Muse Ahoy (janemac’s alter ego)

July 16, 2006

Despite how it looks, I will stand atop the mountain

Filed under: Journalism, Life, Writing — museahoy @ 7:46 pm

I’m about to submit a short story (called Silica Ruby — "magical realism", my former writing teacher describes it as) to Narrative Magazine, an excellent literary magazine that publishes extremely well-written essays, interviews and fictional pieces. (If it’s so high-quality, why am I submitting to it? you ask, with validity. Because you can’t win any chocolates if you don’t step onto the field, I reply.)

As part of my submission, the editors require that I include a "brief biographical note". Not sure what to write, I read the short bios that accompany pieces in the current issue, and have to laugh. They all contain phrases like "has published two novels", "teaches Creative Writing at Columbia", "is working on her third book of short stories"…

… Jane Mackay (my maiden name, which I have decided shall henceforth be my writing name) is a bum masquerading as a highly responsible & respectable office manager/bookkeeper/journalist/photographer, who has enrolled in a graduate journalism course she has no idea how to pay for and writes fiction on a severely sporadic basis. ha ha. Oh, and one of her idols is a brilliant journalist who decimated his brain with drugs and alcohol then, to finish off the job, blew out said brain with a pistol.

I have no taste for either poverty or honest labor so writing is the only recourse left for me. — Hunter S. Thompson.

July 10, 2006

premonition?

Filed under: Life — museahoy @ 11:52 am

A tremor this morning (not unusual — this is California) at 12:35. Shaken awake,  I thought, "There’ll be another one in an hour, and it’ll be bigger," and got up, went to the loo, put on shorts and a tanktop and lay back down. I listed in my head the things I would grab — money, bank card, CDL, cell phone, passport, shoes, sunglasses, jacket with pockets — should the next one be the "big" one, then drifted off to sleep.

A while later I jolted awake. The bed was shaking, the window rattled. I looked at the clock: 1:35am.

July 9, 2006

part II – on the other side

Filed under: Journalism, Life — museahoy @ 6:46 pm

continued from yesterday

The North County Detention Facility shares a fence with the Sonoma County Airport — an irony I find darkly amusing.

Inside, the women in the reception booth are waiting for me. "I’m here to check in," I say. "Oh!" they cheerfully reply, "You must be Jane." One of them picks up my file, which is sitting neatly on the desk between them, and asks the first in a string of questions, the answers to which she types into her computer. Along the way she jokes with me, as if I were a traveller checking into a hotel. Only I’m not a traveller, I’m a "Committment", and every piece of information I give is designed to make me easy to identify should the good officers of the law need to find me: address, phone number, job, employer, birthmark — size, shape and location, scar — ditto.

The probation officer had convinced me not to enroll in the work release programme by explaining that, in the jail system, any part of a day counts as a day. Therefore, because I’d already spent nine hours in the close company of the Sheriff’s department the night I was arrested for having too much alcohol in my system when driving home from an evening out with friends, I would be given credit for having served at least part, if not all, of my sentence. I was dubious, but he seemed so badly to want me to follow his advice that I agreed.

The women at the desk review my file. "You’re a BPR," one of them tells me, with relentless cheer. I was booked just before midnight on March 16 and released at nine in the morning on March 17, so, sure enough, as far as the jail is concerned, I’ve done my time. This evening is a formality: Book, Print and Release. I am relieved, then elated with the possibility of being home in time to see most of the Giants game. I sign the "Waiver of Extradition" ("That means that if you walk out that door we can come and get you, wherever you are." I wonder what would happen if I refused to sign.) then sit on a hard plastic chair in the visitors’ waiting area and begin to read the posters on the walls while waiting for a green-uniformed sheriff’s deputy to call me to step through the metal detector and be fingerprinted.

An hour passes. Behind the low wall with the electronically locked gate green uniforms come and go, paying no attention to me. I read all of the posters — English and Spanish (of which I understand maybe thirty words, half of which are unprintable) — then start on the bus timetables, helpfully provided in a little stand on the counter. I have worked my way through most of the Spanish version of an information pamphlet about house arrest when a female officer with a blonde ponytail barks out my surname. I leap.

I deposit my keys and license in the little plastic container and walk through the metal detector. The officer’s manner is alert and nervous. "Stand here," she instructs, then, when I don’t understand right away, she puts her hand on my shoulder and guides me. "Hands on the counter," she says, then demands, "spread your legs. I have to pat you down." I am wearing sweat pants without pockets and a t-shirt.

The fingerprinting takes ten or fifteen minutes. The officer is tired, and hungry, and loses her patience with the computer when it won’t read the scrolls on the tips of my fingers properly. "Your hands are sweaty," she complains, roughly wiping my fingers with her blue-gloved hands. Eventually, both the computer and she are satisfied and she points to an spot by the back wall. "Stand there. Face the camera." The camera is mounted just below the ceiling. I gaze up at it. I hear a click, then "Turn to your left, face the yellow thing on the wall." The yellow thing is an emergency oxygen kit. Another click and I have now been photographed front and side. Fully identifiable.

"Sit over there," she commands, pointing to a set of three plastic chairs shoved against a short section of wall between a corridor and the doors to what looks like a cafeteria with a giant kitchen. I sit. And wait.

I hate sitting. Always have. I put my feet up on the next seat and recline a little. Ms Blonde sees me and barks, "Put your feet down. You’re not at home, you know."

I have to wait because my fingerprints have to be sent electronically to the Department of Justice (a federal agency) and verified, to determine that I am who I say I am. In the meantime, I am a prisoner.

Green uniforms walk back and forth. Ms Blonde takes her break. Male officers arrive to man the post. Four male prisoners in blue uniforms printed with "Sonoma County Jail" on the back in white block lettering are brought in. While being patted down they stare at me. I stare back. The officer guarding them directs them to walk down the corridor beside where I sit. They file past, staring. The youngest one tries a smile and a "Hey, how’s it going?" Better than for you, I think, but I can’t help smiling, mainly at the surreality of it all.

The hands on the clock move past eight-thirty, past nine o’clock. Green uniforms laugh at inside jokes (pardon the pun), tear open packets of Twix and pop the tops on cans of Coke. I realise I’m hungry. A blue-uniformed male prisoner is brought into the central staging area to wait for the medic. There are two sections of plastic chairs in this area. The three where I sit, and a row of ten or twelve across the other side of the room, all of which, except for one, are empty. The prisoner is told to sit, scans the available options and sits next to me. Deputy Powell (in the absence of anything to read I have started on memorising every detail of the scene in which I sit, including the green nametags) walks in, notices my companion and, with a small smile, points at him, commanding, "You. Over there," pointing to the empty seats across the room. The prisoner smiles, resigned to the inevitability of the command and departs. I feel a curiously strong gratitude toward Deputy Powell, even though I had felt in no danger.

Finally, at around the time the Giants would have been in the sixth or seventh inning, my release comes through. The cheerful "receptionist" puts it on the Sergeant’s desk for him to review and sign. The Sergeant is on break. Green uniforms come and go. The Sergeant returns from break. Green uniforms come and go. Deputy Powell disappears to attend to something else somewhere else in the building. Ms Blonde has never returned. Legs crossed primly, I wait. I stare at the brown paper lunch sack that holds my license and keys, which is sitting on the counter across the room. I could walk over and pick it up, but I know that the second I attempted to do so I would be surrounded and — I don’t want to speculate on what else.

At last, the Sergeant strolls out of his office, walks over to the reception booth and hands the office manager my file (which is yellow — my favourite colour). Suddenly, the green uniforms don’t care about me. I walk across the room to the electronically latched gate. Deputy Powell smiles and gives me  a little wave as I mouth a silent thank you.

The gate clicks open. I sign for my paltry belongings and walk out the door, hastening across to my car. On the radio, the Giants game is in the seventh. It rained, or there was a lot of scoring, or something, but I can still get home to see the end of it.

Under the terms of my 3-year, informal probation the judge gave me, I may not drive with any "traceable alcohol" in my system. That’s a habit I can get into. And stay in.

July 8, 2006

incarceration — sort of

Filed under: Journalism, Life — museahoy @ 11:38 pm

I went to jail the other night. Voluntarily. Sort of. I honoured an appointment to turn myself in by seven p.m. at the minimum security North County Detention Facility. Under the terms of my DUI sentence handed out by the judge in summarily speedy fashion two months ago I had to spend two nights in jail. In the courtroom, the judge had peered at his giant wall calendar and made me a reservation for Oct 30. I protested that I would be in Boston then, just finishing my second month of graduate school — the judge gazed kindly but somewhat bemusedly down at me and suggested that I reschedule for Thanksgiving, for surely I would be returning then, wouldn’t I?

No. I would not, I thought but didn’t say. Instead, I returned to the Courthouse building a few days later and rescheduled for the day after this nation’s biggest and possibly drunkest holiday: Fourth of July.

I had originally planned to do the two days of "hard labour" (i.e. picking up rubbish along the side of the highway while wearing an orange jumpsuit) in lieu of two more nights in the big pink hotel I’d sworn never to return to — fascinating though the first and only night was — but when I met with a detachedly compassionate and overworked probation officer to order my jumpsuit, he convinced me to go to jail instead.

Which is why I was parking my car under a tree across the road from a low-slung, grey, many-cornered concrete building at 6:45 on a warm evening in early July and striding through the double doors with nothing in my hands but my driver’s license and my car keys (which I hoped wouldn’t be lost or misplaced after they were taken from me).

In truth, though, I didn’t think I would — and hoped I wouldn’t — be spending the night.

to be continued… check back tomorrow…

July 5, 2006

who needs money?

Filed under: Journalism, Travel — museahoy @ 8:55 pm

Trying to plan my departure for Boston — moving three thousand miles from the west coast to the east, with barely enough reserve cash to buy my plane ticket — I dredge up travel skills rusty from eleven years of disuse. A quick search (aren’t most of them quick?) on Google reveals the web address for  Hostelling International USA. Fifteen minutes later I’ve paid my $20 annual membership fee and booked my first three nights in Boston — a committment to an arrival for which I don’t even yet have a plane ticket. I’ll figure out how to pay for a room to live in after I get there.

That’s that much taken care of. Northeastern University is paying part of my tuition, in return for ten hours a week of assisting undergraduates or doing research commanded by others’ needs, so now I just have to come up with the other $25,000 or so to cover the rest of the cost of the Master’s in Journalism I’ve signed up for.

As we say in Kiwiland, "no worries!" Yeah, right.

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