's already
told you this. The gulf between the two genres is messing with her
head. When she is working on one of her comic contemporary romances,
she is laughing and bubbly (sometimes nauseatingly so, but safe).
However, when she is Alexa working on a thriller, I hide the kitchen
knives, and Panther hides behind the couch. He's old but not stupid.
Even the research is different. I like to help her do research
for her romances, especially the historicals—although even the
contemporaries have proven to be fun. Did you know that there really
is an outfit, Leather and Lace, into bondage gear? Samatha, the
heroine of Finders, Keepers, claims she buys her custom-made
straitjackets from that outfit. Wellllllll…Its called poetic
license.
But at least Leather and Lace didn't give me any flack. I can't
say about the subjects I've been researching for the thrillers. One
day I was on the web researching a harmless enough topic, the
kilo-tonnage of a satchel-sized nuke and its kill radius. Listen,
that stuff is all over the net. Anyway, suddenly the computer screen
went black, and then it started to glow. Oh my lord! The monitor
abruptly showed a picture of John Ashcroft. His finger was pointed
at me. I put up my hands. "I'll confess…I'll convert!"
Don't forget to visit
http://www.dorchesterpub.com.
Jim