How do you frame-in a one-year old story containing an
extremely flawed character? Do you start with today’s dialogue where the
resident unit manager in the employee lunchroom shares a firsthand account
between bites of his bologna sandwich? And if you sit closer to get a clearer
understanding of human nature will you be nodding your head while your newly
found lunch mate reminisces about this flawed character who for lack of a
better name we call Dr. Pepper or Dr. P for short?
First, in the retelling of this story you must visualize Dr.
P unsupervised in the prisoner visiting-room during non-visiting hours. Then
you must ask yourself, since he’s so close to the electronic gates and his
parole is less than one hour away, what could possibly go wrong? Then the
resident unit manager introduces you to another character—the day-shift sergeant
and you learn that she is making a phone call to Lansing ; still you are rooting for the
soon-to-be-ex-felon to do the right thing, to turn his life around. Tap those heels together, you want to
say (everyone likes an underdog) and
repeat after me, there’s no place like home, there’s no place like home. However,
we’re not in Kansas
are we? We’re in the dust storms of Michigan
and our flawed character has a parched throat and he’s rocking the vending
machine back and forth, back and forth, back and forth until a plastic bottle
of pop releases itself from the vending machine’s mechanical grip and Dr. P,
for all intents and purposes, does what he thinks is best: he quenches his thirst.
For clarification, or maybe because you just don’t want to believe someone
could be that stupid, you ask the resident unit manager whether Dr. P had been
warned about stealing a pop and you’re assured he had been warned more than
once. Also, you learn how his immediate response: “Fuck you Sarge, I’m going
home” may not have been the most diplomatic approach to a minor infraction
because custody staff escorted him back to his housing unit and told him to
wait there until this issue could be resolved.
You notice a wayward piece of cheese dangling from the
resident unit manager’s mouth. You ask him if Dr. P went home. “Oh no,” he
responds, “Dr. P locks in my unit. It’s been well over a year since his last
parole hearing.” You point to the cheese as if one perfect swipe will improve
the construction of this frame-story.
6 comments:
Oh yes, nicely done, framed and all~~
Been a while since I've seen a Towne Club; however, Vernors is being Imported from Detroit lately, signaling something worth additional framing, no doubt.
This is absolutely why I gave up pop. Or soda. Or whatever we call it in Michigan.
I'll have a root beer please.
J.R.-I do not drink pop at all, but as kids we were allowed a tiny glass on Friday nights. Kool Aid in the summer!
A saw on an old country song:
Reformed alcoholic says, "Now I don't drink anything stronger than Pop...But then Pop would drink just about anything."
This doesn't surprise me and I know there are many more stories like these. That's why they are behind 3 fences in the first place. Some never learn. Enjoyed the story. MW
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