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Steven Hunley
09-23-2011, 12:15 AM
Blue Line to LA

by Steven Hunley

I feel like subjecting myself to the variety pack. Remember Kellogg's variety pack ? Little packages of cereal of all sorts? Corn Pops and Rice Crispies, Corn Flakes and Frosted Flakes too. That’s what the Blue Line is like. All kinds of flakes. It’s the good the bad and the ugly of the LA Metro scene. It runs between Long Beach and L.A. where it digs like a mole underground near 7th.

In Watts, on steps a very black and ring-tailed fellow.

Handsome and fresh-faced, corn rows neatly arranged on his black cranium. Pants crotch down between his knees. Butt-ugly shorts showing. Black Chuck Taylors with thick red shoelaces grace his phalanges. Thick imitation gold chain you know where.

Attitude to spare

If you like it,

As you like it.

His opinion? Shakespeare’s got nothing on rappers.

He’s saving money riding the Blue Line. He points his chin to the roof of the car and closes his eyes and mumbles something under his breath. He’s calculating like mad.

No Problem.

An old wrinkled Mexican woman with a bandaged arm sells candy and water for a dollar.
Two kids fight over a red balloon. A young mother wearing skinny jeans burps her baby on her shoulder. An idiot discards a candy wrapper nonchalantly when he thinks nobody is looking or scoping him out.

Humanity, you gotta love 'it.

In Florence on steps a Mexican gangster.

Old gangster, Original Gangster. O.G. Dickie Shorts with white socks up to his calves. Tennies. Tattooed neck and arms, web belt with shiny metal buckle, Old English letter carved out. Baseball cap turned *ss-backwards. Lots of Machimo to spare. He takes a seat and writes notes on a yellow legal pad. He’s saving money by riding the Blue Line. Probably has five or six drive-bys to his name and a heater in his pocket.
In all probability a most violent fellow.

No Problemo.

Various people tap and scroll on their phones, oblivious to the world around them. Ears stuffed with ear-buds, blocking out sounds, peering down at electronic displays in their hands. King Kong could lift up the car and they wouldn’t know until the song was over or the game was finished. A T-Rex could eat us, and they’d think the crunch of his teeth was the sh*tty reception of their cell phones, until it bit their legs, but by then it would be too late.

That’s OK. It makes my job easier.

Downtown on Pico Chick Hern Station-

On steps a straight white-cracker-fellow.

Tan pants with creases. Ancient wing-tipped loafers. Dinosaurian footwear.
Lame solid color suit, you name it. Different colored tie. No taste. No design nor pattern.
Neither has this guy.

He’s adding something up on a Texas Instruments calculator. Good with figures kind a fellow.
Probably saving up for a trip to Tahiti on the old Somerset Maugham trail. Real exotic and rugged. Full of Romance and Adventure too. He takes off his wire-rimmed glasses and cleans them with soft circling motions, in an off-hand manner, as if he was caressing Aphrodite’s cold marble breast in all her Greek splendor. Trying to warm her up and all. One of his favorite fantasies.

Probably trying to figure the price of a country home in Nevada.

Millions of palm trees whip by followed by miles of walls covered by tagging crews in colorful graffiti. A skater wearing black and white Vans like Sean Penn holds his board by it’s tale. Fat people mill about on the platform going nowhere. Skinny people thread their way between them like an unplanned Olympic event. All colors, all sorts, all sizes. Various human-walking patterns.

America the Beautiful.

Eventually, they get off. We really can’t say what happened to them. But maybe we can.

Like Magic.

The black fellow walks into his house. A calendar from the ninety-nine cents store hangs on the wall with pictures of Greece. The brown eyes of his wife brighten.

“You know what, Honey? I’ve saved quite a bit riding the blue line. Looks like it’s vacation time in Santorini!”

No problem.

The moment the Mexican guy steps in the door he’s rushed by his children. They hug him and surround him with smiles and warm feelings. There’s soccer trophies in the display cabinet on the other side of the room, glittering through the glass. As he tosses the legal pad in the corner he shouts towards the warm-tamale smelling kitchen,

“Hey Honey, guess what? I just passed the bar!”

No problem.

The white-cracker fella picks letters out of his mail box and runs upstairs to his woman. On the stairs he makes it a point to kick the cat.

“Hey,” he shouts, “I’ve saved a few cents riding the Blue Line. Call Willy and order some purple Kush. We can roll up a blunt and drink a Budweiser forty-boy."

“But drinking and smoking always makes you so angry,” muses his wife who sports a black eye under her Gucci sunglasses.

“It’s OK,” he figures.“She’s got room for another.”

No problem?

©Steven Hunley2011

Buh4Bee
09-25-2011, 03:22 PM
America is beautiful and anything is possible here. Love the sense of justice, hope, and possibilities for everyone express in this piece. Hope you can share it with your class.

AuntShecky
10-06-2011, 04:37 PM
Over here on the "right" coast, we're under the impression that if you don't drive and own a car in California you can't go nowhere, no how, no way. Nice to know there actually exists some form of public transportation.

The form of this story is off the beaten track, original, counterpointed with the repeated phrase, "no problem."

Watch out for a couple of punctuationand spelling errors,
e.g. "hold his board by its tail." (No apostrophe for possessive pronouns; you don't mean "tale.")

It's as if the narrator is sketching the types of people he sees as the train(?) goes by, then imagines what happens to them when they get off and head home. Some of the portraits are stereotypical, some are more finely detailed.

All kinds of "flakes," huh? They're all described with your your trademark humor.

Here's my favorite passage:





Various people tap and scroll on their phones, oblivious to the world around them. Ears stuffed with ear-buds, blocking out sounds, peering down at electronic displays in their hands. King Kong could lift up the car and they wouldn’t know until the song was over or the game was finished. A T-Rex could eat us, and they’d think the crunch of his teeth was the sh*tty reception of their cell phones, until it bit their legs, then it would be too late.




http://www.online-literature.com/forums/showthread.php?p=1076508#post1076508

Sherri Lu
09-03-2013, 01:27 AM
As a native of LA, I see this as a juicy chunk of the city plucked out of the larger stew. The descriptions could be accurate on any given day. I like that the view of the observer is slanted with the common stereotypes of many people, but then later the reader finds out about what's really going with each person, and each stereotype falls apart. Never judge a book by its cover, right?

Steven Hunley
02-02-2018, 01:26 AM
Used to ride the Blue Line to LA from Paramount and had plenty of time to write.

kiz_paws
02-20-2018, 09:53 AM
Excellently written, Steven.
Loved this story!

Steven Hunley
02-25-2018, 04:41 PM
The trip to work and back involved three buses and the Blue Line. It took over an hour and a half. I'd make up scenarios, but after a while, realized I was working with stereotypes, not real people with all the details. Maybe they were completely different from how I imagined them, and what if they were more than just different, what if they were just the opposites?

Danik 2016
02-26-2018, 10:42 AM
I think that one of the big motors of fiction is imagination. Your characters don´t have to be real to the detail, they just have to be convincing. But I think you know that much better than I do.