Prepare to enter a world of both shadow and substance

Take a journey of body, mind and spirit where you'll encounter things you won't find anywhere else.

Monday, May 21, 2012

A First Here At Photo Journey

     Normally, you'd expect photos to be posted here at Photo Journey, because.... well, after all - it is a photo blog.  But, I like to keep things stirred up, so I thought I'd try something a little bit different and see if I get any response.  I'm going to serialize one of my novels here for the first time anywhere.  It's a detective novel, featuring my character, (who happens to be a detective of the old school), Steve Randall.  It's one of eight novels I've written featuring this same character and the action takes place in New York City of the mid-1950's - back when things were "hardboiled."
     So, without further ado, here is chapter one of "D Is For Doxy," by Kenneth Dwain Harrelson, (that would be me), and please let me know if you enjoy it and want more.  (Like the second and subsequent chapters.)

[1]

     The gleaming black Chrysler Imperial limousine rolled to a stop in front of the Plaza Hotel’s five-star restaurant, the Foxe’s Den.  A chauffeur, dressed equally atramentously, stepped out into the night and walked around the car to the back passenger door.  He noiselessly pulled on the door handle and held it open while the limo disgorged it’s sole passenger.  The passenger, a man, stood upright and wrapped a white silk ascot tightly around his neck to lessen the chill of the late winter.  When he had finished, he turned to his driver and said,
     “Pontford, I won’t be needing the car again until midnight.”
     The chauffeur inclined his head slightly in acquiescence and replied, “Very well, sir.”
     The well-dressed man who had climbed out of the car was no less than the wealthy owner of one of the more famous and glitzier jewelry stores along Fifth Avenue.  The establishment bore the same name as that of the man:  Martine’s.
     Leslie Arafid Martine, a second-generation Manhattanite, had grandparents who had been born in Zurich before the turn of the century.  His family had always shaped precious and semi-precious stones out of the ground and it had went on to support Leslie in a manner to which he had easily become accustomed.  Leslie Martine kept his careful distance from the “working classes,” so he turned away from his driver quickly and walked under the red and gold awning that welcomed people into the entrance of the Foxe’s Den.  A doorman in a crisp, red and gold coat became the point of entry he was seeking, so he moved past him with an almost imperceptible nod of his head.
     “Evening, Mr. Martine.”
     “Hmppf.”
     “It’s such a pleasure to have you join us this evening.”
     “Hmppf.”
The doorman had done what was required of him, so he didn’t try for a third strike.  ‘Some people,’ he thought, ‘act as though they owned the world.’  But of course, Leslie Martine was rich enough to own at least his share of it.  Martine entered inside and was gone, so the doorman turned back to his post and waited on the next arrival in the chilly night.  If the temperature didn’t keep them home tonight.
     Once inside, the tall and slightly overweight Martine divested himself of the ascot and the heavy black floor-length overcoat.  He placed his black Homberg on the counter and a girl placed it on a rack alongside several other hats.  Then, with familiarity, he moved through the small foyer that divided the hatcheck room and the main dining area.  The Maitre ‘d’ Hotel met him immediately.
     “Ah, Mr. Martine, so good to see you tonight.  Are you perhaps come to dine tonight, or can I show you...?”
     He was cut off abruptly in midsentence.
     “The back room, please,” said Martine, sotto voce.
     “Ah, of course.  The gentlemen you seek are already there and awaiting on you.”
     Martine stood with a look of bored impatience showing clearly on his features so the Maitre’ d’ placed the menu he had held in his hands on a small, round table by the front of the room and spun in the direction of the back.   As he walked along, Martine followed.
     Once they had reached the back of the restaurant, there were two doorways; one was the well-travelled double swinging doors that led to the kitchen.  The other was a smaller, single door and less used.  But, not less important.  Men like Leslie Martine used this door and it was here that many big deals, legal and otherwise, had been made.  The fact that the room was used primarily for gambling was chief on the mind of men of Martine’s ilk.  It was carefully through this second door that he finally emerged on the other side to a waiting conclave of four other men.  They had already started a friendly hand of poker, but when they saw him, they threw their cards down.
     “Ah, old boy, glad to see you made it.”
     “How is the weather outside?”
     “We’ve kept your seat warm, Leslie.”
     Once inside the realm of his own company, the man seemed to alter his personality noticeably.  He became
more at ease and spoke to the men as if they were old friends; which, indeed, they were.
     “Wilson, you old devil, this week’s going to be different.  I’ll win back some of the money you relieved me of last Wednesday night.  How’s the wife, Johnson?  I’m surprised she let you out.  Jarvis, don’t let your recent killing on the market fool you into thinking we’ll be easy marks.  What do you say, gentlemen?  Andrews?  Let’s get down to business.”
     Business in this case was five-card draw poker, nothing wild and a fifty-dollar ante.  The same as the previous Wednesday nights here in the back of the Foxe’s Den.  The five upwardly mobile gentlemen had seats athwart a well-used round green felt-topped table and the man named Jarvis motioned to the young hostess hovering nearby.  She came over.
     “Hey, darling, we’re ready to get started now.  How about breaking the seal on a new bottle of your best bourbon and bringing it in here along with five glasses?  Bring an ice bucket and put some ice in the glasses, as well.”
     “Yes, sir.  Right away.”
     As she turned and walked off, the man named Johnson patted her on the rear.  He turned back to the men around the table and smiled.
     “You wouldn’t smile,” said Martine, “if your wife would have seen that.”
     “My wife,” he answered back, “wouldn’t be caught dead in a place like this.”
     This brought loud guffaws from everyone in the group.  When it had died down, the hostess came back with a tray in her hands loaded with a full bottle, ice and five glasses.  She placed it squarely on the table between Jarvis and Johnson and Jarvis shooed her off.
     “Thanks honey, we’ll pour.”
    She scooted out of the room just inches away from Johnson’s hand, and having missed this time, the others teased him about it.
     “The old eyes not what they used to be, eh?”
    “You’re slowing down, Johnson.  It’s age.  It catches up to all of us, sooner or later.”
    Johnson frowned and Martine said, “Gentlemen, are we going to talk all night or are we going to play cards?”
    “We’re going to play cards.”
    “Good.  Then Jarvis, start emptying that bottle while I shuffle the cards.  I feel a lucky streak coming on tonight.”
    “Are you sure it’s not indigestion, Martine?”
    “Yes, I’m sure.  Martha’s out with her league tonight and I haven’t seen her all day.”
    “I should be so lucky with my wife.”
    “Speaking of lucky, Wilson, who was that young blonde goddess I saw hanging all over your arm uptown yesterday?”
    “That was no goddess, she was my....uh.... niece.”
    “How come all your nieces are blonde-haired, Wilson?”
    “Just lucky, I guess.”
    “You’d better hope your wife never catches you with that side of your family.”
    “There’s no worry of that.  I’ve got my ‘niece’ staying in a nice, comfortable little apartment overlooking Central Park.  She’s perfectly content to do without the big family reunion.”
    The bourbon was poured and passed around the table while the cards were dealt for the first hand.  The play went pretty evenly for the first few hours, but after eleven o’clock and a second bottle was emptied, it looked like fortune was smiling mainly on just two souls – Jarvis and Martine.  Their stack of bills consistently grew taller while everyone else’s shrank.  Martine looked down at his watch and said aloud:
    “It’s getting late, gentlemen.  How about making this the last hand?”
    “What, and let you walk out of here with most of my money?”
    “And mine, too, Johnson.”
    “We’ll be here next week.  You’ll probably win it back then.”
    “I hope so.  I’ve been on a terrible streak lately.  I’ve dropped almost ten grand in the last two months.  Any more, and my wife is going to wonder who I’m spending it on.  And then she’ll want a new fur jacket.”
    “They’re not that expensive when you can get them wholesale.”
    “She’s got a dozen of them now.  What does she need another one for?”
    “You know women, Johnson.”
    “Don’t I ever.”
    Jarvis interrupted the woman-haters mutual society long enough to ask for some cards.
    “If you don’t mind, men, I’d like three new cards.”
    “And three it is,” said Johnson as he peeled three cards from off the top of the deck.
    “How about you, Andrews?”
    “Better make it three, also.”
    “Martine?”
    “Only two this time.”
    “Wilson?”
    “Four.”
    “Look out for Wilson,” said the dealer, “and I’ll take three.”
    Johnson finished placing the new cards in his hand with the old ones he’d kept and then he placed the deck on the table.  Jarvis started the betting.
    “I’ll say two hundred to stay and play.”
    “See it, and raise two more.”
    “Covered with an additional five hundred.”
    Wilson folded immediately.
    “Too rich for my blood.”
    “So, it’s nine hundred at me, huh?  I’ll see it and add three crisp hundreds on top of it.”
    “Trying to win it all back in one hand, Johnson?”
    “I would like to get a little of it back.”
    “Well, here’s your chance.  I’ll see your three hundred and raise it another five.”
    “Good God, man, I was only joking.”
    “It’s at this point that we separate the men from the boys,” intoned Johnson.
    “You’ve got me figured out all right,” said Andrews.  “This boy is going to fold.”
    Martine looked at the two remaining players.
    “Well, now it’s just us three.  I’ll go as far as matching your five hundred, Jarvis, but no more.  How about you, Johnson?”
    “I’ll call.  What do you have, Jarvis?”
    “Full boat, ladies over.”
    And as he spread out the three Queens and two tens, Johnson shook his head and threw his cards down on the table.
    “You’ve got me.  What about you, Martine?”
    “I guess it must be my night, for the card gods are with me.  A royal flush, in spades.”
    And he laid them out carefully in front of him.
    “I’ll say.  Well, take it, then,” said Jarvis pointing at the pile of money in the middle of the table, “it’s yours, fair and square.”
    Martine scooped up the hefty stack of bills and started organizing them.
    “Gentlemen, I want to thank you tonight for so richly restocking my somewhat depleted coffers.  I know it wouldn’t have been possible without you.”
    “Yeah, yeah, wait until next week.”
    “I’ll be right here.”
    The five men pocketed their money and one by one began to leave.  As Martine was putting on his overcoat, he rolled up his shirt sleeve a little and glanced at his watch:  12.15.  Pontford would be out front waiting on him.  Good.  That meant the car would already be warm.  He hated New York winters.  If it wasn’t for the fact that his relatives had lived here since 1883, he might think of moving to a warmer climate.  Maybe California or Miami.  But, no, New York – Manhattan, was home.  He’d just have to put up with the cold.
    He stepped out past the doorman again and into the below-freezing flurries that had developed.  His chauffeur saw him and was standing by his door when he reached the car.  Saying nothing, he dipped his head and climbed into the large back seat.  The door closed quickly behind him.
    When the car was moving again, Pontford glanced at the rearview mirror and spoke.
     “Home, sir?”
    “Yes.”  He paused.  “No....wait a minute.  I want to go by the store for something.”
    Pontford turned his gaze back to the road ahead and put his concentration to motoring toward Fifth Avenue.  It wasn’t long until Martine’s jewelry store came into view.
    “Just park in front, I’ll only be a few minutes.”
    The car glided to a stop in front of an impressive building fronted entirely of glass.  Martine got out by himself and pulled a small ring of keys out of his pocket.  He found the right one, inserted it into the lock, twisted it and went inside.  Pontford turned his eyes back to the road now that Martine was out of sight.  He didn’t see what happened next.
    Inside the building, Martine made his way to his office.  He opened it’s door and went in, not noticing that, for a brief few seconds, the sounds of the city swelled and then subsided back to normal.  He was too intent on what he was doing.
    He finished his business in the small, concealed safe on the wall behind his desk, and having placed tonight’s winnings safely inside, closed it securely and turned around.  As he straightened a few items on his desktop, he looked up.  Up into the eyes of a young woman.  A very beautiful young woman.  Absentmindedly, he sat down at his desk.
    “What are you doing here?”  He watched her closely.
    She stepped the rest of the way into the office and pulled the door to behind her without looking at it.  She said nothing.  He kept watching her.
    “Look, if it’s about the money....”
    “It’s not the money.”
    Her voice was soft.  It dawned on him that she must have come in just after he had.  The door had opened, he’d heard it, but he hadn’t noticed it at the time.  Had she been waiting outside for him?  That didn’t seem likely; he always went home on Wednesday nights, but there she was.  True, the woman before him was the mistress he “kept,” his doxy, but she had her place and this wasn’t it.  Doxy.  Now, where had that word come from?  It was one his grandfather might have used.  Her voice brought him out of his thoughts.
    “Let the wicked forsake his ways....”
    “What?  What are you talking about?”
    “And the unrighteous man his thoughts.  Let him return unto the Lord.”
    “Listen, I know I said I’d ask for the divorce.  It just hasn’t been the right time, yet.  You must believe me.”
    “It’s too late for that, Leslie, dear.  For the wicked must pay for their sins.”
    As she spat out the word ‘sins,’ a gun was in her hands.  A big, ugly black one.  He hadn’t noticed it before, so it must have been in her purse.
    “Stand up, Leslie.”
    “Why?”
    “Stand up.”
    He stood up.  The desk was between them, so he could use it to shield himself if she was stupid enough to try and use that thing.  Inspiration dawned on him.  He had a gun he kept inside his safe.  If he could only convince her to take some money, maybe she’d go for it and leave him alone.  He could always plead self-defense if he had to shoot her.
    “Look, I’ve got some money in my safe.  Quite a bit, actually.”  He moved back toward it.  “It’s yours, if you want it.”
    “Stop.”
    “Okay.  But, point that thing away.  It might go off.”
    She took one hand off the gun and pointed to a couch on the left side of the desk.
    “Over there.  On the couch.”
    “Why, what do you want?”
    “Now.”  Her voice was starting to get louder now, but he doubted if anyone could hear it outside of the building.
    “Okay, I’m going.”  He sat down on the couch without taking his eyes off her.  “Look, if you’ll just put down the gun, I know we can work it out.  I’ll do anything you say.”
    She came from in front of the desk toward the edge of the couch.  Her eyes never left his, the gun never dropped it’s lone eye staring at his.  It was becoming very unnerving to see her looking like this; in this frenzied emotional state.  She had never been like this before.  She was crazy.  Yes!  That was it exactly.  But, how could he get the gun from her?
    She bent over and with her left hand, picked up one of the small cushions from the end of the couch.  As she lifted it in front of the barrel of the revolver, he realized what it was for.  As his feet went into action, the pillow coughed out a wad of stuffing and duck down.  It kept on exploding, even after the first bullet had hit him in the chest, knocking him back onto the couch.  Five more times the gun went off.  He watched as the pillow fell limp and depleted, and he died looking at it.  His body ended up a crumpled heap, as desiccated as the pillow, on the black leather couch, which was now spattered with vivid red spots.  The wall was stained the same color and there grew a big puddle on the floor in front of him.  The woman threw the pillow back down on the couch and reloaded her gun.  Then she placed it back in her purse.
    Objective achieved, the beautiful young red-haired woman found a back exit and disappeared into the long, cold night.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Sixth Annual Ten Commandments Post - Bom Bom Baaa

Guess what time of year it is again? Yep, it's time when I blog about my love affair with the motion picture "The Ten Commandments." You'll all have read how it's my favorite movie and that I saw it for the first time on the big screen in 1966, during it's ten-year re-release. Well, it's time to relive the sheer extremity of it again by watching it on Sunday night, Easter night. I know, ABC-TV has taken to showing it of late on Saturday night instead of Sunday nights like it used to, but I've got that covered. I have the best copy, the one released on VHS several years back, that even has scenes the 50th Anniversary Edition DVD does not have. (Yes, I have the DVD as well.) I'll watch it on Sunday night, just like I've done for as long as I can remember and even though I may watch it by myself this year, it will still be special for me. There's just something about that movie that keeps me enthralled, year after year after year.

So, join me in a repeat viewing one more time and enjoy this opening title screen once more which gets it all off to a roaring bang - bom bom baaa! So let it be written, so let it be watched.

Friday, January 27, 2012

The End Of An Era?

On January 19th, 2012, Kodak announced that it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. For me, this is bad news, but not unexpected. The field of photography has been changing rapidly in the last 10 years, with new technologies literally destroying older, and better ways of doing things. Did you know that digital technology, (cameras, etc.), has not evolved enough to be able to match the quality and clarity of a good film camera? I read somewhere that you'd need a camera with approximately 150 megapixels to equal the clarity of a film camera with a good lens. And digital is making film obsolete? Let's not totally dispense with the old until the new is better. Digital also has a fatal flaw of not being able to reproduce colors as well as film can. Look through the pictures below and tell me if you've ever seen a digital image with colors this rich and vibrant. They were all taken on Kodak Kodachrome slide film, another film product that has fallen by the wayside and is gone.









Thursday, January 26, 2012

Vehicles You Don't See Every Day

I see a lot of automobiles on the road, classic cars, luxury cars, foreign cars - but these vehicles are one's you just don't see every day!

I think this is Cinderella's carriage.

It's a train. No, it's a truck. I don't know what it is.

It's a giant ear of corn masquerading as a Volkswagen.

A convertible hearse?

A Cadillac pickup?

This one is the most normal of the lot.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Layoff

First off, I'd like to apologize for not posting much this past year. Regular readers of my blog will remember that my mother died of cancer last year; well, this past month, my father died of cancer as well. It's been a real trying time for the family, especially once you've lost both parents. After a death like this, people will say that life goes on. Maybe it does, but it does so in a much different way. While I try to figure out a way that works for me, I'm going to try and devote a little more time to writing and my blogs. And seeing as how this blog is touted as a blog with pictures, I thought I'd post this year's installment of my Fall tree. Every year I go back to the edge of my town and photograph this one tree. I've been doing it since the 1970's and it's something that puts a little stability and familiarity into my life. Perhaps I've needed it more these few years, but be that as it may, the tree is still there and when it begins to get cold, the leaves start turning different colors and dying off. Maybe it's symbolic of how life goes, I don't know. Here's the way it looked this year, a little earlier than normal, but as photographed on October 14th, 2011:

Thursday, April 14, 2011

The Fifth Annual Ten Commandments Post

It's hard to believe that this is already my fifth annual Ten Commandments post. Regular readers will know that this is my favorite movie of all time and I've seen it probably 40 times at least. While it might seem like there's nothing new under the sun to say about this movie that hasn't already been said, (probably by me), I still can't let this time of year arrive without passing on the good feeling I get anticipating this movie once again. When Spring arrives, I start getting that "itchy" feeling that Easter is near and it's time to make preparations once again for you know what. When the movie starts, from the opening where the baby Moses is found on the river; to the clashes between Moses and Rameses; the time Moses spent in the desert as an outcast: until the end when the Children of Israel are looking over into the Promised Land, there are many peaks and valleys in this movie to keep my attention. If you haven't seen it in awhile, you might think about viewing it with your family - make an event out of it.
The title screen above is not from the 1956 version of this classic, but from the first, silent version Cecil B. DeMille made back in 1923. I still haven't found time to watch this bonus feature that was included in my 50th Anniversary DVD set, but I will one day. For now, though, I'm getting ready for the big event - so let it be watched! I'll leave you with a scene from the silent version. It's where Moses comes down from the mount with the tablets containing the Ten Commandments in hand. He seems to be saying, at least in my opinion, "Thou shalt not miss watching The Ten Commandments this year! It may be your last chance!"

Friday, March 4, 2011

The Law In Illinois Is Clear On This

I want to point out two different laws here in Illinois, see if you can spot the major difference between them. Just so I won't be accused of misquoting or misleading the facts or making things up, I will post post both laws in their entirety.

Number 1: Pertaining to Seat Belts:

(625 ILCS 5/12-603.1) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-603.1)
Sec. 12-603.1. Driver and passenger required to use safety belts, exceptions and penalty.
(a) Each driver and front seat passenger of a motor vehicle operated on a street or highway in this State shall wear a properly adjusted and fastened seat safety belt; except that, a child less than 8 years of age shall be protected as required pursuant to the Child Passenger Protection Act. Each driver under the age of 18 years and each of the driver's passengers under the age of 19 years of a motor vehicle operated on a street or highway in this State shall wear a properly adjusted and fastened seat safety belt. Every passenger under the age of 19 in a vehicle being driven by a person over the age of 18 who committed an offense against traffic regulations governing the movement of vehicles or any violation of this Section or Section 6-107 of this Code within 6 months prior to the driver's 18th birthday and was subsequently convicted of the violation, shall wear a properly adjusted and fastened seat safety belt, until such time as a period of 6 consecutive months has elapsed without the driver receiving an additional violation and subsequent conviction of an offense against traffic regulations governing the movement of vehicles or any violation of this Section or Section 6-107 of this Code. Each driver of a motor vehicle transporting a child 8 years of age or more, but less than 16 years of age, shall secure the child in a properly adjusted and fastened seat safety belt as required under the Child Passenger Protection Act.
(b) Paragraph (a) shall not apply to any of the following:
1. A driver or passenger frequently stopping and
leaving the vehicle or delivering property from the vehicle, if the speed of the vehicle between stops does not exceed 15 miles per hour.
2. A driver or passenger possessing a written
statement from a physician that such person is unable, for medical or physical reasons, to wear a seat safety belt.
3. A driver or passenger possessing an official
certificate or license endorsement issued by the appropriate agency in another state or country indicating that the driver is unable for medical, physical, or other valid reasons to wear a seat safety belt.
4. A driver operating a motor vehicle in reverse.
5. A motor vehicle with a model year prior to 1965.
6. A motorcycle or motor driven cycle.
7. A moped.
8. A motor vehicle which is not required to be
equipped with seat safety belts under federal law.
9. A motor vehicle operated by a rural letter
carrier of the United States postal service while performing duties as a rural letter carrier.
(c) Failure to wear a seat safety belt in violation of this Section shall not be considered evidence of negligence, shall not limit the liability of an insurer, and shall not diminish any recovery for damages arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or operation of a motor vehicle.
(d) A violation of this Section shall be a petty offense and subject to a fine not to exceed $25.
(e) (Blank).
(f) A law enforcement officer may not search or inspect a motor vehicle, its contents, the driver, or a passenger solely because of a violation of this Section.

Number 2: Pertaining to Residency Requirements to be Elected Mayor of a Town or City in Illinois:

(65 ILCS 5/6-3-9) (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-9)
Sec. 6-3-9. Qualifications of mayor, city clerk, city treasurer and aldermen - Eligibility for other office.
No person shall be eligible to the office of mayor, city clerk, city treasurer or alderman:
(1) Unless he is a qualified elector of the municipality and has resided therein at least one year next preceding his election or appointment; or
(2) Unless, in the case of aldermen, he resides within the ward for which he is elected; or
(3) If he is in arrears in the payment of any tax or other indebtedness due to the city; or
(4) If he has been convicted in Illinois state courts or in courts of the United States of malfeasance in office, bribery, or other infamous crime.
No alderman shall be eligible to any office, except that of acting mayor or mayor pro tem, the salary of which is payable out of the city treasury, if at the time of his appointment he is a member of the city council.

Okay, did you spot the difference? I'll tell you, so as not to keep you in suspense. For violation of not wearing your seat belt, you will be subject to a fine of not more than $25. For violation of the second offense, which is not meeting the residency requirements to be elected mayor of a city in Illinois, there is no fine or penalty associated with this violation.

Now, explain to me how come Rahm Emanuel can break Illinois law and not be penalized? He clearly violated the law because he moved to Washington, D.C. for 18 months and rented out his residence to somebody else. He couldn't even stop at his own house when returning to Chicago because the people who have the lease for it wouldn't let him in. How can he maintain that he's lived in Chicago when he can't even provide a residence as his own legal province? I'd like to see the Illinois State Police enforce this law and go arrest him. Or at least fine him. The ISP is quite familiar with fining people who have "broken the law." And they are well up to the task of enforcing the law here in Illinois; you'd better believe it.