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Hello! TNI Books (tnibooks.com)
has occupied this website for a brief period of time. It will be
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in search of something interesting, you won't go away disappointed.
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Welcome to the
LITTLE ENGINES Issue Three Electronic Reading Tour!
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The Pockets
by Paul Maliszewsk
"There is nothing that makes one feel
so much at home in a foreign city as knowing a good bar: a place
where on can feel comfortable quickly, and go back to, in the
hope, if not the certainty, of being recognized."
-Financial Times
Let me give you this example: In Marrakech,
at Tapster's, everyone knows my name. Because I tell it to them,
straight out. In a way I instruct them, but totally without guile,
mind you. I say to them, I say, Sound it out now. I say, Listen
to me. I say, Watch my mouth. See my lips? It's easy. I say, Listen,
a wise man once told me that no sound is sweeter to a man than the
sweet sound of his own name. And I say to them, Ergo, because I
like the sound of that too, Ergo, I will pay you, right now, right
here, understand? to tell me mine.
I've discovered that money, when strategically
deployed, assists the process of memory formation and, in particular,
promotes the cementation of certain long-term memories. The upshot
there being that everywhere I go people know who I am.
I carry all the funny little pink and yellow and orange currencies
of the world, in my pants pockets, my wallet, and stuffed in my
back-up billfold. Some I have zipped into my belt, in a discrete
pouch. I line my shoes with the stuff; I walk all over it. In my
hotel room, alone, before venturing out into the night, I sit on
the edge of the bed and fan a sheaf of bills into a thin layer and
spread it over my calves. The TV in the corner is tuned to VH-1,
replaying an in-depth documentary history of rock history documentaries.
My gold-toe socks, pulled smartly up and over the bills, hold the
thin layers of currency in place.
The wondrous elastic properties of my socks
have never once embarrassed me. Disinterested third-parties have
commented that the subtle effect on my legs' musculature is somewhat
stunning, provocative even, so long as I'm seated just right, and
there's the sort of light that not so much hides as forgives flaws
and perhaps a little of that music they play, in the background,
not blaring, never blaring, and so long as I have my one good leg
dangling jauntily over the other, and then the cuff of my pants
(worsted wool!) creeps up just so. It's quite perfect.
You may have to work at it, but they'll remember
your name provided you get a fix on their price. Don't let the "language
barrier" grind negotiations to a halt. Use your hands, gesture
if you have to, speak loudly. My name, I say, pointing to myself.
My name, I repeat, thumping my sternum with cupped hands. Cupped
hands being what you call your inclusive, gentle, and warm body
language.
I have inner pockets, coin purses, money
clips, a beautiful chrome change machine hanging from a leather
strap around my neck. My checkbook's the size of a photo album,
one for a big family. Everything's monogrammed, embossed or engraved
or otherwise emblazoned with the initials that spell the very names
by which I'm known and are sweet for me to hear. These days I pad
the shoulders of my suit with rolls of American quarters, which
coin seems to be hot with the kids. Used to be nickels were. Even
my pockets have pockets, and they're all full.
My bad leg doubles as a bank safe. The Vault
is what I call it. It's got a surgical steel, triple-tumbler combination
lock machined right into the kneecap, just set right into the sucker.
The combination changes each month. Has to, for security. Additionally,
I possess a killer fanny-pack whose equal is not known, will not,
in fact, ever be known, because I had it custom-tailored in southern
Italy, out of Spanish leather and the finest Libyan thread. This
southern Italian guy did the stitching using a fossilized pine needle
from a rare tree found only near the very top of the western face
of Mt. Sinai, he told me.
You can hold your fingers up to show how
high you're willing to go. For instance, two fingers means you'll
give them two of whatever it is they happen to want most of all
in the place wherever you happen to be at the time. My name, I say,
gesturing openly and warmly, and then hold up seven fingers in front
of my face. Then I look at my fingers outstretched like that, nodding
at them from left to right, to emphasize the sheer plenitude of
digits I'm abstractly offering in place of what they want most of
all.
When in Alma-Ata, Kazakhstan, you have to
track down Lou's or Tip-A-Few if that's closed the night you go.
The Kazakhs moved their capital last summer sometime, I think, or
maybe the year before, so neither place is overrun with miserable
administrator types anymore. You get a whole different crowd, friendlier
and polite like you wouldn't believe, while still not compromising
the frisson of danger thing I associate with all those breakaway
republics.
Which reminds me, there was a place on the
island of Borneo, this is in the interior, that used to be called
Olde Ale House. It got bought out five or six years ago by Slim's.
Slim's is sort of a semi-local chain of similar independently-managed
establishments in the western Pacific Malay region. In spite of
the new owners and what have you, it's still good. They kept the
same bartender on. Definitely worth the trip if you have time off
in Jakarta and just want to get away from everything for awhile.
In Cabo Frio, which I prefer to Rio de Janeiro
- same coastal clime, same access to airports, same etc. - do yourself
a favor and inquire about this place that's a bar disguised as a
fully-operational eighteen-wheeler. It doesn't even have a name.
Say the truck/bar is driving by, on the outside it looks every bit
the spitting image of those trucks that carry the poisonous gases,
all plastered with red signs and stern prohibitions, saying whatever
'notice' and 'warning' are in Portuguese. But inside they've got
a teakwood bar that will quite simply impose a stiff excise tax
on your lungs.
The next time you're in Djibouti, try Ed's.
I met an Account Rep for Barbasol in Gdansk who told me about it.
He was there creating some new popular thinking about facial hair.
And go to The Pub in Perth. That's what they call it, everyone'll
know what you mean. At the South Pole, there's a little place, Eddie's
Tavern. It's quaint but not too. Not so many people know about it
yet. You can walk in there a second time with every certainty of
being recognized as a regular. You don't get that whole expense-account
crowd in there.
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For a paper copy of this story, along with
other fine surprises, check out the newest issue of LITTLE ENGINES
at tnibooks.com.
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