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The Stall King

Picture of by Rondavid Gold

by Rondavid Gold

Stall King Reminiscences • It looked like a chicken!

It looked like a chicken.

In 1958, I was a 17-year-old after school advertising apprentice at a fast-growing… little agency in Cleveland. We specialized in shopping center promotion. Shopping centers were a new phenomenon and we were riding the wave. I was comfortably seated on the commode in my favorite men’s room stall staring at the door in front of me.

There was a chip on the door. It looked like a chicken.

Every day I came into this stall. Every day I stared at the chicken chip. These were the heady “Mad Men” days of anything-goes creativity and of anything-goes anything. 

And so, on that particular day I thought (all at once), “If there were something to read on the stall door instead of a chicken chip, I would read it. If there were an ad with very long copy, I would read it. If I were an advertiser, I would know for certain that captive men and women in a particular office building were reading my message. If I were an office building landlord, I could make money with no investment by just allowing ads on my stall doors.”
It seemed like something that should be done.

I immediately went to, my idol and mentor, Howard Marks, the 27-year-old head of the agency, who had himself apprenticed at the agency that introduced Smucker’s to the marketplace and who, in seven or so years, would create KISS. I told him about my chicken-chip-cover-up epiphany. “That’s a great idea,” he said. “You should do it.”

I was, of course, hoping that he would work with me on it; finance it; make it happen. After all, he was 27. He knew how to make things happen. I was 17. I didn’t. Howard made no offer to help whatsoever. 

So, I then shared my bathroom brainstorm with our agency’s brilliant elder copywriter. He was 32. “That’s really a great idea,” he said. “You should do it.” He went back to his Olivetti. That was it. If anything was going to happen with this, I was obviously going to have to do it myself.

My ad career subsequently took me to California, Milwaukee and St. Louis. I was drafted and was in the Army Band (I’m a reed man) and then Viet Nam for a while. I then moved to New York City and got married.

During all these moves and years, whenever I brought up my idea, mostly as a conversation catalyst, virtually everyone would say, “That’s a great idea. You should do it.” 

So, one day in 1970, unhappy with my present agency position, I got an MBA friend to help me put together a business plan and through a family connection found a group of brave investors who thought stall door advertising really was “great idea” and that “I should do it.” Project R (Rest Room), Inc. was born.
First order of business: get the stall doors. I created a portable cartoon strip film/audio presentation for landlords. In today’s world it would be on a DVD or a memory stick. In 1970, state-of-the art was a 25-pound monster carrying case with a 10-inch screen on its outside and a synchronized strip film/tape player inside. The strip film and audio were constantly getting out of synch. I just had to kind of lug it in, clunk it down as gently as possible, push the start button…and hope. 

The cute little cartoon landlord in the presentation showed initial animated interest when the announcer let him know that he could make a lot money on property that he already owned, with no further investment or risk. And actual landlords actually showed actual initial interest as well. Then the announcer asked the cartoon landlord to guess what this fabulous moneymaker might be. He couldn’t and eagerly awaited the answer that was: “The inside of the stall doors of the rest rooms in your office buildings.”

Upon hearing this, the enraged cartoon landlord jumped on his desk and ordered me immediately out of his office. The announcer begged his indulgence and explained the low-risk, high-return potential. The animated landlord listened and finally, won over by solid marketing strategy, became eager to sign. Unfortunately, actual landlords continued in the “get out of my office” direction. My 25-pound assistant and I were thrown out of some of the most important real estate firms in New York, often accompanied by a shower of stinging epithets.

The Project R investors couldn’t understand why New York’s landlords weren’t lining up to partake of the windfall we offered and were becoming a bit nervous.

Me, too.

Then I got an appointment Harry Helmsley whose firm owned and/or managed more than 100 prime Manhattan properties including the Empire State Building. He had a reputation as a solid businessman and a gentleman. He was both. A soft-spoken, 6’5” white haired, impeccably dressed consummate real estate tycoon, he watched the antics of my cartoon landlord with a civilized smile and listened to my recorded announcer and said, “It’s a great idea. I think we should do it.” 

As I attempted to conceal my elation and disbelief, he laid out the required insurance parameters, etc., told me who to see to get things signed, and told me to stay in touch. 

After all these many years since the chicken chip, I actually had thousands of the best stall doors in the world to offer what were certain to be eager advertisers! Look out world, here comes Project R!

Of course, there were details to be taken care of like getting exactly the right adhesives and laminations for the ads…and building a sales force and maintenance crew, etc. Those were done and it was time to visit ad agencies with my presentation.

The cartoon figure in the agency version was a little media executive who was initially intrigued by the prospects of a mysterious new medium which promised to deliver an upscale captive audience who could be gender and career targeted with absolute precision. When it was revealed to the cute little media executive that the new medium was ads on stall doors of office building restrooms, he became enraged, leaped onto his desk and ordered me out of his office. The announcer begged his forbearance and gradually convinced the cartoon media executive of the advantages to his clients of being “pioneer” advertisers with Project R.

Likewise actual media executives were initially intrigued, became enraged and although not actually leaping onto their desks, ordered me out of their offices. Often accompanied by stinging epithets. The announcer and I were unable to change their minds. “No client of mine will ever…what makes you think that this agency would ever…etc.”

In the midst of these rejections and ejections, Project R, Inc. had now, through the efforts of local reps and the prestige of Harry Helmsley, signed landlords in Cleveland, Dallas, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco. We were national.

In 1970, Jerry Della Femina was an adman’s adman and one of Madison Avenue’s biggest creative stars. His groundbreaking, out-of-the-box concepts were responsible for some of history’s all-time most successful marketing campaigns. I was able to get an appointment with him personally. 

After watching my cartoon media executive and listening to my recorded announcer, he very suddenly charged at me from around his desk, grabbed my presentation case and yelled, “Give me that!” He then called his assistant and told her to book the next flight to Winston-Salem, home of big tobacco. “This is incredible,” he said excitedly. “I’m taking it down there tonight. I’ll be back with it tomorrow night. They’re going to love it! I’ll call you.”

Needless to say, I left his office in a stunned joyous delirium. I always knew that getting tobacco advertisers was nearly as much a key to Project R’s success as Harry Helmsley. I reported the earthshaking news to the team and waited eagerly for the call that would change our lives forever. 

Two days later morning it did.

“They say that they’re a food product and can’t advertise on stall doors,” said Jerry Della Femina.

And that was that. There would be no Project R tobacco ads. No flood of millions.

Although this was a major blow to our instant-success dreams, the buzz and the company, nevertheless, continued to grow.

There were front-page articles in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Advertising Age and in business columns all over the country. There were national broadcast interviews and photos taken of me standing on a stall toilet seat for Life Magazine.

In addition to our introductory ads which opened with: “Welcome to the Project R Reading Room…Please don’t get up.” There was a long-copy ad from a lingerie company that gave the history of bras beginning with: “In Roman times, every woman had to own a Zona. (Look it up.)

The media had a ball feigning outrage: “NO ESCAPE FROM THE AD MEN. One of the last places left in life where a person can get a little peace and quiet is being invaded by Madison Avenue though Project R,” etc., etc.

Our readers, however, loved us. We received glowing letters gushingly raving at how much people enjoyed the Project R idea and the ads. More than a hundred employees from one company actually sent us an entire roll of bathroom tissue filled with scrawled rave reviews. 

We added buildings in Detroit and Anchorage.

So, how come you never heard of me? How come I didn’t become very rich and famous? Three words: the economy dumped. A very severe recession (we had them then, too) hit in the early 1970’s and Harry Helmsley, in a consummate tycoon but kindly manner, told me that his buildings were no longer filled to overflowing and that his board of directors told him that Project R was too much of an image risk in seeking new tenants and…you get the idea. 

My investors urged me to continue. But without the Helmsley Empire behind us and with the economy only getting worse, I decided to skip the hospice step, pull the plug and return to a “normal” advertising career.

It was a great ride from chicken chip to Stall King and back to earth. One that I can safely say no one else has taken. Sometimes I think about it as I look at today’s totally invasive ad environment and I smile and feel old.

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Taking The Plunge

A Flash Fiction piece by R.D. Gold

The year: 2028. The place: a Lucid Automobile Showroom.

“Welcome to Lucid. How may I help you, Mr….?”

“Jackson. Evan Jackson. I’m interested in the ’29 EV1000.”

“Great, Evan, I’ll be happy to show you this extraordinary vehicle and arrange a test drive for you. Please. Come with me.”

“Will do.”

“Here you go, Evan. Isn’t she a beauty?”

“I’ll say!”

“And her beauty isn’t just skin deep. She’s totally AI self-aware. Just tell her where you want to go and she’ll take you there. Quickly, safely, comfortably. The EV1000 is simply the finest automobile ever made.”

“Could I take her for a drive?”

“Absolutely. Slide right in.”

“Uh…there are no door handles. How do I…”

“Just walk next to her…that’s right…and voila!”

“Wow.”

“That’s right. She senses you and opens your door. Now slip into those gorgeous leather seats.”

“Beautiful.”

“Enjoy your drive, Evan.”

“Sure. But…”

“Yes?”

“There’s no starter button…or…how do I…?

“The EV1000 is completely voice activated, Evan.”

“Really?”

“Absolutely. You just say, ‘Thank God’ to make her go and ‘Hallelujah’ to make her stop.”

“That’s it?”

“Yes, Sir.”

“OK. Here goes. Thank God!”

As promised, the EV1000 sped off like a rocket. In fact, it went so fast that Evan Jackson lost control. The car left the road and headed straight for Green Lake Canyon, a 1000-foot cliff overlooking a huge green-hued lake.

As he approached the cliff’s edge, Evan, in his panic, struggled to remember the code word to stop the car. Then, at the last possible second, he shouted, “Hallelujah.” The Ev1000’s Enhanced Emergency Braking System instantly engaged and the car skidded closer and closer to the edge of the towering precipice, finally stopping just inches from doom.

“Thank God,” said Evan Jackson.

Hallway To Destiny

A Flash Fiction piece by R.D. Gold

For so many years I have simultaneously anticipated and dreaded the journey down this long, dimly lit hallway to the stark white door at its end. That door and what waits behind it is now the focus of my unwavering determination to complete this…what should I call it?…mission. Step by step. Step by step.

Initially, the whole idea was deeply repugnant to me. It was beyond possibility that anyone could…or would… do such a thing. Still, close friends, relatives and others I’d only heard about had decided to take this perilous walk. Step by step.

The hallway is silent. Eerily silent. The only sounds coming from within my own body; the heavy pounding of my fearful heart, the gurgling of the acid in my roiling stomach.
Step by step.

Now, at last, I ‘m here. The ornate doorknob turning in my sweat-slick hand. And now slowly, slowly…the voice…

“Ah, Mr. Roberson, come in. Welcome to Comedy Central. Let’s see what you’ve got.”

Dealing With The Devil

A Flash Fiction piece by R.D. Gold

It wasn’t a journey I relished.  It promised to be unbearably long, terribly tedious and probably perilous. But necessary nevertheless.  My heart raced like a ticking timebomb as Alyssa packed our bags, including my own special one, for our journey to Columbia.  Of course, I understood that her Papa was in mortal danger and he needed his beloved only daughter to be with him.   But Medellin was a hotbed of chaos and corruption. Single and mass murders, kidnappings and mysterious “disappearances” were everyday occurrences. Drug lords operated by their own set of perverse practices, totally unchecked by terrified, ineffective law enforcement.
 
It was into this hellish hotbed that we were headed.  But it was even worse.  Alyssa’s Papa had incurred the wrath of Alejandro Pinzon, vicious head of Vipora, one of Columbia’s most powerful drug cartels. Papa had killed one of Pinzon’s cousins while attempting to foil a robbery at his bank.
 
Alyssa works for the U.S. State Department, DEA division.  She is in possession of the highest- priority top-secret information regarding drug-enforcement procedures and activities.  This information is more precious than diamonds to Alejandro Pinzon.  Of course, the DEA knew of Alyssa’s dad and, because he was the head of one of Columbia’s largest banks, they had always hoped that a situation would arise where he could serve as a conduit to a Medellin drug lord. Now, that opportunity had tragically materialized.  Papa was now being held hostage and his safe release depended on the strength and veracity of the information that his daughter could provide to Pinzon.
 
My special bag was the key to the success of the special op to free Papa and take down Vipora. Hidden within its seams was a liquid spray, whose principal ingredient was, ironically, a super-potent form of the deadly venom of the Gaboon Viper. (Vipora is viper in English.)  Alyssa would have access to a hidden spray switch on the bag which no search would reveal.
 
Airline security personnel were made aware of the vital nature of our mission, so our flights to Medellin were uneventful and the search of our luggage was cursory.
 
We were met at the airport by an armored custom-made Bentley manned by four dour dudes.   Alyssa was blindfolded and after what seemed like forever, we arrived at a huge, heavily fortified manor house, hidden deep in the dense Columbian jungle.
“El Jeffe is expecting you,” announced one of the dour dudes.
 
After being carefully searched, including my bag, we were escorted into a monumental, bodyguard bedecked office, featuring a monumental, gleaming mahogany desk behind which was ensconced a small, elegantly dressed mustachioed man who could have been sent by central casting to play a Columbian drug lord.  Papa sat far across the room, gagged and tied to a chair.
 
“Welcome, Alyssa.  I hope I can call you Alyssa.  Call me Alex.  May I offer you a drink of any kind.  No?  Well, then, I hope we can conduct our business quickly, efficiently and…to our mutual satisfaction.”
 
“The information you want is hidden in the bag.”
 
“What bag.  You didn’t…”
 
“My puppy’s carry back pack.”
 
“You’re joking, of course.”
 
“It was the safest way to bring it in.  No one thought to search it thoroughly.  Your own men searched it and didn’t find anything whatsoever.”
 
“Ingenious I must say.  Let’s see it.”
 
With my tail wagging wildly and my ears furiously flopping, Alyssa gently took me out of my special bag and pressed the hidden button releasing the venom spray.  As the drug lord and his minions gasped for breath and dropped to the floor, Alyssa quickly injected Papa with an antidote.  (She and I were already protected.)
 
Then there was the welcome sound of our rescue helicopters and mass confusion amongst the now-leaderless gang.
 
It’s great to be back home.  Papa’s with us.  He loves me.  Alyssa loves me.  I got a medal for bravery and more than ever, I enjoy riding around in my special bag.

Sisters

A Flash Fiction piece by R.D. Gold

A Nice Photo

It was a gray, drizzly March day, 70 years ago. My younger sister, Grace, and I, both teenagers, were taking an afternoon walk in town when we were suddenly confronted by a disheveled old woman, with very bad teeth and even worse breath.

“You girls are very fortunate,” she rasped as we attempted to get by. “You’ve been chosen to receive a special gift.”

“Keep walking, Emily,” Grace whispered. “Don’t pay any attention to…”

“Eternal youth,” said the woman.

I stopped. “Well, it certainly didn’t work for you, did it?” I blurted.

“Shush,” said Emily. “You’ll just encourage her.”

“I was chosen to give, my dear. Not to receive,” said the woman holding out a small, beautifully fashioned metal box.

“What…?” I began, caught between being repelled by the tattered, foul-smelling woman and an irresistible attraction to the gleaming object in her gnarled hand.

“Emily!” snapped Grace. “Come on!”

“It is for you both and only for you both,” said the woman pressing it into my hand. “Take it. Use it. You will see.”

And then she turned and walked away and was shortly out of sight.

“You shouldn’t have taken that from her, Emily,” Grace scolded. “Who knows where it…”

“C’mon. You’ve got to be at least a little curious, Gracie,” I said.

“Not in the least,” she said. But I could see that she was. More than a little. We both were.

“We’ll take a peek when we get home.” I said.

We hardly said a word on the way home as anticipation quickened our step.

We went immediately into the back garden and put the shiny little box on the bench.

“I’m scared,” Grace said. “What if it’s something really gross.”

“Only one way to find out,” I said and slowly lifted the lid.

“What is it?” said Grace.

“I’m not sure,” I said as I removed a small object.

We stared in wonder.

“It looks like a little camera!” said Grace.

“You’re right, it does,” I said.

“Well let’s see if it works! Let’s take a picture!” said Grace taking the camera with a quivering hand.

“I think there’s a timer setting on it. See, here. A tiny hour glass symbol.”

“Put the camera on the table and set the timer!”

I pressed the shutter button and a red light began to flash.

“Hurry! Over here!”

We ran and stood together in front of the camera as the red light blinked faster and faster and finally stopped.

There was a blinding flash of light. Much too bright to come from such a small object. But it did.

We screamed and clutched each other.

And that was it.

We stared at each other.

“Wow,” I said. “That was scary.”

“For sure,” said Grace.

We stared at each other.

“Now what do we do?” Grace asked.

“Well,” I said, “I guess we roll up the film, if there is any… and take it to Mr. Jayson at the drugstore and have him develop it and see what’s what.”

“I suppose you’re right,” said Grace.

And that’s what we did.

Mr. Jayson was a little puzzled by the small roll of film. “Guess it’s one of those new German cameras,” he said. “I’ll do my best with it. Come back in two days.”

For Grace and me it was the longest 2 days of our lives. We expected to see something special and extraordinary.

“Very strange,” Mr. Jayson told us when we went to pick up our developed film. “I’ve never seen any film like it. It was a bright gold color. But I developed it in the usual way and there was one picture on it. It’s very nice.”

“But not special? Not extraordinary?” I asked.

“Nope. Just…nice,” He said.

He showed the picture to us. He was right. It was a very nice picture of Grace and me in the back yard.

“Well, that’s was a real let-down,” Grace groused as we headed home.

“Yeah,” I said. “No magic. But it’s a nice picture. let’s frame it and put it on the piano anyway. To remember our little adventure together.”

And we did.

That was 70 years ago. Grace and I grew to young womanhood and then…we stopped aging.
In fact, today, both of us remain vibrant, healthy young women.

But, that photo on the piano now shows two sisters in their 80’s, one holding a cane, standing together in their back yard.

It’s a nice photo.

The Voice

A Flash Fiction piece by R.D. Gold

The voice spoke to me on that beautiful Fall afternoon while I was visiting Anne’s grave.

I go there every week, you know, just to tell her how much I miss her and how empty my life is without her. It’s my sad way of attempting to cope. Somehow, I sense her presence more in the solitude of that quiet place than anywhere else. Of course, I never anticipated a response.

On that particular day, however, as I was pouring out my weekly lament, I heard her voice. In fact, it was not really hearing, but rather a soundless sound deep in my soul. It was definitely Anne’s voice.

“Change is coming,” it said to me.

And from that same place in my being, I was wordlessly able to ask: “What change?”

“The universe.”

“Will this be a cataclysmic change? An explosion?”

“No. Don’t be concerned, my love. It will be completely peaceful…evolutionary. Look.”

And I saw.

In fact, it was not really seeing, but yet I did clearly see a vast sandy plain extending from horizon to horizon. Standing on the plain in a circle were countless women dressed in black. They appeared nun-like but were not nuns. They faced an open area in the center. In the center of the open area was a simple wooden platform. In the center of the platform stood a solitary woman in normal dress.

And I knew.

The women were transmitting the power of their feminine energy to the one on the platform. She was absorbing it. I understood somehow. That energy, through that woman, was going to change the universe.

I then noticed that at the bottom of the steps leading up to the platform, there was a man. It was me.

“Am I a part of the changeover?” I asked.

“Yes.”

“What should I do to prepare?”

“Don’t be concerned. It’s all done. It will be revealed. You’ll know.”

And then, written across the sky, appeared the word, “truth.”

And then…nothing more. Just me. Standing by Anne’s grave.

And so you see, doctor. Since then, I’ve been waiting. I’ve been watching. Look around. You can already see it happening. And I’m part of it. I don’t know why or how. Waiting and watching doesn’t mean I’m crazy, does it? Does it? You’re a woman. You understand. I’m not crazy, doctor. Am I?

Am I?

The Fifteenth Step

A Flash Fiction piece by R.D. Gold

I swore never to return to this place.

And yet, here I was in the city, on the street and in front of the house where it all happened.

As I stood and gazed through the familiar arched hedge at the Victorian-style town house, my senses spiked, the hairs on my arms stood up as from a lightning strike and memories stormed in like a thunderclap.

Even standing on the street, my mind could smell the fresh-baked bread… hear the sounds of hysterical getting-tickled giggles from Amy…and the happy disarray in the sprawling, high-ceilinged living room.

As I walked slowly up the chipped cement front stairs, I was strangely, simultaneously attracted and repelled by the prospect of figuratively and literally opening the weathered door to the past that loomed menacingly before me.

Just before she died, my mother had sent me the house key and the note, “The fifteenth stair. “

I had stormed off those many years ago, leaving behind the remnants of a fraying life. Amy’s death had destroyed us all. Shouted accusations. Guilt-induced depression. “Not your fault,” everyone said. We knew better. There must have been something we could have done. Something we must have missed.

The heavy front door creaked open revealing a dismally dark and dusty interior that reflected my own feelings as I slowly entered. The living room was to the left. The dining room to the right. Furniture covered with sheets. Sun streaks spilling onto the wood floors from the kitchen straight ahead.

And there, directly before me, gracefully spiraling upward, stood the glorious centerpiece of the house and our lives…a magnificently immense, wide, marble and mahogany staircase.

These stairs had been our playground as we bounded upward and raced downward playing our childhood games. Its polished bannisters perfect for sliding on. And what grand entrances we made on those special occasions. Slowly descending in our finery to the admiring applause of those below.

And then Amy died and my world wept without ceasing.

She tripped on the hem of her glorious graduation gown and tumbled down those stairs, her lovely head striking the marble again…and again.

I swore never to return this place. And yet, here I was painfully ascending the stairs that had killed her. Ten…eleven…twelve…thirteen…fourteen…

The fifteenth stair. It seemed no different from all the others at first. On closer inspection however, I found that I could slide it aside like the cover of an ancient sarcophagus.

There was a large walnut box. I lifted the hinged lid. It was all there in profusion. Photographs of the good days, the sweet times together, the holiday celebrations, the joys. There were favorite childhood toys. There were birthday cards. My life with Amy.

And there was the wilted corsage from her graduation gown.

And from my mother, a card. “To My David. May her memory be as a blessing. Not a curse.”

And so it was.

I swore never to return to this place. I’m glad I did.

Because of Eve

A Medical/Mystery Thriller
A novel by R.D. Gold ( available soon )

Chapter 1

 

Michael Katz was startled by the huge, grease-matted rat, which suddenly and silently scuttled from beneath the remnants of a carelessly discarded paper bag and scurried into the shadows. The weary wooden stairs creaked noisily beneath his well-worn Mephistos.  

He shuddered, and cautiously made his way along the dim, refuse-strewn hallway to a soiled, scarred door roughly marked with a barely legible number 4.  Michael took a deep breath, knocked firmly and waited.  In response, there was only the whisper of loose papers being blown about the grimy hallway, more scurrying…and silence.

“Mr. Barcotti?  I have a delivery for Joseph Barcotti,” he said loudly, knocking again.

“He ain’t there,” said a graveled voice emanating from an unkempt head that appeared suddenly from an adjoining doorway.

“Thanks,” said Michael.  “You sure?”

“Yeah. Joe B. moved out a few months ago.”

“Any idea where?”

“Nah.  But, he sure didn’t belong in this fuckin’ trap.”

“Really? Why’s that?” Michael asked. 

“He was smart, y’know.  He talked real good…and he didn’t drink or shoot up and shit.”

“Thanks, man,” said Michael, resignedly turning and heading back down the filthy stairs.  He punched #3 on his cell phone.

“Stern Detective Agency.  May I help you?” 

“Hey, Stacey… Michael.  Barcotti’s on the move again.  I’m goin’ back to his bank to check out the latest.”

“You’ll get him, Michael.  You always do.”

“Thanks, Stace.  I’ll stay in touch.”

“Hey, Michael.  Scott wants a minute.  You got one?”

“Sure.”

“Hang on. “

Shortly, Scott Stern’s big voice boomed, “Michael!  Great work on tracking down Little Dickie Sammerson.  He was sickeningly slick.”

“Yeah, it felt great getting that asshole.  Now, I’ve got to pick up the trail to Barcotti.”

“You’ll get him.  You always do.”

“Your confidence warms my cockles.”

“Screw your friggin’ cockles!  Have you thought about what I said?”

“You mean that thing about leaving medical school and becoming a full-time detective and ruining my life?”

“Yeah, that thing.”

“Here’s what I think about that thing. I think Dr. Katz wouldn’t think that was a very good idea.”

“Your father’s not you, Michael. 

“Don’t I know it.”

“You’re the best natural detective I’ve ever seen.   You’ve got a perfect nose, a great sense of logic and a friggin’ photographic memory.”

“A blessing and a curse.”

“I’m serious.  You love doing this crap.  You could make a fortune. You could…”

“Hey, Scott. Don’t make me get all sappy about becoming a doctor… helping people, saving the world and all that stuff.”

“I’m not through trying to convince you, you know.”

“I know. I know. I know.”

“Don’t bet against me on this, kid.”

“Not going to happen, Scott.  I’ll be in touch.  Later.”

 

Kilwins

A sampling of text from Ron's original Flash Fiction piece

by Rondavid Gold

He entered.
“Welcome to Kilwins. What can I get ya, young man?”
“One scoop of cherry in a cup, please.”
“Comin’ up.”
She entered.
“Be right with ya young lady. Here ya go, young man, that’s five twenty-five.”
“Keep the change.”
“Thank you very much, sir. And what can I get for you ma’am?”
“A scoop of cherry in a cup, please.”
“Comin’ right up.”
“Well. It looks like we were meant for each other.”
“Pardon me?”
“When two people both like Kilwin’s cherry, that implies a deep connection.”
“You think so.”
“No question. I’m Larry.”
“Beth.”
“Here ya go, young lady. That’ll be…”
“Here. This one’s on me. To celebrate.”
“No, uh…”
“Larry.”
“No…Larry. I…”
“I insist…Beth. Here, keep the change.”
“Why thank you. Now you two enjoy your Kilwins together, y’hear.”
“Thank you, Larry.”
“My pleasure, Beth. Let’s sit right here. OK? You have a few minutes?”
“A few. I have to be back at work by two. I like taking my break here.”
“Good choice. Where do you work?”
“Haskell & Demmings. First year.”
“Really? You’re an attorney?”
“’Fraid so. Change your mind about having ice cream together?”
“Actually, you might want to change your mind. I’m an attorney also. Goldstein and Morgan. Second year.”
“Uh oh.”
“Yeah. This may not be do-able.”
“I guess we could still try to make it work somehow.”
“Maybe…with counselling.”
“You live nearby?”
“West Palm.”
“Jupiter. Still possible. Not too far.”
“It’s a long shot, though.”
“For sure. And I’m Jewish.”
“Reformed?”
“Reconstructionist.”
“Uh oh.”
“Another major hurdle to our relationship.”
“But, Reconstructionist and Reformed aren’t really that different.”
“I guess not. But, before we get married…”
“Are you proposing, Larry?”
“Not quite yet. First there’s something I need to know.”
“Yes?”
“Do you always have to be right?”
“Absolutely.”
“Me, too! We’re going to have some wonderful arguments.”
“Well, I guess that settles it.”
“I guess so. We should probably get together Saturday night to discuss the wedding plans?”
“I suppose you’re right. Here’s my address. 8PM.”
“7:30.”
“7:45.”
“Alright.”
“I really love this ice cream.”
“Me too.”