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Ordinary Horrors

Lowell Mick White Night at the Tex Lounge

12/4/2021

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Where to start?

Let’s start with setting.

​It was December, 1981. I was living in the Haunted House on Pruett.


The Tex Lounge—not to be confused with the Austex Lounge, on South Congress—was a sleazy beer joint on 4th Street, just west of Congress. The photo below is the best I could find—the bar's entrance was just to the right of the awning on the far right side.
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The Tex Lounge was sleazy and nasty, but a step up from the super-nasty (yet interesting) rumdum bars I wrote about here. The bar itself was kind of small, but there was a big room on the east side with a couple of pinball machines—one of them a KISS machine that I could roll all the time. There was a barmaid from Minnesota named Gail, who was lovely, and we actually knew a person in common back in the north. I would go down to the Tex in the afternoons and play pinball and flirt with Gail and work on being a colorful character in a sleazy bar. Every now and then the Tex Lounge would book a band in the big room--Kathy and the Kilowatts was a big draw, and the Gutter Brothers.

My connection to the Gutter Brothers was through Peter Nye, the band’s bass player, who was also a bartender at the Deep Eddy, and also a neighbor at the 700 Club. One Sunday night we were hanging around the Eddy watching TV and when the bar closed, barmaid KB sent us on home. We walked up the hill to the 700 Club, and as we crossed 7th Street three or so cop cars screeched up and swarmed around us. Not city cops—UT cops. They got out of their cars and one of them grabbed me by the arm.

“There’s been reports of prowlers around the married student housing,” one of the cops said. “You don’t match the description,” he said to Peter. “But YOU do,” he said to me.

“Oh,” Peter said. “Well, I’ll see you later.”

He crossed the street and went up the steps and into his apartment. Ha. I wasn’t too worried—it was like a big joke. I had an ironclad alibi—down at the bar all evening being a ne'er do well. I got to sit in the cop car until someone came by and looked me over and said I wasn’t the prowler and then they cut me loose and I went on up to my apartment. Peter later bought me a beer and apologized for bailing.

​The Gutter Brothers’ biggest song was a punk number called “Killer Waitresses.” It was sort of inappropriate in 1980, and certainly inappropriate in 2021.
​Killer Waitresses
They got big tits
Killer Waitresses
They get big tips
Yes. Well. It was fun at the time.

​They also had a great t-shirt, which you can see me wearing here.

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The shirt is long gone now. When it existed, it showed Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy—fucking!—in the gutter. (Artwork by Peter Nye...).

I guess that was inappropriate, too. But amusing!

So, I don’t know, we were all at the Deep Eddy one evening, and I was ranting about something. Probably complaining that someone (my professors?) didn’t recognize my greatness or whatever.

“Well, you’re a great American,” Peter said.

“Yes!” I yelled. “I am a great American!”

And so it was on. The Gutters had a gig coming up at the Tex Lounge, and Peter set it up as a tribute to me.

The night itself was fun.

Many people came—I didn’t do a count, so I don’t know exactly how many. Mostly people I knew, but also people who came in off the street because it was Saturday night in a sleazy bar in Austin. Much beer was drunk. At one point the band invited me to read a poem—and this was my first public performance.

I kind of sucked. I’m the weird kind of introvert that wants people to pay attention to them, until people are paying attention to them, and then they get anxious.  (Also I mentioned much beer, right?). I started to read a poem. I’d never used a microphone. People had trouble hearing me. Peter Nye came over an adjusted the mic a couple of times. Maybe it was better. I continued reading—a punk poem I’d written a couple of years before in Minneapolis after hearing the Sex Pistols record for the first time.
​My mommy was a sterno bum
My daddy was a whore
Granddad was a newsboy to the age of 84
(what a slimy bastard he was)
 
I’m never ever gonna go very far
I’m never ever gonna drive a nice car
Every day is just the same
I’ve never even been to a baseball game!
 
And I’m so pissed.
It was an authentically terrible performance. Someone even threw a beer can at me! Sadly empty. Oh well. I think I’ve gotten better since then.

But! Despite the poetry, it was a great night! A big sporting evening, as they say. And when the show was over, I was grabbed by some characters and we drove down to the coast to watch the sun rise.

​Youth is exhausting.


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You might be interested in my novel of Austin, That Demon Life....a novel of lust and laziness....

“That Demon Life has got Austin in its sway, or at least this novel's motley crew of characters.  A horny judge, a defense attorney with an attitude, an entourage of petty criminals, a dating service maven, a self made internet porn star and a boy toy or two—they're all slouching toward Sixth Street and beyond.  This is a fast-paced, hold-on-to-your-bar stool satire, a hilarious, stumbling romp through law and disorder, urban ennui and its after-hour antidotes, Texas-sized lust and doom.”
—Alison Moore, author of The Middle of Elsewhere and Synonym for Love.


​Read That Demon Life now!
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Yeah, I Climbed the Water Tower

1/25/2020

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I’m not a big believer in nostalgia—I mean, I do like the past, but I see it as kind of place, a setting for my stories, not as some golden cheerful smiling misty-eyed fake memory mess. We all have pasts—we all have stories, and if you follow those stories you can sometimes fall into a wormhole of memory that comes out somewhere else and is quite startling. And so…I was looking at something or other online, and I saw a reference to Mankato, Minnesota, a town where I lived from 1965 to 1976 and did much of my growing up. I went to Google Streets at looked at my old house (I did that a couple of years ago, too, for a blog post) and then I followed the cam around to other places in the town. I haven’t been to Mankato since 1979 or so, and, as you might expect, it’s a very different place now. Interesting, in a dreamlike way, familiar and strange at the same time.  But then I saw the water tower on Balcerzak Drive—and, oh—a story came clawing up out of the deeps of time.

We—us kids—we used to climb that tower!
Picture
In the days of my youth, those apartments on the left were there—they were brand new—but the building covered by shadows wasn’t there, and softball fields were all cornfields. This was in high school—junior year, senior, 1975, 1976. We’d park at the apartments and sneak across the cornfield and—kick—the door at the base of the tower.

Boom. The door would open, we’d jump in, and shut it behind us.

Inside was a circular stair winding up and up and up.

Then there was a little platform. From the platform on up there was a ladder—inside a tube—running up through the water tank itself.

Then there was another platform at the top of the ladder. Stand on that and you were inside the tank. Shine your flashlight down at the water—and it was always scummy and covered with mats of algae or bacteria or—just scum.

Then there was another ladder up to the top of the tank. This ladder was kind of scary, because it went up at an angle, and you were out over the scummy water.

Whoever was the first up the last ladder would—ease—open this big hatch and lower it gently onto the tank top.

Then you’d go through the hatch and onto the top of the tank.

It was scary! The top of the tank was curved and seemed to slope sharply. No railings.

But! You could see for fucking ever! I told people I could see all the way to Waseca, about thirty miles to the east.

Maybe I could just see the lights of Waseca reflecting up into the clouds. Still—a long way.

My only time as the first up the ladder, I didn’t gently ease the hatch to the surface of the tank—I fucking dropped it and it BANGED and echoed around and my buddies cussed me out. Still we went up through the hatch and stretched out on the tank, looking out at the world.

Then there was someone yelling at us down below.

“Mike Westlund! I know you’re up there!”

It was Mike’s sister, who lived in those apartments. I guess she heard the banging of the hatch.

“You get down from there right now or I’ll tell mom!”

So—we came down off the tower before we even had a chance to engage in youthful bad behavior. I fucked everything up.
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The Death of Sparks: January 1, 1980

12/30/2019

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​Just about forty years ago, as I write this—the early hours of January 1, 1980—I was witness to the murder of Anthony Noble Sparks.

A cop told me it was the first murder of the decade in the state of Texas.

It was a pretty traumatic event for me—and worse of course for poor Sparks, and for his family, wherever they are.

​I’ve written about it (sort of) fictionally twice—in the story “It May Be a Day, it May Be Forever,” (my first published story, found in the collection The Messes We Make of Our Lives), and in the novel Professed. I’ve never written about it factually, in a historical/personal context, though maybe I will at some point.
Picture
Some memories:
  • My roommate, TWS, and I went down to San Antonio for a New Years’ party given by one of his fellow Jell-O salesmen. TWS thought ahead and brought a change of clothes—I didn’t….
  • After midnight we left the party and went driving around looking for a bar. We came across the New York Pub. TWS said, “A taste of the Big Apple in the Heart of Texas!”
  • We went in to play some pool—and things happened.
  • The morning after the murder we took our hangovers (and my aching face) down to Mi Tierra for breakfast. I was still wearing my clothes from the night before and was soaked—caked!—in Sparks’s blood, and while we waited for a table fucking flies kept landing on me.
  • (The blood: TWS did CPR on Sparks, but somehow I got way more blood on me!)
  • After breakfast we went to the cop station to be good citizens and report what we’d seen.  We told the cop managing the desk that we wanted to give a statement about a stabbing we’d witnessed. The cop said, “Stabbing? We had a hundred stabbings last night and fifty shootings. You’ll have to be more specific.”
  • When TWS said we’d been at some place called the New York Pub, the cop looked at a list and said, ”Oh—upstairs, homicide.”
  • Upstairs we met with two cops—one, African American and young and well-dressed, and one middle-aged and rumpled and bleary with a huge rum-dum nose. I thought—it’s like these cops came from TV!
  • The old cop asked, “What the fuck were you doing at the New York Pub? We don’t go there, and we have guns!”
  • And there was no real answer to that other than the stupid truth—we left the party and went out to play the first pool game of the decade.
  • The cops showed us photos of poor Sparks naked on a slab—the wounds in his chest.
  • TWS looked away, said, “Jesus! You guys do this every day?”
  • “Twenty-four hours a day,” the handsome cop said. He took a drag on his cigarette, then exhaled. “Three hundred sixty-five days a year.”
  • Just like TV!
  • Police later arrested a guy named Jesse Vasquez for the murder. We were told he’d been turned in by his sister. Apparently he’d stabbed several other people earlier that evening.
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A few years ago I was in San Antonio and found myself a few blocks from the murder scene. I went looking for the New York Pub. I found the address, but the building was totally different—remodeled beyond recognition or just replaced. It was vacant. Where's Spark's ghost?

​Does anyone but me think about Sparks forty years on?

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    Lowell Mick White

    Author of the novels Normal School and Burnt House and Professed and That Demon Life and the story collections  Long Time Ago Good and The Messes We Make of Our Lives.

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