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Donald Doesn't Drive (standard:humor, 9191 words) | |||
Author: J.A. Aarntzen | Added: Oct 30 2005 | Views/Reads: 3863/5866 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
After being bitten by a dog, a man decides to sue the dog's owners. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story to her previous owners, Zesty's Body Shop, that keeping a yard dog was more a liability than an asset in protecting the shop during the night. An electronic security system was a more secure system than a Rotweiler. The security system would scare off vandals and burglars and not scare off customers the way Chelsea did. Security systems did not have to be fed nor would they ever turn onto their masters. Chelsea liked her fenced in yard at Zesty's. She was queen of her domain there until an attorney showed up on the day before Stacey was given the nod to nod off to sleep. This attorney, this Hugh Huygens, told Zac Zestrowski, the Zesty of Zesty's Body Shop, the sad lay of Donald and Stacey Grodley and how at that moment in time it appeared that Donald was going to lose his leg. Zac Zestrowski knew Donald. Donald had the body of his 1986 Toyota Celica redone at Zesty's. Donald had tried to sell Zac everlasting salvation but all that Zac could sell him was a six month warranty. Hugh Huygens sold Zac a top of the line surveillance burglar system. Besides being an attorney, Hugh sold expensive electronics on the side. Zac was not on Chelsea's side in the contest between animal and machine. Like the horse that lost to the carriage, the guard dog lost to the electronic surveillance system. Chelsea was given a ride in a vehicle to the Humane Society where if nobody claimed her within fourteen days she would have maybe had a chance to take a bite at Donald's leg up there in heaven. That chance never came. Brian and Thelma Grodley wanted a dog to replace their dearly departed Stacey. And upon seeing the broad, muscular chest of Chelsea, they knew that they had a fine replacement for their dearly departed dog. Some cash had to dearly depart them as well for the cost of destroying one canine and saving another. Brian and Thelma didn't have a savings account nor did they have the kind of insurance that would cover Donald's claim. Adam Tray claimed that Donald need not worry about the Grodleys coming up short when the amputeed man pointed out that a stone cannot bleed. They made Donald bleed, he being a Christian should know that he now has the right to make them bleed. An eye for an eye. But if Brian and Thelma had no insurance, wouldn't this become more a pound of flesh? Donald wondered if his attorney was not some Shylock rather than Abraham. He didn't want a pound of the Grodleys' flesh. He rarely ate animal flesh, what would he do with human flesh? Stacey had some human flesh, not quite a pound of Donald's human flesh, and he did not live much longer afterwards although the pound had him the rest of his living days. Thelma knew that Brian could not live the high life much longer. He had already been thought of as a low life by most of his neighbours before Stacey attacked Donald. None of the people who lived in the homes adjacent to the Grodleys wanted to associate with them. They were not hospitable to Donald either when he had come to spread the word in the neighbourhood. Their doors had been kept shut when a well prepared and motivated Donald came up their front walks. Thelma would have shut the door too but Stacey was already out in the yard when Donald came walking jauntily on two legs up the walk. It was the last time he would walk jauntily on two legs and it was the last time that Stacey walked freely on four. Four hundred thousand dollars was what Adam Tray told Donald what his leg was worth. Donald had no idea. Thelma Grodley had no idea either. That was more money than a year's worth of jackpots at the Bingo. She was lucky at the game but not that lucky. Whatever she won, Brian would spend on drink and sleazy women who were attracted to what the Grodleys' neighbours would summarily call a scuzz ball. Brian didn't care. He had long ago given up on trying to be more than neighbourly with those that shared a similar zip code. Perhaps it was his earlier efforts and escapades in being the man on the street that made any man on the street such as Donald that fateful day someone to be suspicious about. Chelsea, from her training at Zesty's Body Shop, was suspicious of any man, woman or child, but she really mistrusted lawyers because of one Hugh Huygens. When she saw another lawyer, Adam Tray, come up the very walk where her canid predecessor had thrashed an ugly wound in Donald's leg, she thought that such an action deserved an encore. She bared her sizable teeth and had her hair stand on end on her back. Had she a tail it would have been held in the question mark pose. She had no tail since her first day of life but there was no question who her mark was. Adam had the answer and was about to bolt until he noticed the bolt that held Chelsea and her chain securely fastened to a pin in the wall. Chelsea would have had him pinned to the wall had not Adam quickly calculated the terra unreachable to the former body shop dog. Traversing this terra saved a definite tear in Adam's trousers. It was these trousers that Thelma first seen as Adam approached the side door of the semi-split Grodley home. Adam Tray as a child was a notorious bedwetter and with adulthood he still could not entirely control his bladder in moments of high excitement. His bladder had felt the tension of Chelsea's provocations and it abruptly voided a small sample of its contents. This was what Thelma noticed on Adam's trousers as he came to the door. She had no idea how much this was a precursor to the way that she would feel when Adam left the door leaving her a notice of imminent court action. At that moment Brian was feeling imminent courting action at the First Down and Ten, the local sporting bar where he was a frequent patron. A woman who was not a frequent patron, in fact not even an infrequent patron, had accepted his offer to buy her a drink. Gwen Palace often accepted drinks from strangers although she did not often accept the possible consequences that such social interaction might lead. She did not want to accept any social interaction with Brian Grodley because he fit the category of scuzz ball in her taxonomy of the male human gender but she really did want the drink. She always wanted the drink. Gwen was an alcoholic who had recently moved to town when her former town would not provide her with the much desired drinks any longer. This was her first time at the First Down and Ten. Brian's opening play was the purchase of Ms. Palace's drink. This got him one yard and it was now Second Down and Nine. It would take him more than a yard of ale to go the full nine yards to get his first down. He was not even at first base in Gwen's eyes. By the time he was at his third down against Gwen's heavily stacked defense, Brian had to go to the defensive himself as Thelma found him and salvoed a volley of raves and rants about what one Adam Tray had served upon the Grodley nuclear unit concerning one dearly departed dog. Gwen instinctively knew that no more drinks were going to be served upon her when Thelma appeared. She would have to dip into her own purse and pull out the cash that she had managed not to spend in her multi-yeared alcoholic binge. She had plenty of cash, Gwen had been a multi-millionaire heiress before she met her true love, Mr. Vermouth. She was now a multi-millionaire drunk who knew how not to spend her money when she had willing patrons, even in places where she was not a patron,who wanted to pay homage to her frowned upon social habit. Adam Tray had concocted a way to spend Brian and Thelma's money even though they were not heirs or heiresses. They were not even heir apparents. They were not parents and any money that they had always managed to vanish in thin air and usually places such as the First Down and Ten. The Grodley's cash flow could be described as a torrential stream from its headwaters at the St. Dominic's Catholic Auxiliary Bingo to the wide delta of the town's watering holes, the First Down and Ten being one of the many spits. Adam Tray wanted to construct a dam on this stream and divert most of the waters to Donald while making sure that Baines, Baines and Baines was amply irrigated. Upon hearing the news that his wife had brought him, Brian Grodley's anger center in his brain was amply irrigated with a flood of neurohormones that stimulated that enraged response. Brian's initial enraged response was to trash the collection of empty glasses set before him at the bar where he and Gwen Palace had previously sat. Gwen had a new seat now six stools away at the other end of the neon-lit bar. A new glass was rapidly entering the state of emptiness there. The First Down and Ten was emptied of Grodleys in quick order by the bartender, Hefty Heinz, who after throwing Brian out by the scruff of his collar returned to fill Gwen Palace's next order. Brian did not have a collar for he was wearing a tee shirt but any one who had seen him would feel free to use the modifier "scruffy" in describing his appearance. Brian did not care about appearances at this moment nor about modifying his behaviour. He was filled with misdirected rage which wanted to vent itself on Hefty Heinz. Thelma Grodley was well aware that Hefty was called Hefty for a reason and she was able to redirect Brian's rage. This anger was still pointed in the wrong direction for now it had targetted Thelma herself. Brian, who was feeling relief as his anger dissipated, did not care that he was creating a scene out there in the parking lot of the First Down and Ten by throwing a highly vocal and obscene tantrum towards his beloved wife. Obscenities had always played a significant role in the day to day life of the Grodleys. Obscenities did not even have the part of a walk-on extra in the vocabulary used by Donald. He was aware of these words for they often appeared in the mouthes of others when he conducted his door to door mission for the Church of Jesus Christ and the Latter Day Saints. As it so happens, Donald was on such a mission to the homes across the street from the First Down and Ten that precise moment when Brian was using a tirade of these invective curses in his monologuistic diatribe with Thelma in the parking lot of the sporting bar. How did Donald manage to get in such a vicinity after so recently losing his leg, one might wonder. Donald did so by hobbling on crutches. He did not want to use his newly bequeathed disability as a crutch for not doing the Lord's business. It was business as usual as far as he was concerned. But the going concern at that moment was across the street in the parking lot of the First Down and Ten for Brian in his alcohol-enhanced outrage had shoved Thelma to the ground. She may have avoided the stumble had she practical shoes but she insisted on wearing the almost stiletto-like high heel pumps that altered her center of gravity and her sense of equilibrium. She may have added to the fall by not trying to regain her balance once Brian's hands transferred their inertia to her shoulders. This allowed Thelma to lose the head upon her shoulders and she quickly regained her feet and slapped her husband squarely on his cheek. It was the sharp crackling soundwaves of this slap that caught Donald's attention on the other side of the road. He did not know that he was indirectly the instigator of the marital dispute and that these were the very people that were making him a litigator. Thelma and Brian had not shown their face to Donald the day Stacey had shown to much of his face to the Latter Day Crusader. Thelma had been home at the time but she was hiding behind closed curtains hoping that the crusade would not sack her home. In the end it was her dog that got the sack and her husband who got sacked at a local establishment which at that time was not the First Down and Ten. Brian was well established in all of the local taverns, roadhouses, hotels and sports bars. But it was now at the First Down and Ten that Donald first met his legal adversaries. But he did not know that it was them and he did not feel adversarial towards them, well maybe a little against Brian who was obviously either a well established wifebeater or somebody who was just beginning their career in that loathesome but still yet highly practised profession. Donald's estimation of Thelma judging by her clothing was that she came from an even older profession. To Donald what he saw across the street was a golden opportunity to save some souls. He called out to the pair and told them not to move until he had a chance to talk to them. Brian and Thelma did not hear him for they were too caught up in the heat of their dispute. Donald did not have to fear losing his opportunity for the Grodleys did not mind making a public spectacle of themselves. The neighbours on their street were often privy to their outbursts of adult languaged name calling. Perhaps that was another reason they did not hold Brian and his wife in very high regard. Had Donald the chance to speak to these neighbours he would have been asked to join in a prayer for a real estate agent to be hammering in a "For Sale" sign on the Grodleys' poorly kept front yard. There were no front yards where Donald was standing at the moment. All that was in front of him was four lanes of rather busy suburban road. The First Down and Ten was not near any corner. There were no traffic lights nor stop signs or crosswalks that would aid Donald in making a quick and unobstructed one-legged traipse across the road. The road to salvation is not an easy road and Donald accepted whatever lay in his path as a test of his faith. His wife, Nan, at times found staying with Donald to be a test because of his faith. She did not share the evangelical devotion that he had although she was a firm believer in Jesus Christ and that he had made an appearance in the Americas as the Book of Mormon proposed. They both wanted to be Americans but Nan did not want to be an Apostle where Donald found it impossible not to be an Apostle. It could almost be his creed. This creed which was not part of Donald's and Nan's marriage vow was now leading the one-legged driven man across a road driven by many two-legged men and women with heavy feet. Had his wife, Nan, been there to witness his action, she would have proceeded with divorce action. Thelma was even closer than Nan in bringing to fruition a divorce action against her husband. Brian wasn't much of a husband at all. Donald had his mission, Brian had his admission of being an adulterer. In this state, adultery was grounds for divorce. In the state Donald was in any vehicle could have driven him to the ground. He was allowing blind faith to get him across the street. He trusted his fellow human beings not to run him over and the drivers going down the street must have harkened to his faith for none of them managed to sustain a dent in their cars as the hapless man on a mission hobbled his way across to cross paths with a cross man and wife. The man and wife's dog, Chelsea, who had taken advantage of the fact that Thelma had been negligent in assuring that the dog was adequately penned when she had rushed off to confront her husband, had followed the familiar scent trail between the Grodley's home and the First Down and Ten. It also happened to be the route to her old home, Zesty's Body Shop and whether Chelsea was going to Zesty's or to the First Down and Ten would never be known as Chelsea, like the rest of her kind, was a creature of few words. When her visual senses took over in the final stages of the trail, her canine brain interpretted the data as a man with a pair of weapons about to attack her new masters, Brian and Thelma. Had Chelsea been schooled to make discerning evaluations of the implements of human beings, she would have known that the weapons in question were in fact a pair of crutches used to aid the man in walking. Chelsea was not schooled this way even though she may have had aspirations of being a seeing-eye dog. These aspirations would also never have their veracity verified due to Chelsea's silence. Like her seeing-eyed cousin, she did want to help her masters and from what she could see of the situation her masters did need the help. Donald's blind faith made him blind to the fact that he was in the sights of an over-protective Rotweiler. He was only a matter of feet away from the squabbling couple, when a couple of slavering fangs took the last of his feet away. Chelsea's four feet were planted firmly on the interlocking bricked sidewalk as her head was engaged in unlocking the alleged assailant's remaining leg. Donald yammered in agony as he used one of his crutches to beat the dog on its head. A yelp from what some people affectionately call a Rottie loosened Chelsea's mouth from Donald's heavily bleeding limb. The man wanted the dog to bleed as much and continued smashing the splintering crutch over the canid's broad back. Brian only witnessed a stranger viciously attacking his dog with a heavy wooden object. He objected to this treatment and at once gave up on brawling with his wife and proceeded to pummel the stranger who was pummeling his dog. Chelsea whimpered away as her new master came to her rescue. Had she a tail long enough to go between her legs, that tail would have been there. Thelma swore that her husband would never be between her legs again while Donald literally had no more leg to stand on. He collapsed to the sidewalk with the first blow that Brian successfully landed. The blow to his head from the sidewalk made Donald lose his consciousness and forever never be able to recall these last few moments that had transpired along the side of a busy suburban road. Someone who would be asked to recall these last few moments during the criminal trial of Brian Grodley was one Dr. Lee Chan, a periodontist, who happened to be driving by during the altercation. Dr. Chan was driving his leased Honda Accord down the boulevard and had seen Donald beating the dog and Brian coming to the distressed creature's rescue and giving Donald what appeared to be a rugged shove. Donald's criminal attorney who happened also to be his civil attorney as well, one Adam Tray, told the court to shove Dr. Chan's testimony to the side. How did Dr. Chan explain the ugly festering wound shaped like a dog's mouth on Donald's leg? The wound was festering because Donald once again refused to see a doctor. He would not lose this leg however. Intervening factors came into play before the gangrene had a chance to set. Dr. Chan did not have to answer the question concerning the existence of the dogbite-like wound on Donald's leg as the Grodley's court appointed attorney adequately pointed out that Dr. Chan was not a witness to what may have happened previously. Donald, himself, did not know directly what had happened previously, although he had his suspicions. These memories were obliterated from his memory. Thelma, who also had been witness to the event, proclaimed that she did not see anything, she protecting the husband who was getting in the habit of beating her. She did not want to see him beaten. There were other witnesses who had seen everything happen on that road on that afternoon but the court never saw who these witnesses were for not one of them ever stepped forward. Stepping forward to give a possible explanation for the wound was the Grodley's court appointed attorney who pointed out that Donald may have sustained the wound either when he was originally attacked by the Grodley's former dog, Stacey, or he may have received the wound from Chelsea in an act of self defense on her part and that the whole question of this wound was immaterial to the present case at hand. On hand to witness the court case was a court reporter for the local biweekly tabloid newspaper. He was hoping to have the famous man bites dog story for the weekend edition of his rag. But the story that would have to be told to the community early Sunday morning was that one of the partners in Baines, Baines and Baines would be announcing his intentions to run for public office. This announcement said to Adam Tray that there could ostensibly be an opening in the firm for a new partner. But by that Sunday morning, he knew that the new future partner would not be him. He had lost a routine assault case to a court appointed attorney from the public defender's office. Months later this court appointed attorney would defeat the partner at Baines, Baines and Baines in the election and no opening would ever appear in the firm over this exercise in democracy. Still believing in democracy and remaining firm even after the court had turned against him was Donald. It was more difficult for him to stand firm given the severity of the wound inflicted upon him by Chelsea and how the community had rallied behind this poor, mistreated animal. The court reporter had chosen to print a picture of the Rotweiler with his tongue hanging down from his mouth. Under the picture was the caption, "Dog Still Manages To Smile." This picture and the ensuing story of how the dog was maliciously beaten in public by a crazed cult member put a smile on the Grodleys' faces as well as the public lavished money and gifts upon them to help them keep poor Chelsea healthy and happy. They were not aware that their money instead was winding up in large bundles at the First Down and Ten. Brian Grodley never had it better. The female patrons in the sports bar listened sympathetically to Brian's sad lament of how his poor creature had been so savagely attacked by the crazed cult member. Even the neighbours in the Grodley's neighbourhood were sympathetic to Thelma and felt a refrain to look down their noses upon her and her husband even though they still felt the urge to do so. Looking down his nose at the paperwork involved in the civil litigation against the Grodleys, Adam Tray knew that he would have to do a lot of work to rehabilitate his client, Donald, in the public eye. Even the other members of the Church of Jesus Christ and the Latter Day Saints had issued a statement disowning Donald as one of theirs. The senior partners of Baines, Baines and Baines threatened Adam Tray that they would disown him if he proceeded with the case. Disowning was better than disbarring in Adam's eyes. He had agreed to be Donald's attorney long before Donald had acted so disgracefully in public. To decline legal services to Donald was to decline him his legal rights and the attorney's healthy cut in a lucrative settlement and that to Adam was tantamount to not behaving in an ethical manner and that to him was grounds for personally disbarring himself. Hefty Heinz wanted to disbar Brian from the First Down and Ten for Brian's behaviour had grown more lewd and lacivious since the famous court case. The detectives investigating the case and Adam Tray had asked him if he had seen any of the alleged altercation. Hefty who had been to trial over other altercations and who had seen the peculiar path of justice in the past told both parties that he had not seen anything although he would admit to close personal cronies that he had seen everything. He had thought that he had seen everything until he saw Brian engaging himself in behaviour so outrageous upon the dance floor of the First Down and Ten that he could no longer keep his rage in. It had to come out. Out came his heavily knuckled fists which landed directly to the pulsing vein on the side of Brian's temple. Donald was in the temple trying to reason with the elders to not pass false judgement upon him when the judgement came down upon Hefty Heinz in a no-contest assault case at court. The manager of the First Down and Ten would have to manage with a sixty month jail sentence as well as the medical costs sustained by Brian Grodley in recovering from a terrible concussion that made the man partly blind in his left eye for the rest of his life. Hefty would have served the rest of his life in jail rather than repent for his violent attack upon Brian so outrageous in his opinion was the victim's behaviour. Brian, recognizing a cash cow when he saw it, milked this victim's behaviour for all of its worth. The owners of the First Down and Ten had made it clear to him that he would never have to pay for his drinks there again. This made the sports bar very popular in public opinion and business went up there dramatically afterwards. Although Brian would never again do the act publicly that had so vexed Hefty, he did engage himself in all forms of naughty shenanigans that amused the new patrons. Becoming a well-established patron of the First Down and Ten was Gwen Palace, the financially secured lush who had been there the day Chelsea attacked Donald. She had not seen any of this turmoil nor was she approached by the detectives or Adam Tray. They had been told by Hefty Heinz that Gwen was too inebriated at the time to remember anything. She did remember Brian Grodley and it was because of Brian that she was now a regular at the bar. She had taken a fancy to him and all of his bad boy notoriety. Taking note of Ms. Palace's fancy for her husband, Thelma Grodley had decided that she wanted no more of the man. She had retained Hugh Huygens to be her attorney at law to take action against her husband. She originally wanted the court appointed attorney who had successfully defended Brian in the assault case but this attorney was now seeking local political office and had decided to divorce himself from his connection with the socially deviant Grodleys. Hugh Huygens accepted the retainer since there was to be a lot of money to be extracted from the now lucrative Grodleys seeing the large dollar value of damages going their way from Hefty Heinz. Chelsea did not like Hugh Huygens since the day this opportunistic and capitalistic barrister persuaded Zac Zestrowski to rid himself of the dog in favour of the high-tech electronic surveillance system. Since Chelsea's removal from the premises at Zesty's two attempted break ins had occured but each attempt had been foiled not by the surveillance system but by Zac himself who had recently ran into his own marital problems and was now using his body shop as his principle place of residence since his prior residence was now the sole domain of his separated wife. Neither Zac nor his wife had retained Hugh Huygens as their attorney. They neither opted for Adam Tray or the court appointed attorney who was now an aspiring politician. Zac and his future ex had thus far not brought in any third parties to work over the nest and nest egg that had been the Zestrowski estate. The state that the elders of the community temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints found Donald in on that day when the blackballed man who became recently physically challenged was not what they desired to be a representative of their faith. They preferred that he no longer make his devotions at their temple and they stated rather strongly that the disabled man seek his salvation directly from the Lord without having them act as go-betweens. Going between their words, Adam Tray thought that Donald had a strong case of discrimination against the Latter Day Saints and urged the miscreant to take legal action against the Church for reparation of damages equivalent to the price of eternal salvation that the Church had promised Donald when he was first recruited as a disciple long ago when Donald was a teenager with two legs. As a teenager Donald was given to understand that his only hope of achieving heaven was through the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Now, the elders had thwarted this expectation and Donald was not to be going to expect to go to heaven at all. All and all Adam Tray estimated that the dollar value of such an action would be in excess of one hundred million dollars and he told Donald dollars to donuts that they had a strong legal case because of broken promise. The Grodley's marriage had been a broken promise. Brian and Thelma had promised each other that they would love, honour and respect each other until death do them part. Death did not part them but rather Gwen Palace had parted them and Hugh Huygens wanted that part of them that could be translated into cold, hard cash for his pocket book. He booked the divorce hearings with the court the same day as Adam Tray booked Donald's lawsuit against the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. It was late in that day and the two counsellers decided to dine together and they told each other of each other's cases and thus breached their respective clients' right to confidentiality but they kept this information confidential to themselves and both were confident that Thelma Grodley would take Brian Grodley to the cleaners. Neither felt any confidence in Donald's case but Adam Tray told Hugh Huygens in confidentiality that this case would get national attention and there would be many dividends for him to collect upon taking the Church to court. Years earlier Brian had courted Thelma to Church but neither had been there since and Brian had not been to the cleaners since he and Thelma had parted company. The company he now kept was considered socially unclean yet Gwen Palace still believed in clean clothes and she had Brian take his wash to the cleaners. Clean, Clean, Clean the drycleaning outfit in town had Baines, Baines and Baines as their attorneys and had Adam Tray do most of their legal work. Now that Adam Tray was out of work with Baines, Baines and Baines, Clean, Clean, Clean were being actively pursued by Adam to move their business from Baines, Baines and Baines to his practice. It was not the practise of this cleaning outfit to be unloyal to those that served them well but Adam Tray still tried to coerce them into doing business with him. In fact, that afternoon when Brian Grodley was bringing in his unclean clothing to Clean, Clean, Clean, Adam Tray was in the backroom trying to be persuasive with one of the cleaners' major shareholders, one Gwen Palace. She was the reason Brian selected Clean, Clean, Clean to do his cleaning. She had recommended it and told him to use her name when he dropped off his clothes. Brian wanted to drop the clothes that he was wearing when he saw the lady who served him. She was a striking beauty whom he had never before seen in this town and he had thought he had seen them all. Trudy Bayfield, the striking beauty, had thought she had heard it all until she listened to the complete catalogue of Brian Grodley come on lines. She was paid to listen and to make out the bill which always had to be prepaid but she would not make out with Brian. His clothes were dirty and his mind was dirty and she believed in cleanliness. Trudy was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and a saint of any day, Brian was not. He was not even a patron of Clean, Clean, Clean and yet the man would not prepay and had the audacity to say that he was the major shareholder's fiance. Fiance or not, he still had to finance the prepayment of the cleaning, Trudy Bayfield told Brian Grodley who's temper was being lit. Gwen Palace was half lit in the backroom with Adam Tray at the time, her own temper was being stoked by the relentlessness of the man, but half lit or not, she recognized the straining voice of Brian's coming from the counter. She came out and encountered a raging man ranting and raving at the hired help. Gwen did not help the help but ratified the ranting and raving of the raging man by dismissing Miss Trudy Bayfield. Adam Tray had to keep Trudy Bayfield at bay as she hissed her own torrent of foul invective at both Gwen Palace and her misanthropic boyfriend, Brian Grodley. Brian recognized Adam who recognized Brian. They had been on opposite sides of the courtroom when Donald was publicly chastised as an animal beater. Brian, who was a wifebeater, had beaten Adam in court that day and on this day he wanted to physically beat the attorney for stepping in on a labour dispute between an employer and an employee. The employer, Gwen Palace, had to restrain Brian from carrying out his desire to fruition even though Adam Tray goaded Brian Grodley by calling him a fruit. It was a fruitless situation and Brian eased off. Gwen did not let Trudy off easy. She was fired. Gwen did not let Adam Tray have her business. She threw him out of the shop and as the attorney stepped out onto the parking lot of Clean, Clean, Clean he was already talking to Trudy about pressing charges against the cleaners for wrongful dismissal. Trudy wanted to dismiss the case since she was planning to quit soon anyways but she decided to make an appointment with Adam to discuss her options. The law firm of Baines, Baines and Baines were disgusted that their former associate, Adam Tray, would be bringing legal action against one of their clients, Clean, Clean, Clean. They wanted to pulverize the little upstart and were thinking of bringing action against him for trying to tamper with their clients since this was proprietal information that Adam Tray upon joining the firm of Baines, Baines and Baines had agreed to leave sacred if he ever left the them, was using against them. Nothing was sacred to Adam but the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints was sacred to Trudy and when she inadvertently discovered that her lawyer was trying to bring the Mormon Church to court, she dismissed him at once. Wanting to re-miss was Thelma Grodley and she wanted Hugh Huygens to expedite the divorce proceedings against Brian but the civil court docket was well filled up with lawsuits and nothing could be rushed. The docket had Donald suing the Grodleys over the loss of his leg, Donald suing the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Grodley vs. Grodley in a divorce case, and Zestrowski vs. Zestrowski in another divorce case. The criminal trial of Hefty Heinz had come and gone but there was also upon the docket, Brian Grodley vs. Hefty Heinz over the loss of eyesight, and Brian Grodley vs. The First Down and Ten because Brian realized that if that sports bar establishment was willing to give him free drinks then they must be culpable and therefore should be willing to give him much more. There was also the Baines, Baines and Baines vs. Tray antitrust suit. Not trusting in a "suit" to look after his legal needs, Brian Grodley had decided that he would act as his own counsel in his suits against Hefty Heinz and the First Down and Ten. This suited the latter two parties just fine. They knew that they would not get anything more than just a fine at the very most and quite possibly no action against them whatsoever. Justice Lucas O. Fine was the magistrate who sat on these two proceedings and he had no problem throwing both out of court due to the legal ineptitude of Brian Grodley. After the first case, the Hefty Heinz one, he asked Mr. Grodley if he would rather have legal representation and when Brian declined, Justice Fine had Brian thrown out of court. Out front of the court, the legal reporter was able to interview both Hefty Heinz's attorney and the team of barristers that represented the First Down and Ten. The reporter soon had two stories for the weekend edition of the paper concerning countersuits against Brian Grodley from both Hefty Heinz and the First Down and Ten who went as far also to state that Mr. Grodley would no longer be receiving free drinks from their establishment, in fact Mr. Grodley was permanently banned from entering the sports bar. With the headline "Sports Bar Not Good Sports in Barring Brian" greeting the community on Sunday morning, one would have thought that the town would have rallied behind Brian and boycotted the First Down and Ten. But such was not the case, it was now football season and there was no establishment in town that had more satellite T.V. coverage of the games than the First Down and Ten. Brian was last year's Cinderella team, this year he was the defending champion and everybody likes to see the champ go down. Going down to the First Down and Ten that first Sunday of the brand new N.F.L. season was Gwen Palace. Her boyfriend was banned from there but she no longer thought of him in that way. Brian couldn't get her her free drinks any more and she never saw anything more in him than this. Their relationship was through. Thelma was through with Brian too and she was through with the divorce action. Brian now had no source of income and to divorce him would be nothing but to spend money on lawyers and she had little money to spend and the little that she had she would rather it be spent at the Bingo hall on a bank of cards and Nevada tickets. Her luck was not good of late but she knew that that would have to change before it would eat up all of her small change. Changing his tactics somewhat after hearing about Brian's dismal display before Magistrate Fine, Adam Tray knew that he had to somehow have some legal foot to stand on in Donald's suit against the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints. Donald was barely left with a foot to stand on but there was no sympathy factor at work for him in Judge Fine's court. The court of public opinion had not even stood with Donald in the assault trial against Brian Grodley. He was thought of as an animal beater and that label had far more negative connotation than the positive connotation of being a cripple. It was stacked against him and this stacking was precisely what Adam Tray was going to play on in the case. Judge Fine was not a sentimentalist and how Adam was going to portray Donald was as a very negative character who society could barely condone but and this was Adam's big but even marginal shady pariahs had rights guaranteed them according to the Constitution and these rights included the freedom of religion. The Mormon Church by doing their version of an excommunication was infringing upon Donald's right to practice the religion that he chooses. Adam Tray was hoping that this was a big enough but to impress Judge Fine to find for his client. Gwen Palace was never worried that her butt was big enough. She had an hour glass figure with the accent on the bottom of the clock but she had butted into Brian's life a little too much of late and he was not very happy because in his eyes his life had become ashambled. Learning from the shambles that his legal cases were of late, he decided that he would take the law into his own hands. Everybody's hands were on the paper the next day reading about how a crazed Brian Grodley had murdered execution style a well-to-do lush in the parking lot of the First Down and Ten. Brian had obeyed the restriction against him not to enter the bar but he did not obey the sixth commandment in the Hebrew-Christian charter that stated "Thou Shalt Not Kill". He was quickly apprehended on the scene by local police who had been called there by I.R.S. agents who were staking out the First Down and Ten for possible tax infractions. Another infraction that Brian Grodley was charged with that night was resisting arrest and it took a bullet in his abdomen to make him see resistance was futile which were the very words uttered by the Borg on a rerun of Star Trek Voyager playing in the bar that very fateful night. On another station, ESPN were showing highlights of the prolific career of Bjorn Borg, the tennis great from the 1970's and on the sound system Neil Young sang about Mother Nature on the run in the 1970's. Brian could no longer run in the 1990's. He had to forego going to the police station as his wound dictated that he should be taken to the hospital so en route to the emergency room his rights were being dictated to him by one of the arresting constables. At the same time, the circumstances of the murder were being dictated to the reporter who no longer was on Brian Grodley's bandwagon. The Grodleys had once owned a station wagon but at the time of their separation, they owned a minivan that was behind on its payments and was likely to be repossessed by the bank. Thelma Grodley was by the bank when she heard news of what had happened at the First Down and Ten. She was driving home in the minivan from another losing night at the Bingo hall when she was pulled over by the police. She did not think that she had been speeding nor had commited any other traffic violation but her very soul was violated when she was told about what Brian had did and what happened to him. At the hospital, Brian was quickly rushed to the operating room for surgery to remove the bullet that was lodged in his belly. The bullet was accompanied by a lot of alcohol in there as well. Brian had drank a well full of vermouth earlier that night. The vermouth put a slur to his mouth while his vile actions put a slur on the townspeople's mouthes the next day upon reading about the reprehensible act. The reporter made the common folk feel pity for the dead Gwen Palace and pity as well for the living Thelma Grodley who even after all that she had been through was keeping a steady vigil at the hospital where Brian's condition was listed as critical. Very few can be usually critical towards a dying man but unusually they can. Critics came out of the woodwork inciting how unsavoury and unwholesome Brian Grodley was. These very critics had forgotten that only a short time ago they had lauded the man for defending his dog. Chelsea was in the doghouse when all of this happened. Donald was still in the doghouse himself when all of this happened. The reporter had chosen not to mention that this murdering Brian Grodley was also the same Brian Grodley that had been acquitted of the assault causing bodily harm charges against Donald. So as the reporter painted Brian as a villain he failed to villify the villain's most recent victim. Feeling that she was just as much a victim of the entire affair was Thelma Grodley who had been the victim of a marital affair between Brian and the late Gwen Palace. Brian had done much to make her life miserable yet she could not leave his side during his misery. She prayed that the Good Lord would show mercy to her estranged husband and that he would survive the gunshot wound. Also praying for his survival was Adam Tray. He did not want to lose an antagonist in the civil proceedings between Donald and the Grodleys from the lost leg lawsuit. Donald, however, did not pray for Brian's survival. He did not pray for his death either. Donald did not pray anymore because the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints forbidded him to worship with them. However, Donald was not forbidden to read the Sunday paper and he read about the murder at the First Down and Ten parking lot. He thought a lot of crime was happening there. He had been assaulted there even though he could not remember it. But he did remember Brian's name and he did remember that it was Brian who had allegedly assaulted him. He had felt it to be an insult that the community had not stood behind him and rather chose a retired junkyard dog to stand behind. Not even his Church at the time had stood behind him and looking behind himself now, all that he could see was the money-hungry Adam Tray. Adam Tray was not really behind him physically but in Donald's mind he saw the snivelling ambulance chaser there. The ambulance had already come and gone with the wounded Brian Grodley when Donald decided to make an appearance at the hospital himself. He had not appeared there when he had sustained the initial dogbite from Stacey nor did he show up there when the flesh wound from Chelsea started to grow infected. But he was at the hospital now. He walked upon crutches although Adam Tray had urged him to obtain a wheelchair. But the wheels of Donald's mind were spinning on something else. Retribution. He managed to elude the nursing staff at the nursing station near the trauma unit where Brian was being held. There was an armed policeman standing guard at the door where inside Thelma Grodley grieved and Brian Grodley was in a semi-comatose state attached to a spiderweb made up of tubes entering his body at all manner of points. Donald asked the policeman to point out the room of some fictitious person whom the policeman in his duty to serve felt obliged to find the answer for Donald. In doing this serving he failed at his other prime duty, protecting. Brian was not being protected when Donald burst into the room with a firearm that sent a volley of bullets into him. Some of these bullets also fell open Thelma Grodley. In a matter of seconds the community had no more Grodleys and in a few more seconds the community was made up of one less Donald as the policeman was quick to shoot down the man who had so easily fooled him. The policeman was made to look the fool at the investigation that followed. Adam Tray had desperately sought to be the policeman's counsel but this assignment was given to the new junior partner at Baines, Baines and Baines. Hugh Huygens had done well for himself since he had so lucratively administered the Gwen Palace estate and was quickly recruited by the firm who had also assigned him the account of Clean, Clean, Clean. Hugh no longer went after the Zestrowski divorce case. This was handled by the young public defender as his last bit of business before taking on his role in the government seat that he won in the election. One of his first pieces of business in the legislature was to grant Hefty Heinz a pardon in the assault case that had sent him to jail. The sentence was judged to be too harsh given the nefarious character of Brian Grodley. Upon release from prison Hefty Heinz went to that other type of prison and rescued one female Rotweiler by the name of Chelsea. She was slated to die since no one wanted her but Hefty gave her a reprieve as well. Not getting a reprieve posthumously from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints was Donald. They could never condone his murderous behaviour and stated in one of their sermons that they believed Donald to be in Hell. Donald, being dead, did not know where to believe he was or if whether he had been reunited with his leg. All that was for certain was that he did not drive any more for the day that he was buried a letter arrived at what was his home informing him that his license had been revoked by the State. Tweet
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J.A. Aarntzen has 10 active stories on this site. Profile for J.A. Aarntzen, incl. all stories Email: joe@storytelleronthelake.com |