Wednesday, November 27, 2013

The Thanksgiving Dinner Fiasco

In honor of Thanksgiving, I thought I'd share a story I wrote last year entitled, "The Thanksgiving Dinner Fiasco."  Enjoy!

The Thanksgiving Dinner Fiasco

            Ah, Thanksgiving dinner.  A time for rejoicing in family and celebrating your love for one another.  Thousands of years ago, some over eager girlfriend had decided that the Thanksgiving dinner was the perfect opportunity to introduce her boyfriend to her family.  And we have been paying for it ever since.  After years of trepidation surrounding meeting Amber’s family for the first time, The Thanksgiving Dinner Fiasco with them made me feel like a God amongst mere mortals.

---

            After dating Amber Palleta for four years, the time had come.  I couldn’t put it off any longer.

            “Listen, Jesse,” Amber said, “my mother has called nine times to find out if you’re coming this year.”  I sighed.

            “Amber, I love you,” I said.  “But you have to understand.  This ‘meet the family’ thing is very difficult for me.”  She shot me a look that said, ‘dear God Jesse, don’t tell me about growing up in an orphanage again.’

            “Baby, I know it’s hard for you, what with growing up all alone and not being adopted until you were twelve,” she said.  “But my family is very important to me.  And I want them to see how in love we are so that we can get their blessings for the wedding.”

            Why she kept talking about this wedding thing I have no idea.  I hadn’t bought a ring, I hadn’t even started looking.  In truth, having realized over the years how important family was to Amber, I didn’t see ever winning over their approval. 

Come on, I had just turned twenty-five.  I worked at Starbucks slinging latte’s for $8.15 per hour.  I had seven unfinished screenplays saved on my MacBook with no idea how to finish them, market them, or try to sell them.  I wore shorts and flip-flops every day.  Amber on the other hand, had just started her residency at Bellevue Hospital after finishing a three-year accelerated med school program.  She was a ten, and me, I was a five, maybe.  I was lucky to breathe the same air as her.

“Jesseeeeee,” she said, drawing out the last ‘e’ the way she did when she was trying to get me to do something that I didn’t want to do.  “If not now, then when?”

She had a point.  I couldn’t put this off forever.  “Ok,” I said, less than enthusiastically.  “Let’s go meet your parents.”

---

Amber’s older brother, Julian, picked us up on Thanksgiving Day at six in the morning.  His new ride, a BMW X5, cost more than I made in three years time.  We had met a few times before.  I got the distinct feeling that he didn’t like me.  I never had a brother; I didn’t know what I should be doing to make him like me.

“Let’s go boys and girls,” he said.  “We’ve got eight hours to go til we hit family country.  Ever been to Erie this time of year, Jesse?” he asked me.

“I’ve never been to Pennsylvania before, Julian,” I said, already on the defensive.

“Well, you’ll love it, I’ll make sure of that,” he said with a smirk.  He turned his attention to Amber, trying to get comfortable in the back seat.  “Sis, Uncle Martin is coming this year with Kristina.  And they’re bringing Sammy.”

“AWESOME!”  Amber exclaimed, startling me.  “When was the last time we saw them?  Five years now I think?”  They just kept talking as if I knew who these people are.

“Well, Uncle Martin had his hip replaced,” Julian said.  “And Kristina just started her new job, and they took Sammy out of Lakehill and put him into Warren Academy.”

“Oh, that’s great.  Sammy should be much happier at Warren.  The campus is much prettier too.  I never understood why they chose Lakehill in the first place; that Dean of there’s sure had it out for Sammy.  What were they thinking?” 

Was this how families spoke?

Once we exited the Holland Tunnel and hit 280 West, I could feel my nerves getting the better of me.  I started to sweat, and my feet began to move and jostle around, without my knowledge. 

“Take it easy there, Jes,” Julian said.  “We haven’t even hit I-80 yet, and we do nearly four hundred miles on that, so you’ve got some time.” 

Julian reached into his pocket and pulled out a plastic zip lock bag with a white substance in it, presumably cocaine.  He handed the bag to me, but I passed it back to him.

“No thanks,” I said, shaking my head.

“Listen, Julian, my name is Jesse.  No one in my life has ever called me Jes.  Not even your sister.”  Amber had fallen asleep long ago.  It was just us men.

“Jes,” he said.  “You’ve been with my sister now for four years.  And there’s nothing I can do about that.  If she picks you, well, then she picks you.  It doesn’t matter how I feel about it.  But you and I gotta form our own relationship.”  He grabbed the back of my neck with his right hand, pulling my head close to his, staring straight into my eyes.  “But here me now,” he said, lowering his voice to a whisper.  “If you ever hurt my sister, I’ll fucking kill you.  I will come over to your shitty apartment while you are sleeping and will kill you.  Literally.  Do you get me sweetheart?”

I tried to pull away from him but found myself unable.  Julian had spent six years in the Navy and now spent countless hours a day at the gym.  I was like a small child in his grasp.  “Lucky for me that will never happen, Julian,” I said, finally able to wiggle free.  “I would never hurt Amber.”

“That’s good to hear, Jes,” he said.  I knew in that moment that for however long Julian and I knew each other, he would call me whatever name he wanted to. 

“I don’t want to kill anyone again,” he said, the lack of smile on his face driving the words home.  Again.  He said he wouldn’t want to kill AGAIN.  What had I gotten myself into?

---

Ken and Lila, Amber’s mother and father, had been having the Thanksgiving Dinner at their house in Erie for the past nineteen years.  First to arrive, always two days before everyone else, were Ken’s brother, Trevor, and his wife, Ashley.  They had two kids, Molly, sixteen, and Corey, twelve.  Ken and Trevor’s other brother, Thomas, would always arrive solo, usually drunk from the plane ride in from Salt Lake City.  His ex-wife, Marie, still came to family dinners, no one knew why, and no one thought to ask.  Martin, the baby brother, and his wife, Kristina, had missed the past several dinners but would be coming this year with their son, Sammy, who had just turned six.

The only sister of the four brothers’, Donna, would arrive last, with her husband Beau in toe.  They would fly in from London, Ontario, a flight of only twenty-six minutes.  They had the shortest commute of the family.  Beau’s four kids from his first marriage would inevitably show up at some point before the Thursday dinner.  Twins, Mark and Mason, had just turned twenty-one.  They had two sisters, Margot, eighteen, and Chloe, sixteen.  That made seven kids altogether, plus Amber and Julian, but neither of them was classified that way.

I tried to map out Amber’s family tree in my mind, but found a migraine quickly approaching.  Ken, Trevor, Thomas, Martin, and Donna, were all blood relatives, from the same parents, Patrick and Mary Palleta, both deceased.  All five of them had married.

Ken, Amber’s father, married to Lila, Amber’s mother
Trevor-Amber’s uncle, married to Ashley, two kids-Molly, sixteen, Corey, twelve
Thomas-Amber’s uncle, divorced from Marie
Martin-Amber’s uncle, married to Kristina, one kid, Sammy, six
Donna-Amber’s aunt, married to Beau, four kids, Mark and Mason, twins, twenty-one, Margot, eighteen, Chloe, sixteen.

---

         “MA! Here’s Johnny!” Julian screamed, as we entered through the garage door.  I dutifully carried all of our bags. 

            “Kenneth,” Amber’s mother screamed, “they’re finally here.”  She threw her arms around Julian and Amber and squeezed until their faces all turned red. 

“And you must be this boy we’ve been hearing so much about,” she said.  I extended my hand but she didn’t take it.  “Come here, let me have a look at you,” she said, waving me to come closer to her.  She grabbed my face with both of her hands and pulled me close to her.  “Not bad,” she said, and planted a sloppy wet kiss on my lips!!!

            “You’ll have to excuse her sonny,” Ken said.  “She’s been at the bottle since she woke up.  How many Seven and Seven’s have you had dear?  Seven?” He smiled at this joke.

“Hush up, Kenneth,” Lila said.  “It’s only two o’clock and you already had your first case of BUD.  Talk about the kettle and the black cat calling each other the pot,” she said, not realizing her complete demolition of the idiom.

            Their house was HUGE!  Four stories, a four-car garage, and almost five hundred acres in total.  The seven bedrooms were more than enough to accommodate the large family.  I immediately understood how Amber had been able to afford both college and med school without the use of student loans.  As we walked to her room, I pinched the back of her arm lightly to get her attention.

            “You never told me your family was rich,” I said in a whisper.  Now I had something else to be intimidated by.

            “You never asked,” she said slyly, as if I even knew to ask that question.  “My father developed a software company when he was twenty-four, and sold it to Microsoft when I was born five years later, for 90 million.”  She pointed to a large wall, by far the largest wall I had ever seen in my life, stretching almost seventy feet high, with a huge blue letter “W” painted on it.

            “You’re kidding me!” I said.  “Your father created Microsoft Word?”  I couldn’t believe my eyes.

            “He created the software that Microsoft used to create Microsoft Word,” she corrected me.  “He still gets a monthly pay-check from them, and here it is, almost thirty years later.”  This was going to be worse than I thought.

---

           
            Amber dutifully introduced me around before we sat down for dinner.  Her uncle Trevor gave me a big bear hug and lifted me off the floor when we met.  All of Amber’s aunts kissed me on the lips, just as her mother had done.  It was a strange sensation to feel loved and repulsed at the same time.  Was I supposed to kiss back?  Was this how all families greeted each other?

            I quickly noticed the amount of alcohol that was being consumed.  Aside from Amber’s parents, who were both in the hole, Amber’s uncle Martin was limping around, still feeling the effects of his hip replacement, with a bottle of Bushmills in one hand and a bottle of Jameson in the other.  He would take alternating swigs from each bottle.  I don’t know how he was still standing.

            Kristina and Donna were both drinking double cosmos out of beer steins.  They must’ve been sixty-four ounce glasses!  Just one would have floored me for the night.  Besides the alcohol, there were other drugs too.

Marie, uncle Thomas’s ex-wife, had a large, red leather purse that she kept reaching into to pull out vials of pills.  In under a half hour, she popped five.  One Valium, one Percodan, one Roxanol, that was freakin’ morphine, I didn’t even know you could get it in the states, and then she popped two Dexedrine’s, an amphetamine, I guess so she could stay up and pop more pills.  She slurred her words and could barely sit up straight.

            Julian kept running into the bathroom with Mark and Mason to do coke.  The plastic bag he carried kept getting thinner and thinner.  The threesome came out, eyes bloodshot, nostrils flaring, talking a mile a minute.  Julian was chain-smoking Marlboro Red’s that he kept stealing from Ken.

            Molly, Corey, Margot, and Chloe, all sat downstairs watching television and smoking marijuana.  They had an entire “brick” of the smelly, sticky, substance, about sixteen ounces I should think.  Molly and Margot shared joint after joint, while Corey and Chloe passed a large bong back and forth.  Even Amber found her way downstairs to share a joint with the kids.

            AND THIS WAS ALL BEFORE DINNER.  How could any of these people eat a bite of food with all of the drugs that were flying around?

            I wasn’t judging, but I seemed to be the only sober person in the house.  Oh, and Sammy, but he was only six, so he didn’t really count.  I was nursing a Miller Lite for the better part of an hour before opening my second.  My nervousness didn’t allow me the ability to get inebriated even if I had wanted to.

---

            “ATTENTION!  Ladiessssssssss and gentlemenssssssssss,” Lila screamed into the intercom system wired throughout the house.  “Dinner issssssssss sssssssssserved.”  I’d never heard anyone slur that badly in my life.  Never.

            The dining room was located on the third floor.  The ‘Great Room,’ as it had come to be called, was decorated in an old Victorian fashion.  The Parisian table, made of maple, cherry, and oak woods, stretched nearly fifty feet long.  All of the chairs were lined with a gold finish.  The cushions were stuffed with bear fur.  Real fur taken from real bears.

            The place settings were equally as elegant.  The plates, dating back nearly four hundred years, had a minimalist floral pattern along the edge.  The stemware, Baccarat crystal, was lined with a platinum finish at the base of the stem.  The flatware was engraved with the official seal of the White Star Line, the company that had operated the Titanic.  I was in awe about it all.

            I had never seen a spread such as this.  There were two turkeys, both twenty-five pounds each.  Ken and Trevor took their positions aside the great birds to begin the carving process.  Lila brought out piling dish after piling dish.  Two trays of mashed potatoes, each with its own gravy boat.  Two large plates of stuffing, roasted with the birds’ innards.  Marie’s specialty was sweet potato pie, stuffed full of mini-marshmallows.  Donna brought her homemade cranberry sauce, all the way from Canada.  And Kristina brought two trays of homemade creamed spinach.  My mouth watered.
           
            We stood around the table, admiring the feast before us.  Ken and Lila took their places at the heads of the table.  “Please, let us join hands,” Ken said.  We did.

            “Thanksgiving is a time for family,” he began.  “Today, family is more important than ever.  And where would this family be without each other.  We’ve come a long way, through thick and thin, and we did it by staying together.  Please join me in welcoming a new member to our family, Jesse Smith.  Son, we just love your relationship with our Amber.  And we are so happy with how happy you have made her.”  He turned to face me, and Amber squeezed my hand tightly. 

            “Jesse,” he said.  “We all know that you have never known your family.”  He walked over to me and placed his hand on my shoulder.  “Jesse, from this day forth, I’d like you to consider us your family.  I’d like you to view me as your father, the father that you have never known.  I bestow upon you the name Palleta.  Son, your name is now Jesse Palleta.”  Tears began to fall from my eyes.
           
I looked over the faces of Amber’s family.  Her father, Ken, once arrested for assaulting Amber’s mother, drunk on Budweiser.  Her mother, Lila, once arrested for assaulting Amber’s father, drunk on Seven and Seven’s.  Her brother Julian, AWOL from the Navy in 1988, and imprisoned for two years, high on coke.  Her uncle Martin, convicted in 1977 of statutory rape, and imprisoned for three years, drunk on a combination of Bushmills and Jameson.  Her aunt’s Kristina and Donna, both arrested and convicted on charges involving a Ponzi scheme in 1973, drunk on double cosmos.  Her aunt Marie, twice arrested on drug charges, both times in 1991, high on a plethora of prescription narcotics.  Her cousins, Mark, Mason, Molly, Corey, Margot, and Chloe, all kids, too young for this life, all high. 

I had never been in trouble with the law.  I had never done drugs.  I had never been drunk.  And yet, I saw their humanity in their eyes.  And in that moment, I related to them.  I related to each and every one of them.  And I felt like home.

I hugged Ken and Lila, and then turned my attention to Amber.  “Amber,” I said.  “I am home when I am with you.  And I am home when I am with your family.  I love you.  Will you marry me?”

“Yes,” she said.  “I will marry you.” 

I am home.  Happy Thanksgiving.

Jamie Schoffman

5/22/12

Monday, October 14, 2013

I frequently get asked what I'm working on and I submit any number of answers.  Short stories, a novel, editing; all are acceptable answers.

But what I'm really working on is improving my writing.  It's hard to find time to write, but I squeeze in what little time I can.  It might only be an hour a week, but in that hour, I am working as hard as I possibly can to improve.  And that's what counts.

I may never sell as many books as Stephen King.  I may never win a Nobel prize like Toni Morrison.  I may never become a grandmaster of science fiction like Kurt Vonnegut.  But I will never stop trying.  And so even if I fail, I will still have succeeded.  Because I will have given my heart, my soul, and every ounce of effort I can to succeed.  And that will make all the difference.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

My first published short story, "The B," is available here:

http://thedyinggoose.com/magazine/the-dying-goose-volume-1-issue-2/

"I have proven that if you set your mind to a goal, work hard, and never give up, you can accomplish anything." - Jamie Schoffman

Sunday, April 28, 2013

First short story to be published this summer!

Today is the second proudest day of my life.  After many long months of writing, editing, and submitting, my first short story was officially accepted for publication.  "The B," by Jamie Schoffman, will be appearing in the summer issue of The Dying Goose (http://thedyinggoose.com).  Thank you to my amazing fans, friends, and my beautiful Chris Ann O'Neill.  This is proof that if you set a goal and believe in yourself, you CAN accomplish anything.