Rainy Day Bike Show

4 #

Wade's Wet Bike

“I saw you rolling in on your bike,” said Hugh when I ran into him under the food tent where I was huddled against the ferocious rain.

“Yeah,” I said, “Another sucker.”

“It’s good,” he said. “You gotta to get soggy now and then.”

The block was lined with vintage motorcycles doing exactly that. “I hope my bike starts after this,” said another guy under the tent who was busy slathering mustard and ketchup onto a cheese covered hotdog.

During the worst of it, most people were crowded under the various tents but others continued to up and down the block, some covering their heads with newspapers or plastic bags, a few others carrying umbrellas, and others still resigned to being wet, hair matted, shoes saturated, carefree and soaked to the skin.

A band onstage finished up a song. “How you all doing?” said the singer. “Getting wet?” The sky yawned and the rain crashed down. “Goddammit.”

The band launched into another number despite imminent threat of electrocution. On the street in front of the stage, a group of people held a big blue tarp over their heads and danced.

Rainy Bike Show

The food tent was a hotspot — in both senses of the word — and too smoky and crowded to linger, so I headed to where, by far, the biggest crowd stood — inside Works Engineering, the motorcycle garage that was hosting. While eating my burger, I ran into a former garage-mate of mine, Patrick, who I hadn’t seen in over a year, maybe two. Although we haven’t really stayed in touch, we did trade emails a few months back, and so he knew about two my broken-bone motorcycle stories — about how I broke my foot last summer, and broke my arm six months after that. “About six months after breaking my arm,” I said, “I started getting really superstitious that something was going to happen again.”

“Ha, yeah, I don’t blame you. Such a crazy story, man. How are you doing though? Everything okay?”

“Yeah, it’s all good.”

“Your bike’s looking good,” he said. “I saw it when you pulled in.”

“Yeah, thanks. You’d never know it had been hit, right? How about you? Did you come here on your Norton?”

“Yeah,” he said, “it’s parked at the other end of the block.”

Patrick had the insane good fortune of being gifted a Seventies Norton Commando by a fashion photographer h used to assist for. The photographer owned it, but never rode it, and Patrick was always very vocal with his admiration for the thing. One day, on Patrick’s birthday if I’m remembering the story correctly, the photographer surprised him by giving him the keys. Like mine, some crazy stories are a drag, while some crazy stories are too good to be true. But it is, and I’ve seen the bike. It wasn’t his only crazy story, though. He had a new one.

I asked him how the Norton was running.

“It’s been great,” he said. “I’ve been riding it a lot this summer. A funny thing happened to me a few weeks ago. I’d been riding around and was parked the bike on the street and this chick comes up to me and says, ‘Nice bike, is it yours?’ I’m like yeah, it’s mine. ‘Nice’ she says. I look up at her and she is just smokin’ hot, okay? She’s wearing a short little mini skirt, with legs that won’t quit. I’d guess she was maybe 22. And I mean, really, super cute, looks like a fucking model, okay? She asks ‘Will you take me for a ride?’ I hesitate. I couldn’t do it.”

He didn’t say why he couldn’t do it and I didn’t get a chance to ask. Something to do with his girlfriend, maybe? Who knows.

“So she’s all pouty disappointed,” he continued. “She tries to talk me into it. I’m like, give me your number and I’ll call you a call in a few days and I’ll take you for a ride then. Okay, she says, and we trade numbers.”

If some of my other friends had been telling this story, I might’ve tempered my vision of what this girl looked like with a bit of skepticism. But Patrick works as a professional photographer and has also assisted for some of the top fashion photographers in the city. In the world, in fact, having also lived and worked in Paris for a few years. Patrick is no slouch himself. He’s a good looking guy, in his mid-thirties, and it’s totally within the realm of possibilities that a young attractive model would hit on him –or at least ask him for a ride.

“So we go our separate ways, and I kind of forget all about it. A week or two later, I get a text message. It’ this chick. ‘What happened to my ride?’ she asks. Like I said, by this point I’d forgotten all about it, so I call her and say, can you be ready in an hour? Yes, she says, and tells me where to meet her. I get myself ready, get on the bike and head over to her place. She comes out of her apartment and, no lie, she’s even hotter than I remember. She gets on back of the bike and we ride around. I take here and there, just ride around town for an hour. Now, we haven’t said more than three words to each other. She just got on the bike and we rode. After a while we stop for a drink. So we’re sitting at a table, making small talk when I notice she has this tattoo on her arm. I couldn’t really tell what it was, just some kind of design. I’m trying to come up with things to say, so I ask her about it. She tells me it’s in memory of her father. ‘My father dies three months ago.’ Oh man, wow, well I’m sorry to hear about that, I say. What happened? She says, ‘He died in a motorcycle accident.”

“Wow,” I said. “Was she working out some issues or what?”

“I know, totally. So we finish our drinks, I drop her off at home and that was that. I felt kind of like I was operating some kind of door to door motorcycle rides service.”

Rainy Bike Show

“I’ve had girls ask me for rides before,” I said. “One time I was on the street just outside my apartment — I used to live across the street from this restaurant and when it was nice out, people would hang out in front of the place. Waitresses and their friends. Shit like that. Anyway, this chick comes over and says, ‘My friend over there wants a ride.’ I look over to where she’s pointing and there’s this beautiful young girl in a sundress sitting on the sidewalk. She waves. I wave back. ‘Will you give her a ride?’ he friend asks. ‘I can’t,” I said. ‘Oh c’mon, just around the block?’ I gave her every excuse I could think of — that I didn’t have a spare helmet, that the girl’s little dress wouldn’t protect her legs from getting burned on my bike’s high pipes. Of course the real reason was that we were standing directly under my apartment window and if my darling wife happened to look outside, well, let’s just say that we would definitely need two helmets.”

Rainy Bike Show

The Hot Rod show held under the BQE every year was held the previous day — much nicer weather for that, unfortunately. I mean, the bike show was an open air block party while the car show was under the shelter of the elevated highway. It would’ve been nice if the weather had been the other way around, but so what? The rain was kind of fun and it didn’t keep too many people away — the beer still ran out by mid-afternoon ad the food followed soon after.

Make New Memories

1 #

Dirty Lollypop

I don’t know what the temperature was when I drove back from New Jersey after visiting my parents for a couple of days. It was well over 100 degrees outside, and with no air conditioning in sluggish traffic, it felt like a hundred more in the small cab of my little pickup. My shirt was soaked trough with warm sweat and the stagnant air had the vague smell of cat piss — courtesy of the tom cat that lives in my parking garage. I thoroughly cleaned the car several months ago and seemed to have the cat piss licked, but apparently it had only been hiding.

It took about three hours to get back to Brooklyn which is par for the course — even mid-week — in the summer time.

I went inside, peeled away my sticky, stinky clothes, and hopped in the shower.

The water coughed out in spurts, then gave a few dry heaves and quit all together.

No water.

The water pump in our building is unreliable. We complain and get told it’s fixed about once a month. I kept checking it very couple of minutes, but finally gave up and instead just stood naked in front of the air conditioner. Once dry, I collapsed on the bed and fell asleep.

Without realizing it, I’d left the water tap on and woke up to the sound of a faint stream of water pulsing into the sink. I shut off the kitchen tap, and then went into the bathroom for another try at the shower. Water trickled out weakly, as if the shower had prostate trouble. I stepped into the stall and rinsed off as best I could, then got dressed and went outside in search of some dinner. (With Deborah away, there was no food in the house, of course.) I walked about a half block before I was completely soaked through with sweat again.

Deborah Sunbathing on the Roof

Deborah returned from her family visit in Pennsylvania the following day and I drove to JFK to meet her. More cat piss and traffic.

The drive to the airport wasn’t half bad, but the drive home was a nightmare. It took us nearly three hours to drive 17 miles. Deborah didn’t mind. She was just happy to be home and used the time stuck in traffic to regale me with tales of her family visit.

Deborah Sunbathing on the Roof

Deborah and a few of her relatives went to Kennywood, an old amusement park near Pittsburgh that’s been around since 1898 and, according to Wikipedia, is one of only two amusement parks listed in the National Register of Historic Places. They originally planned to go on the Fourth of July to see the fireworks, but went on the Fifth, instead, which was probably just as well since the park was crowded enough as it was.

Kennywood: Make a New Memory

Deborah, her cousin Katy, Katy’s husband James, and their 14 year old son Zach, took a ride on a water ride called Raging Rapids. Riders are seated in a round tube-like flotilla, six seats facing in a circle. Two gangly, somewhat nerdy, teenage boys filled out the raft, and off they went. “Waterfalls, geysers and even water guns from onlookers drench riders as they traverse the course down a beautiful river canyon…”

After one particularly rough patch of “white water” Katy pointed out to Deborah that Deborah’s top was down, completely exposing her bare breasts. While Deborah fixed her shirt, James said to the two red-faced teenagers, “That’ll be five bucks.” All anyone has to do is look at my Flickr account to known that Deborah has no problem revealing her breasts, and nudity causes her no embarrassment, but it’s hard to to feel a little awkward when everyone around you is beet-red. Deborah laughed and shrugged, and looked at the boys as if to say, “oh well, whatever, moving right along,” but neither of them could look her in the eye. Not then, nor for the duration of the ride. She passed them later in the day and one nudged the other, “There she is.”

“Just think,” I said to Deborah when she told me the story, “You’re now a part of these kids’ personal mythologies. Those guys will be remembering that moment for the rest of their lives. Or at least until they get girlfriends.”

Kennywood Park’s tagline is “Make New Memories.” Their website invites visitors to contribute stories of first kisses or first dates. “Did you meet your husband or wife while working at Kennywood? Did your parents bring you to school or company picnics when you were child? Thousands of folks have a favorite Kennywood memory to tell. May we hear yours?”

Ha.

Summer Pants

3 #

Rubber Supply

Although he originally planned to stay for six months, Brian cut out from the Buddhist Monastery three months early. He drove north from Virginia, stayed with our friend Joe in New Jersey for a couple of days, and then disappeared into the wilderness of western Connecticut where he remained incommunicado for months.

I called Joe to ask if he had any news, he didn’t, and we were both a little worried.

“He’s pretty out there,” said Joe.

“Yeah, but being ‘out there’ has always been a part of Brian’s charm,” I said.

“True, but, I mean, I don’t know.”

When I hung up with Joe, I called Brian, hoping for the chance to judge for myself whether three months in a Buddhist Monastery had done a number on his head, or perhaps enlightened him beyond the ability to relate to us mere mortals. I left a message, didn’t hear from him for a couple of weeks, and left another. When he finally called, of course, he was fine. Out there, yes, but no more than ever.

“I was worried about you,” I said. “After Joe told me you left, and then not hearing from you for months, I started thinking all kinds of crazy things.”

He admitted that when he first left the Monastery, going to Joe’s place and watching football on a big screen TV without any time to decompress had been a little more than he could handle. “I’m sure I was acting strange. Of course I was. Anyway, I would’ve called you earlier, but I just didn’t want to talk to anyone.”

“I understand. I’m just glad that everything’s okay. How was it? Why did you leave?”

“I’ll tell you all about it when I see you,” he said. “I’m coming to the city in March.”

Pasteup Critter

This was all a couple of months ago and, true to his word, Brian is back in the Big Apple, working on a job at The American Museum of Natural History. “It’s awesome, dude. I don’t even bother leaving for lunch, I just take long walks through the museum. They have so much cool shit there. I love it.”

We spoke last week and made tentative plans to see each other over the weekend, but neither of us followed through with a phone call. “I barely even left the house,” he told me. “I went food shopping, that was it. The fucking weather.”

“I hear you. I had to get a prescription filled and was totally soaked by the time I got to the pharmacy and doubly soaked by the time I got home.”

“The wind,” he said.

“Totally. It stirred up the rain from all directions. All kinds of shit was strewn in the streets — garbage cans, plastic bags…”

“Umbrellas.”

“Yes! When I was leaving the pharmacy, there was a woman just ahead of me. She stepped outside, opened her umbrella, and in an instant it turned inside out. She stood there trying to figure out a way to fix it, but it was beyond hope.”

“Dude, get this: I went to the supermarket, right? I had exactly two pair of clean pants, my heavy denim work pants — no way way I was going to wear those, they’d still be wet by the time I go to work on Monday — and a light weight linen pair. So I threw those on — without any underwear — and ran to the supermarket. By the time I got there, I was drenched. I looked down and realized my pants were totally transparent. You could see everything. Everything, dude.”

“Oh man, that’s fucking hilarious. So what did you do?”

“Fuck it, what could I do? I had to do my food shopping.”