All Stories, General Fiction

Swiper Alley by Adam Kluger

Magoolie had rules about who to swipe left on.

Cat lovers [swipe left] (allergic).Any woman looking for “generosity”(aka a sugar daddy) [swipe left] …any swipers demanding men of a certain height (at least 5’ 10”!) [swipe left].

Swipers that included photos of themselves with their past lovers —but with the face of the other person in the photo blacked out – turning them into a non-entity. I loved you once. Now I am cancelling you out with a circle on your face. [swipe left]
Magoolie swiped left on anyone outside of NYC or still living in Thailand or still looking to get married.[swipe left] Been there. Done that.

He also passed on any woman with an angry face or crazy eyes resembling a dinosaur or pit-bull,  or whose profile started off with a negative attitude toward the male of the species— (“not into immature man-babies, men who are scammers,  no ONS (One night stands) or FWB (friends with benefits) or ENM (ethically non-monogamous) only LTR (long-term relationships) and NO MAGA!!! [swipe left]

Most of the swipers wrote that they were looking for their “last first date” and they all seemed to be into yoga or pilates (whatever the heck that was),

“How do you like my jogging outfit?”

“It’s cool … looks like you are a cast-member from Lost in Space—that 60’s TV show.”

“Don’t remember that one”Two small iced coffees and a gingerbread snowman later.

“You’re not emotionally over your ex. I need someone who is more emotionally available and by the way here’s some advice, none of these dates you are going on want to hear about your exes.”

They agreed to get coffee as “friends” in the future.“Maybe we could introduce each other to other people”

Magoolie agreed but after saying goodbye he figured that would be the last time he ever saw her again. She had really cool hair. Like a bouffant.

Magoolie was still thinking about HER.

The one who had been his girl for a number of good years until she wasn’t anymore.

It happened suddenly.

He had embarrassed HER somehow in front of her girlfriends at a work event. The subject of Halloween came up and he asked the assembled women, “why was the witch late for the party? Because she was too busy riding her broom.” Stunned silence at the women’s empowerment event.

She let him have it good on the street after and then the next morning she called from her well appointed apartment and said, “that’s it. It’s over… Ripping the band-aid.”

And she told Magoolie not to text her funny gifs or memes.

Flowers didn’t work.

Long apology texts didn’t work.

She had already moved on mentally and had made that decision months earlier and there was nothing Magoolie could do. He had been on double-secret probation without knowing it.

He kept flashing back to the way he loved to touch and kiss her and hold her at night and make her moan and relax and laugh and he could not believe it was all over.

Really over.

He had bought tickets to see DEVO and the B-52s at Jones Beach for them some months prior, and so, after their silly fight, he texted HER to ask if she still wanted to go to the concert w him…hoping she would say yes.

Crickets.

She wanted a clean break.

Her friends had probably encouraged her to find someone more suitable, more liquid, with wanderlust to travel the world instead of the messy, needy, immature, hard-working, paycheck to paycheck schlub that Magoolie always was and always would be.

He would try to hold her hands in the beginning of their courtship and it was never a perfect fit.

She had the hands of a fighter. A heroic mom. And his hands were not as calloused.

She was way tougher than Magoolie despite her beauty.

She was a doer.

A problem solver and Magoolie was just another problem. But he felt that they could heal each other and he still believed it even as he scoured the bumblebee dating app for a possible last minute date to take to the concert instead of HER.

Finally, he found someone he had texted with from 5 years prior who somehow miraculously expressed interest in going to the concert w Magoolie on short notice, after all of his guy friends were busy or uninterested.

To make it all work Magoolie had called his cynical artist pal Manfred Gogol to beg a ride to Jones Beach. Gogol who spent most of his life driving various gorgeous women wherever they wanted to go, whenever, reluctantly agreed.

But when the night of the concert arrived Gogol came up with a super-lame last minute excuse and Magoolie and his old/new swiper friend, who was really only interested in going to see the B-52s and DEVO —were completely fucked… one hour before the opening act (Lene Lovich of “My Lucky Number’s One” fame) was set to hit the stage.

Rather than call the night off – the swiper insisted they try to get to the venue. That was a bad decision.

They took a subway to Grand Central and then made their way to the LIRR tracks that were completely redone with enormous escalators that took 10 minutes to ascend and go down

—they were lost and they missed their train and then another train and the information booth person was unhelpful and by the time they made it to the Jones Beach train station a couple of hours later the buses to the Jones Beach Amphitheater were no longer in operation.

Magoolie and his extremely pissed off swiper flagged a gypsy cab driver who spoke no english and had another passenger. They drove around all parts of the area at night—lost for the most part despite GOS. Using Google translate to ask the driver questions in Spanish. “Dude! Where the fuck are we?? …No bueno!”

The swiper now truly hated Magoolie and when they finally got to the venue – the security guard was incredulous,” hey folks where are you going?”

“We just got here from New York City”

“You gotta be kidding me— this is the last song… feel bad for you… let me see your tickets.”

Magoolie showed his phone and the security guard let them in to watch DEVO perform “Freedom of Choice” while encouraging the remaining few fans, sprinkled through the Jones Beach Amphitheater to “remember to vote!”

The anger suddenly enveloped Magoolie.

He now understood very clearly how OJ Simpson could go from being a beloved celebrity to viciously murdering his ex-wife, allegedly.

Magoolie started punching and stabbing Gogol in the face over and over. He could hear Gogol screaming and see the blood spurting all over.

“You fucking selfish asshole mother-fcker. I hate you so much I’m going to stab you in the face —you asshole!!!”

This is the phrase and vision that kept rolling around his head over and over.

The combination of frustration, heartbreak, humiliation and murderous rage washed over Magoolie in waves as he gritted his teeth imagining he was stabbing and killing his old friend.

The missed concert and the entire misadventure was a new low point in Magoolie’s life full of many other failures and disappointments. He now realized that he was neither noble nor a good person, really. He was a murderer. Or at least he had that violent killer nature inside him. Buried deep. But it was there.

And after he cooled down and finally made it back to NYC—$500 lighter in his depleted bank account because there were no buses still running, only very expensive taxis, he felt defeated and ashamed. A complete and total loser.

The Swiper was not happy either. She was pissed off— is what she was. She hated this loser named Magoolie but at least she didn’t seem to want to murder him. She just wanted to forget the night and Magoolie —forever.

It was now a month since the break-up maybe more and Magoolie still felt broken.

As he cleaned his crowded studio apartment he saw the white plastic orb with LED lights. He had purchased it on whim at a convenience store near HER apartment. To surprise and please HER. That’s all Magoolie ever wanted to do. He was given back the orb with HER thanks— but no thanks.

When he brought it back to his apartment, it was a throbbing white sphere of red, blue and green lights.


It added something. somehow.
It had been unplugged for a while and Magoolie wondered if the now plugged-in and pulsating sphere the size of a grapefruit would send out vibes in the chilly NYC air that would now cross the city to HER place and alert HER somehow to his desperate need to hold her again very close and kiss her and make her laugh before he would invite HER to partake in some friskiness.
They had had something very special. He could not believe it was all suddenly and abruptly and unexpectedly and perhaps irrevocably over and finished.

What seemed so easy and comfortable was no more.

Of course he was to blame.

Of course it was him.

Of course she had every right to right the ship and throw him overboard.

And that’s exactly what she did.

He was left with a raft made of refuse and a bag of his old clothes on an angry ocean to navigate to some safe harbor or get swallowed up into oblivion.

That’s when he re-activated his long dormant dating apps like tinderhooks and bumblebee- and got back into swiper-alley.

Then he also looked back at the notes section of his iphone where he wrote down in a drunken rage what he really wanted to tell Gogol that night:

notes:
Dont call me ever again
You puece of dcking shit i want ti tak wknife and stab in face yoyr fackinf piece of shit assholw swlfish fuck facw asshile fuck you
.Duxk you you fuxjing puex eod shit  …

Uncle Ernie was a mongoloid and it determined what he could see.

i wwnt a double gimz and tonic no wait i ll get whatever this os called— a hollow mule —that’s what this night has been— a fucking hollow mule —stuck in the lirr railroad bar to get a train to a bus to see devo and the b52s

Exposed completely as a person unable to drive a car, own a car or get to a concert on Long Island on his own— using public transportation. A real loser.

“So wait a minute —how ling ago dis you buy yhtse tkts —-and how long have you been broken up “

“Give me back my man i’ll give you fish I’ll give you candy …

Magoolie looked at his jumbled notes from one of the worst nights of his life and sighed. He had lost his shit completely but at least Gogol had apologized and they were still friends. Gogol even dipped into his trust fund to reimburse Magoolie the 500 clams he lost on his Rock Lobster debacle.

So, Magoolie had missed out on seeing the B-52s and DEVO on a one-time only double bill but he was missing much more than just seeing two of his favorite bands.

He missed HER.

Some asshole was blasting his car horn outside the window now because he was undoubtedly blocked into a parking space nearby —

“Ok asshole,” someone yelled.

The horn noise stopped.

The anger. It was always there under the surface.

Magoolie shook his head and prepared to meet a stranger later that night for dinner.

Adam Kluger

Image by Felix Mittermeier from Pixabay – Black mobile phone laying on its back with a blank screen. Other images* – long escalator, ornament made of coloured lights forming flowers in red blue and gree and a band of two men one playing guitar and one singing into a mike with the heads of an audience in the foreground. Other Images* are from the author.

All Stories, sunday whatever

Sunday Whatever – The Bony Old Ghost of a Whore by Dale Williams Barrigar.

                         “And tell her there’s a darkness on the edge of town…”

                                                  – Bruce Springsteen

I don’t know where she is now so for me she doesn’t exist any more except in the memory of her blue eyes.

Continue reading “Sunday Whatever – The Bony Old Ghost of a Whore by Dale Williams Barrigar.”
All Stories, Editor Picks, Short Fiction

Week 579: Further Adventures in Urban Wildlife

(Sir Andy Hisster)

Due to his departure to the green fields of the PAWS’ center located about a half hour north of here, this is the first spring in which Andy Hisster (The Gray fella above this paragraph) does not rule (in person) the courtyard of my building in what feels like ten years. My uncertainty of the year is because I can not remember the moment I meet any Feral Cat, they just appear, magically, and it feels as though they have always been.

Continue reading “Week 579: Further Adventures in Urban Wildlife”
All Stories, Fantasy

A Shoddy Business by David Rudd

Kenneth Waldron was a painter – quite a successful one – with a number of famous people seeking him out for portraits. It was mostly thanks to Cynthia Grossman, who had begun as his financial advisor before becoming his personal manager and, finally, his partner.

Continue reading “A Shoddy Business by David Rudd”
All Stories, Fantasy

Kiri by Sarah Hozumi

Oslac toiled his way through the woods beyond his home, stopping to allow his daughter to catch up to him but not daring to look at her. His ears faithfully absorbed the beautiful sounds of his daughter humming to herself while picking her way among the roots of the trees, and his heart began to splinter. They had been walking for half a day now, their pace waylaid by Kiri’s wandering attention. He heard her attempt to whistle at a bird in a low branch nearby and thought about just turning home.

Still, the thing had to be done.

Continue reading “Kiri by Sarah Hozumi”
All Stories, Fantasy, General Fiction

Woven from Memory [*] by Dr A.A. Chibi

Long before Máire’s time, the village of Mallow was a peaceful settlement in Munster, its fields rich and its people rooted deep in the land. But in the late fifteenth century, calamity struck—a raid by an English militia descended like a plague.

Continue reading “Woven from Memory [*] by Dr A.A. Chibi”
All Stories, General Fiction

Hourglass by Ken Goldman 

 “Time goes, you say? Ah, no!
Alas, Time stays, we go.”

Henry Austin Dobson

“It strikes! one, two,
Three, four, five, six. Enough, enough, dear watch,
Thy pulse hath beat enough.”
 
Ben Jonson

Howard removed the hourglass from his mantel, and placing it on the table he watched the grains shift. He had bought the object – a ‘grotesque egg timer,’ Camille once had called it  – at some roadside flea market for fifteen bills. Yes, it was cheap and the gizmo looked cheaper with the winged cherub clinging to it, a golden Cupid with arrow in hand. But there was something almost sensual about the piece, something womanly with its figure-eight shape and an erotic symmetry as its contents shifted. Beautiful, really. And a little sad too.  Because when you thought about it, the passage of time was always a little sad. 

Howard recalled some genius once saying that the only thing constant in life is change. Like those shifting sands, time had altered things significantly with Camille. Similar to that tacky “Days of Our Lives” tag line – – the soaper was one Camille never missed – – like sands through an hourglass these were the days of Howard Jamison’s life, all right. He watched every grain shift from top to bottom as he had watched those days of his life with Camille spill through his fingers.

During their early times, falling in love happened easily. The young man’s electrified hormones overpowered his reason from the moment he noticed how nicely one golden haired Rutgers coed could fill out her ass tugging mini. For Howard that red hot emotion required a full thirteen minutes past “Hello” inside an upscale Manhattan pub, the time needed for Camille Dorsey to finish her merlot and flash a 100 watt smile his way. With a simple touch of her hand Howard felt his heart race, felt the muscles of his groin throb. If she would have allowed it, he would have taken the young woman right there on the bar’s counter, sending the beer mugs and wine glasses flying.  But he had waited maybe four weeks before the two officially sealed the deal with breathless promises moaned beneath Howard’s sheets.

“Oh God, Camille, I’ll always love you!”  His words just spilled out bypassing his brain completely, a new experience for the young accountant whose usual thoughts required mathematical precision. Then, music to the ears of a young man in love – –

“Yes…Oh yes…” 

Beautiful and sad, the memories.  Maybe behind everything beautiful lurked sadness. Howard watched the hourglass’ shifting grains, remembering an early fantasy from those golden days.

Camille wears a uniform from her Parochial school years, one of those Catholic girls kilt-like skirts with a crisp white blouse and green knee socks. But the skirt is rolled all the way up and young Camilles very white panties are fully exposed. Howard reaches for the warm spot beneath them. Camille protests, of course, but her objection lacks earnestness and lasts only for a moment. Noticing the hint of moisture in the material, Howard savors a faint and wonderful whiff of femininity just before he takes her. 

With no coaxing from him, the memories came. As an adolescent Camille had attended Our Sisters of Mercy School for Girls. Most males would have considered the green plaid skirt and drab knee socks as unflattering and ugly, but not Howard. Through his adulthood he would have selected that Camille wear her Catholic Girl’s School uniform over anything from Victoria’s Secret. And during one very special night Camille had slid into that very outfit of Howard’s fantasy. The uniform fit perfectly, and (true to his erotic reveries) white cotton panties had replaced Camille’s usual silken undergarments. She protested Howard’s purposely fumbling advances through giggles, as any good young Catholic girl should, although the woman who wore that outfit on that night had been seven years clear of those Sisters of Mercy. Afterwards she had joked, “What would Jesus say?”  
“I believe the man would have given me a high five,” Howard answered. “Sister Agnes, however, probably would have put your shapely ass in a sling.”

They both laughed. Soon after, they married. Cue Celine Dion’s number and roll the closing credits. The End. Time to exit the theater all warm and fuzzy.

But not quite. The real end came a few years later…

***

The grains shifted inside the twin spheres and most of them were gone from the upper portion. Howard sat transfixed, remembering how his love for Camille had somehow evaporated. Or maybe it had merely passed through time’s hourglass to become something else, sifted to a fine dust that easily blows away.

Yes, their love had become something else, but what?

Watching the shifting grains dribble beneath Cupid’s bow, Howard remembered another fantasy from those subsequent less-than-golden days.

Howard straps his wife to their bed and works over her naked flesh with the nub of a lit cigar.  She screams while he laughs, shoving the entire Havana stogie down her gullet. From nowhere he produces a lit stick of explosives sputtering flame like a Fourth of July cracker. This he also rams into her mouth and waits for the womans brains to explode and fill the sky with crimson goo, creating his own personal Independence Day, his unique fantasy payback.

  “Cheating whore! Miserable spoiled cunt!”

  “Lying bastard! Go screw another secretary!” 

The searing of Camille’s flesh remained only a fantasy. But the accusatory words, those were very real. With a delicious irony that their respective lawyers found both amusing and profitable,  few of the couple’s aspersions proved inaccurate. Time, that notorious indian giver, had reclaimed whatever love once had existed between them. From behind a polished mahogany table Martin Shengold from the legal firm of Matkoff and Shengold had a term at the ready for the couple’s shared misery.     

“Irreconcilable differences. It’s an all-encompassing description, Mr. Jamison, legalese, if you will,” the attorney announced alongside an expressionless Camille. Howard could have sworn he saw blood dripping from the man’s teeth. “Alienation of affections would also suffice, but that sounds a bit harsh, don’t you agree?”

At one hundred and fifty dollars an hour Howard agreed, silently nodding like a moron. He also would have agreed with the suggestion this man swing from the ceiling fan by his testicles. 

“How much will these irreconcilable differences be costing me, Mr. Shengold?”

The man offered a smile and jotted a figure on his note pad, slipped the paper across the table. Somehow Howard managed not to laugh out loud. 

“You feel like adding a vital organ or two with that request?”

No smile from Camille’s attorney this time. “It’s a fair figure, Mr. Jamison. I mean, considering the circumstances.” Howard turned to his lawyer. Attorney Michael Broder offered no words of comfort.

 “The courts usually favor the wife,” he told Howard. “It’s the system. We can walk, of course, but these things tend to drag on, and it will probably come to the same thing later. Your wife’s terms are not uncommon. It could be worse.”

“Yes, she could have asked to have my gonads made into earrings.”

“You can keep the dog,” Camille added. “For when Emma visits. She loves little Bieber, you know.” She smiled broadly, turned to Shengold. “Our Emma just loves that Justin Bieber.”

Smiles from the two attorneys. It would have made a nice Rockwell painting had the late artist shown an interest in painting human snakes.

Howard hated the dog, an obnoxious toy poodle who barked incessantly at him. More than once the little fucker had pissed into his shoe. Camille hated the mean tempered canine too, so here was another “Gotcha!for her. But Howard had no fight left in him. On a grey December morning, ten years of marriage would dissolve with the stroke of a pen. House, car, even custody of his own child — Poof! these all would be gone, like those grains of sand that passed through that cheap hourglass. Cupid’s golden arrows may have once hit their mark, but Howard knew their long lasting effect had been two dysfunctional hearts left to bleed out over this polished mahogany table. 

“I want my hourglass,” he had insisted, not even sure he knew why. He felt a great pit had  opened, swallowing everything he had owned, and he just needed something – anything – he could point to and say, “Yes, this still belongs to me!”

There was the chance Camille would fight him for the timepiece simply because she could, but as it turned out she had no problem with the request. She leaned towards him, whispered so only he could hear. “It’s yours.  Because if you didn’t take that piece of shit, I would have put in in the trash.”

Howard would not have admitted it to anyone who asked, but at that moment he realized why he loved that damned timepiece as much as he did.

He loved it because Camille hated it. 

He stood up, turned to Camille and Shengold. “About these papers, I’ll get back to you, okay? Fuck you very much.” 

And he walked.

***

The grains shifted more quickly through the glass now, and wasn’t there something poetic in that? The less time that remained, the faster those grains seemed to pass through the hourglass’ aperture. The bottom portion had filled almost completely, but enough time remained for one last memory.

The phone call…

It had awakened him at the ungodly hour of – what had the digital clock read? – 2:37 a.m.  For some reason he remembered that.

“Is this Howard Jamison?”

“Who–Who am I speaking to–?”

The caller ignored his question.

“Your wife is Mrs. Camille Jamison?”

“My ex wife. Or soon to be. We’re separated. She and my daughter are staying at her sister’s in Glenn Echoes. What is this abou–?”

“Mr. Jamison, my name is Officer John Tandy. I’m afraid there’s been an accident involving your…involving Camille Jamison.”

The rest became a blur of policespeak gibberish, but the details that Howard managed to understand shook him awake.

“Car accident on the Interstate…your wife…so sorry…need you to come to County General to identify the remains…”

The woman on the slab inside the morgue was Camille, all right. Apparently she had been drinking, having come from Moxie’s,  a local hot spot for cheaters and the newly divorced. Her Honda had swerved into the oncoming lane of the Interstate and into the path of an eighteen wheeler hauling Jersey produce, whose shaken driver was full of unnecessary apologies. Camille never stood a chance. One look at her ruined face told that story. For one horrific moment Howard thought it resembled an overripe tomato that had burst open.

Deep shame glutted his thoughts. Among Howard’s recent fantasies, one had involved cutting her Honda’s brake line. Pissed off to his limits he had almost done it, too, weeks earlier during another of his own benders. But he had remembered little Emma and decided maybe the alcohol was doing his thinking. Still, Howard could have sworn that fucking Bieber looked at him kind of funny that night as if he knew, and the mutt spent hours growling his displeasure deep inside his throat. Howard kept him locked inside the bathroom all night to avoid looking at him.

Camille’s unforeseen death brought with it a myriad of decisions. The divorce papers had not yet been signed and he remained her legal husband, so those decisions fell on him. Howard decided on a simple funeral but no burial. Some family, some friends, a somewhat forced eulogy.

“She was my wife, the mother of my child. I loved her. I’ll miss her.” Short. Simple. And except for the wife and mother part, essentially bullshit. With a phone call to the crematorium and the selection of an ornate urn — the marmalade colored ‘golden sunset’ model — it was over.

But not quite.

Howard wanted to be there to see, and he was careful to select the last dress Camille Dorsey Jamison would ever wear.  Asked to remove anything noncombustible, he noticed she had not been wearing her wedding band although he still wore his because it never occurred to him to take it off. He removed a necklace that had belonged to her grandmother, placing it into a plastic baggie with some of her other jewelry to dispense to Camille’s sister. None of this thoughtfulness lessened the intense stare Howard received from the bald headed man at the cremation chamber who ran the show.

“You’re certain this is what you want?” he asked, straightening Camille’s blouse for her 1800 degree Fahrenheit trip into the next life. “Usually we don’t dress them — especially not like this.”

“It’s something personal between my wife and me,” Howard told him, deciding it would not be tasteful to ask if they had dressed her in the white panties he had left with the mortician. The bald man wiped his forehead and took one last look at the young woman dressed in her Catholic Girls’ School uniform. He looked like he might smile but covered his mouth before it showed. Yeah, he probably knew about the panties, Howard figured. He handed the man the golden urn and stayed to watch Camille’s pinewood casket slip into a tunnel of flames.

The rest was ritual-by-the-book :  a call from Edwin Fleuhr at the funeral home to come and collect the urn that now contained Camille’s ashes, the requisite expressions of sympathy from the mortician and his comment about the tasteful selection of the vessel Howard had made for his wife’s remains, then home to place the urn upon his mantel for friends and family to see. Howard could not resist a peek inside the urn. Its contents had been sifted thoroughly into a fine grain-like powder, and like the container that held them,  Camille’s ashes were as golden as the sun  except for a few flecks of green he figured were the remains of her Our Sisters of Mercy uniform.

“Beautiful,”  he found himself saying aloud. It seemed a shame to hide her ashes inside a container where he could not always see them.  Considering this, Howard saw no reason why he had to.

***

Bieber was in growling mode again. His eyes shifted from Howard to the hourglass and back. His growls grew deeper.

The grains had run out of the top portion of the glass, some of the powdery substance clinging to the sides. Time had come to flip the thing over,  to start the whole process again. Howard turned the timepiece on its end. The winged Cupid was supposed to shift his position and turn over also,  but the stupid cherub remained hugging the glass upside down. Maybe there was some meaning to be found in that image of  Cupid with his bow, ridiculously hanging on to the timepiece like some kind of wounded bird.

The image was something to consider as Howard watched the object his late wife truly despised, watched the  golden ashes (with flecks of green) again sift through the thin aperture inside his hourglass.

Howard had to smile. He could watch the shifting grains all day.  And maybe he would.

Bieber’s growls did not stop.

Ken Goldman

Image by günter from Pixabay – sand inside an hourglass with tiny sparkly bits.

Literally Reruns, Short Fiction

Literally Reruns: Bingo by Hugh Cron

Oh my oh my, after reading Bingo, I wondered what kind of father our beloved Hugh Cron would be. Actually, I think he would be an excellent parent because he would never bullshit his kids about Santa, organized religion or “The Farm” where pets go, mysteriously, all of a sudden while the child is in school. “Sparky decided he will be happy, there, at The Farm,” Papa said, wiping his eyes due to a sudden recurrence of his “allergies.”

Continue reading “Literally Reruns: Bingo by Hugh Cron”
Short Fiction

Week 578 – Clock Hanging, Don’t Buy Balm And The Chief Is A Legend.

Week number 578 is here.

Another week gone, another week I thank my lucky stars for Literally Stories!! It keeps me sane!!

We’ve been getting a lot of humour submissions lately so I’d like to revisit this topic. I apologise if you have read something like this before.

Continue reading “Week 578 – Clock Hanging, Don’t Buy Balm And The Chief Is A Legend.”