Sharkey's Place Season 2, Episode 7 By Rick Regan 4/12/22 Rick Regan Raleigh.rickregan@gmail.com 919-218-8834SHARKEY’S PLACE - EARLY EVENING Kirini and Sandra are working the early evening crowd. The place is about half full. Sandra takes drinks to the tables and Kirini works the bar area. KIRINI So, what do you think of our fresh-faced new helper? SANDRA She’s a hahrd worker and a quick study. Why not have her work nights? She could make more money. KIRINI One word: coffee! Did you know she taught herself to use Myra’s coffee bean roaster, from YouTube? Now she is hinting that I need to get more, better and moreexotic beans for her. She is so focused on the roasters, you know what she said? SANDRA No, what? KIRINI She said, shhhhh, listen! Can you hear it? It’s saying, ‘Feed me! Feed me beans!’ SANDRA Well can ya beat that? KIRINI And I tell ‘ya, there’s as much money in coffee as there is in beer. Heather at the Honk’R has had it right all along. Sell cups of coffee to the boys in the morning and take it to the bank in the afternoon. SANDRA You don’t say? KIRINI We’re making as much on coffee sales as we are on beer sales. Lunch was always a loss-leader, or breakeven at best, but cups of coffee is a cash machine - now that I’ve got... we’ve got, somebody to run the roaster. SANDRA Gordo seems to like it. The boys from the Squid usually come by. You think Aiden is still trying to make a play for her? KIRINI You know what she asked me about?2. SANDRA No. KIRINI Myra’s son, Ethan. SANDRA Wait, Ethan who-is-with her sister-Bella, Ethan? KIRINI Yep. SANDRA That little tramp. KIRINI Hey, take it easy! SANDRA You don’t steal your sister’s boy. That’s not on. KIRINI I don’t think she’s done anything about it, and besides Ethan and Bella are going up to U-M in a couple of weeks. SANDRA They starting the summer session? In what? KIRINI Who knows? At a place like U-M you could study whatever you want, like aquatic-needlepoint, or Japanese Cartoon Studies. I don’t get it. They ought to study something useful. SANDRA If you say so, but I’m glad that there are people who spend their lives working on the strangest things. It makes the world more interesting. And listen to you, Miss Slinging-Beers in Rural Maine. Wouldn’t you have liked to have a background in Russian history right now, what with this war and all? Maybe we could make some kind of sense of it. KIRINI Ah, you’re right, you’re right. It’s good to have learned something. But it is also worthwhile to sling beers for the boys in Maine. Know what I mean? SANDRA You know I was just reading one of Boot’s new novels. I don’t know how she comes up with all of those stories. The bad guy was so... bad! 3. KIRINI She’s got a lot of experience, with evil. SANDRA Makes you wonder what’s going on in that head. Neil comes in. He is covered in splotches of turpentine, lacquer and paint dabs. While most of the customers smell like boats, fish and the sea, Neil stands out with the sharp solvent smells. NEIL Evening ladies. KIRINI Neil, a favor? NEIL Anything. KIRINI Could you hang your gear outside, on the hooks. It’s quite... ro-bust. NEIL Ah, yes, of course. My apologies. He goes out, hangs up his coveralls amid the other fishermen’s gear and returns. Sandra works the room. KIRINI What can I get you? NEIL A gin and tonic, with lime, I think. Something clear, sharp, and with a few bubbles. KIRINI Coming up. NEIL Kiri, I heard you were going to set up a stage, for music and such. Anything happen with that? KIRINI Here you go. Oh, yeah, we’ve got a fold-down stage over there, and a new spotlight, mounted there. She indicates. NEIL Oh, yes. Very good. So... no takers yet? 4. KIRINI Takers? NEIL No young women with big acoustic guitars, singing in that plaintive style, about looking for some kindness in the world. KIRINI Like Taylor Swift? NEIL Or Billie Eilish. KIRINI Alanis Morissette? NEIL Cowboy Junkies. KIRINI Indigo Girls. NEIL Avril Lavigne KIRINI Fiona Apple. One of my fave’s. NEIL Mine too. Tracy Chapman. KIRINI The Cranberries. Dolores O’Riordon. NEIL Sinead O’Connor. KIRINI Full stop. No Sinead. Not in here. Not in my place. NEIL Because of the Pope thing? KIRINI That was disrespectful. NEIL Yes, it was. And, I think, necessary. KIRINI No it wasn’t. 5. NEIL She was, in the end, proven right, about the priests and the pedophiles and all of it. KIRINI But to tear up the picture of the pope, on TV. Nope. NEIL Kiri, you’re not even Roman Catholic though, are you? KIRINI Greek. NEIL Right. So what do you care? KIRINI It’s just disrespectful, is all. NEIL Well, you are right about that. KIRINI And you? NEIL Oh, they kicked me out a long time ago. I grew up in the church, in Philly, but when they pushed so hard on the anti-gay stuff, well, they pushed me right out. KIRINI Oh, right. Yeah, I guess so. NEIL So, no music? KIRINI I haven’t really looked into it, I guess. NEIL What about readings? KIRINI Like Boots? Yeah, she said she’d do it. NEIL And poetry? KIRINI Um... poetry? Do we have any poets in town? 6. NEIL Well, not to toot my own horn, but I am myself a published poet. Small periodicals, literary reviews and the like. KIRINI What are you saying, Neil? That you want to read some poetry on stage? NEIL Yes, that’s about the size of it. KIRINI Is that why you came in here tonight? To read poetry? NEIL I come in for the same reason anyone does. Friendly faces, good cocktails, some mingling with the salty local folk. KIRINI Salty what? NEIL I’m just kidding. I was in my studio all day, working on the finish coats for the Sandras. I just wanted to see some people. KIRINI So, speaking of, how much is one of the Sandras going to run me? NEIL Well, funny thing. I am under strict instruction, from the model herself. She wants me to burn them. KIRINI Burn them? NEIL Some of them. She said, one for you, two for Captain Gordon. Then I have four for my clients in Philadelphia. But the last four, she wants me to destroy. Sandra approaches. SANDRA Hello, Neil. How are you? NEIL I was just telling Kirini that you want me to burn the paintings. 7. SANDRA Just the extra ones, right. Give one to Kirini. NEIL And two to Captain Gordon. SANDRA Right. And burn the extras. KIRINI Sandy, why? Why do you want him to burn them? SANDRA Because Alexi wants to buy them all. KIRINI So, that’s a good thing, right? SANDRA How is that going to work, if I go back to New York? Nude pictures of me in every room. And he’ll sell them, or give them, to his buddies. So then they will look at me and see right through me. They already throw away women like a half-eaten shrimp shell. I don’t need them ogling me when I’m not even there. KIRINI But, I don’t know, is that right? Can she do that? NEIL Of course. It’s her image. If she doesn’t want it used like that, I have to retract it. KIRINI Oh. NEIL But I am hoping to come back next fall and, fingers crossed, maybe we can paint some more. Perhaps some of you, Kirini? KIRINI Well, that puts the shoe on the other foot. Yeah, I can see how you would want to limit the circulation of your body. NEIL Image of the body. KIRINI Right. Image. Boots Moran comes in and waves to the team. 8. SANDRA Hey’a Boots. What can I get you? The usual? KIRINI Boots! A Hurricane for you? BOOTS Hello, all. You know my weakness, dearest Kiri. Yes, one of your Maine Hurricanes for me. SANDRA Are you celebrating something? You look like you won the lottery. BOOTS Hello, Neil. Good to see you. NEIL Nice evening, Boots. You finish your book about the killer, predator? BOOTS They are all about killers and predators. No, I just heard from my publicist and Five Nickels is on the Times Best Sellers list! KIRINI That’s wonderful, Boots! Hey, first one’s on the house! BOOTS Thank you, dearest. SANDRA But you’ve had best sellers before, haven’t you? BOOTS Well it’s a funny thing, you see. Because now they pretty much all sell about one hundred and fifty thousand copies, give or take a few. SANDRA That’s a lot of books. BOOTS But it’s the speed they are interested in. I mean, if a book takes ten years to sell a hundred thousand, that’s a ‘slow seller’. But if it sells a hundred thousand in the first ninety days, that’s a hit! Even if it drops off after that. SANDRA That’s a funny way to do it. 9. BOOTS What they want to identify - and hype-up - are the books that are going fast. They want everybody to get the sense that everybody is reading it. You know what I mean? SANDRA Like that Eat, Pray, Love book. All of a sudden it seemed like everybody was reading that book or talking about it. BOOTS But it’s still the same hundred-thousand or twohundred thousand people. Not millions. It’s the same people. KIRINI What about that James Patterson guy? He sells millions, doesn’t he? BOOTS Oh, Jimmy. Yes, he sells millions. He has his own factory that churns out formula mysteries every two weeks. He takes up all the space in the market because of his murder-industrial-complex. SANDRA Really? BOOTS But what the editors know is that while Jimmy sells millions, and makes millions, nobody who really reads books - really knows books and is an informed critic, none of those people read his books. He is selling to a non-literary crowd. SANDRA But the makes-millions part. That would be nice. BOOTS I won’t lie. That would be nice. But, my fans love me, and I love them, and ladies, I love you! KIRINI Well, timing really is everything because you are about to hear Neil read his poetry tonight. BOOTS Poetry? Really? Where? KIRINI I called those people you sent me to and had them do the work. 10. SANDRA We’ve got a stage the folds up. And lights. KIRINI More of a platform but yes. SANDRA Neil, I didn’t know you write poetry. NEIL Well, the way I feel about it is that I don’t really write it. It’s just that sometimes some lines come to me and I write them down. Sometimes a full poem and sometimes just an image. I admit that it is as Truman Capote said of Kerouac, That’s not writing, that’s typing! BOOTS Ha! Yes, he was right on that score. Gordon comes in. Neil orders another drink. GORDON My boon companions! NEIL On the water today, Cap? GORDON Above the water. Below the water. In the water. Water ahead and water behind. I am the water and the water is me. KIRINI How was the fishing? GORDON A good haul. I am just back from the broker. Unloading the traps, weighing, measuring and trading lobsters for cash. Gordon pulls a fat roll of cash out of his pocket. NEIL Wow! How much is that? GORDON Oh, I’ll get some of it but I split it with the crew in the morning. Pay for tomorrow’s fuel. Then a pinch for me. Beer money. KIRINI Cold Harpoon for you, Gordo! 11. GORDON Ah, lovely Kirini, skin so fair and so clear. Eyes so bright and lovely. And the heart of a lion. Bless you, girl. KIRINI Heh! First one’s on the house. BOOTS Gordo, you’re a man of a poetical mind. GORDON On occasion, yes. BOOTS Well, Kirini had a stage and some lights put up, over there. She’s looking for poets to do readings. Do you have some verse that you’d like to share? GORDON As antique as it may seem, I prefer the old-school practice of oral memory for the epic stories. I remember them, all up here. (points to his head) SANDRA Nobody can steal that from ya! GORDON And I recite at sea, the great sea stories, of course. But also, the great Testaments, Old and New. The legends of the great historical figures, Beowulf, Gawain and Huck Finn. The struggle for Troy. The Art of War. These and many more, I read, I learn and I repeat. BOOTS With only the birds to hear you. GORDON And the crew. I try to make these men into ones who aspire to the great deeds, the greatest deeds. Some stay, some go. But I teach on. NEIL That sounds like a... uh... an edifying tour for a young lobster crewman. Do they like it? GORDON When the story is gripping, heroic, I just tell the tale. It is already written and I repeat it. If it gets their attention, it is on the strength of the story, not me. 12. KIRINI Say Gordo, how about you and Neil lower the stage down. Sandy, help me clear that table. And we’ll give it a try. BOOTS What about me? KIRINI You keep an eye on the bar. BOOTS Yes, sir! Gordon and Neil fold down the Murphy-bed-style ‘stage’. It folds down from the wall and makes a sturdy platform. Kirini and Sandra swing the tables aside and make room, setting the tables back up around the stage, to encourage people to sit closer and listen. BOOTS (CONT’D) You know what you need? A rug, on the wood there. KIRINI A rug? BOOTS Yeah, for a little sound softening. Kirini goes back into an interior office and takes the throw rug off the floor. She puts it on the stage. KIRINI Sandy, can you dim the lights? I’m going to try out this spotlight. They all are busy and get the arrangements made. BOOTS So, Neil, you ready? NEIL Umm, well, no. I was wondering if they had things set up but I didn’t expect to go on right now. Maybe you should go first, do a reading from your books? BOOTS Don’t be nervous, Neil. Heh, that’s funny, Nervous Neil. You are among friends. SANDRA What kind of thing do you have in mind, Neil? Like a love poem? (MORE) 13. NEIL Something like that. I had a thought while I was working today, while looking at you in fact, and a few lines came to me. SANDRA You write ‘em down? NEIL Nope. KIRINI You ready to go? Our first act! NEIL I’m not an act. KIRINI Well, show. Our first performer. NEIL I’m not a performer. KIRINI Dammit Neil! Are you going to go up there or not? NEIL How about a Green Lady for strength? KIRINI I’ll give you some Dutch Courage when you finish. How about that? NEIL Alright, alright. Here goes nothing. Neil goes up to the stage and stands in the light. There is no microphone but the room quiets for this man on stage. SANDRA (quietly) That takes some balls. KIRINI I couldn’t do it. NEIL (to the crowd) Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. I know you didn’t come out tonight because there would be a poetry reading. You came for the cold beer and the warm hospitality of Kirini and Sandra. Let’s give them a round of applause! (the crowd claps and whoops!) NEIL (CONT’D) (MORE) 14. Now many people write poetry, on the side, in their spare time. Lots of people start when they are young but give it up as an adolescent pursuit. But, unfortunately for you, I never stopped. I have a couple of books of poetry on Amazon, which I encourage you to buy! People read poems and sometimes ask what they ‘mean’. I think it’s better to think about poetry more like songs. We sing something like Handel’s Great Hallelujah Chorus, with the voices and the music swelling and crashing in great waves. But if we ask, what does it mean?, well that might be missing the point. GORDON (shouting) Neil! Get on with it! NEIL Right! Right. Thank you, Captain. And to all the captains and crew here tonight, thank you too. Now here is a poem. (pauses, then formally) How did it begin? We approached each other like lonely, fasting, penitent hermits, coming down from our separate hideouts. Like distant planets, somehow we were pulled together by gravity, until one day we were holding hands, fingers entangled in the sunlight below the dome at St. Paul’s, eager to explore the City, and the world, together. Overcome with the flood of affection, understanding and love, beyond imagination, so bright and blinding was the feeling. Later, standing at edge of St. Stephen’s Green, with the smell of new mown wet grass in the morning sunlight, I remember the perfume in your hair as you swept by, pulling me forward with the Bloomsday tourists. Now I can only hold these memories, like a handful of matchsticks, in my own lonely darkness. When I strike, and am blinded again by the memory of you, and that lights my way, a little forward. And maybe the light of these memories can get me to solid ground, brighter days. And the mourning will come. NEIL (CONT’D) 15. (looks up) Thank you. I’m Neil Ruffin. GORDON Hurray! (begins clapping) The crowd claps and applauds for Neil. Neil waves at the crowd and steps down, going back to the bar. NEIL Well! How was that? GORDON Gloomy! NEIL Oh? GORDON “Fasting, penitent hermits”? NEIL An expression of isolation. GORDON Well, after that, I think the ones suffering are the listeners, me! NEIL Gee, thanks for the support... GORDON Ah, no. Wonderful job, my boy. Brave heart, clear voice and evocative language. Well done. NEIL Thank you, Captain. SANDRA That was really good. What’s it called? NEIL Number Twenty-Two. I don’t really worry about titles. GORDON What was Twenty-One about? NEIL Playing blackjack in Geneva with Sugar J. 16. GORDON Dreadful. And Twenty-Three? NEIL About the time I met Michael Jordan in Philadelphia. GORDON Ugh! (Shakes his head) Anyway, keep it up. Good work. KIRINI Got a Green Lady for you, Neil. Our inaugural poet! GORDON Boots, I imagine you should take a turn. Got anything lined up? BOOTS Gordo, I do this kind of thing all the time. I don’t need to do it here. KIRINI Come on, Boots. I got the lights. I got the stage. You said you’d do it. BOOTS Well, I don’t have anything prepared. SANDRA I’ve got one of your new ones in back. The Nickels one. BOOTS You’ve got it here? SANDRA Sure. Hang on. Sandra goes to the back office and retrieves a hardback edition of Five Nickels. BOOTS You bought it? SANDRA Well, you know, I’m one of the literary readers, that buy your books. Heh! BOOTS (takes the book) Well alright. Let me see. Here, this is a good one. (MORE) 17. KIRINI You ready? BOOTS Now? KIRINI Sure. BOOTS OK. Boots goes to the stage. KIRINI She’s a pro. NEIL Yep. BOOTS (to the crowd.) Wow! Here we are. Milbridge! Give yourself a hand! (audience whoops) Wasn’t Neil great? I loved that. So... poetical. Anyway! I’m Boots Moran! (audience claps and whoops) And I’m going to read a section from one of my recent books, called Five Nickels. It’s the story about a woman who goes on a trip with her boyfriend to Greece. She’s hoping he’ll propose, but he dumps her. Jilted and devastated, she boards a 3-day cruise to Italy. And one night she hears what might be a murder in the cabin above her. At this point in the story, she goes to investigate the cabin above, the next day. She’s been staking it out all day, and then she goes in. So, here goes. (reading) When the coast was clear, Lily made her way to the door. When she pushed, to her surprise, it slid open. There was tape on the door latch. The killer must have done that, she thought. That’s pre-meditated. That’s murder. She slipped into the sunny cabin and looked around for clues, creeping softly, as if she might find something dreadful. She noted blood on the corner of the glass coffee table in the middle of the sitting area, beyond the bed. The aqua-marine carpeting glowed flatly in the afternoon glare. BOOTS (CONT’D) (MORE) 18. She made her way around the room, finding little except for the blood. She ducked into the en-suite bathroom looking for clues. As she fogged the mirror for hidden writing, she heard the door open behind her and quickly close. It was him, she thought. She stepped into the shower, behind a low green-tile wall and frosted glass doors. Motionless, she listened for his movements. She heard him moving around, stepping carefully through the room. Only now did it really occur to hert hat this man had murdered that woman. She’d heard her scream. She’d heard the crash against, what must have been the table. Then she’d heard the splash in the water outside her window. She was in the same room as the killer. What would he do with her if he found her, here, hiding in the shower? He’d have to kill her too. She knew too much, she thought. Would he do it in broad daylight? Would he keep her here, tied up, and rape her until it was dark enough to throw her over the side too? She thought about Richard and how she wouldn’t be in this mess if he had done what he was supposed to do. Why didn’t he? Why didn’t he say that he loved her and wanted to marry him? Why didn’t he ask for her hand? She was a sensible woman, with her own means, she thought. What’s wrong with that? She remembered that time he’d brought home sleep-masks, the ones with elastic that goes around the back of your head. She’d told him that she didn’t need a sleep mask but he said it was for the bedroom. How would they have sex wearing masks, she asked him. She was a sensible woman and didn’t need a mask or a costume to be intimate. Why, once she had a blindfold on, he could do anything he wanted, or swap out some other guy for a kiss. Could she even tell, if he’d brought in somebody else to kiss her? Somebody like the tall, Greek foreman of the engine room, that she’d noticed. What would Richard think if she liked kissing the Greek as much as she liked kissing him? Or more? She was a sensible woman. What did he expect? Richard had been patient and respectful in their bedroom. He didn’t push her and waited to hear what she wanted, which was mostly to hold hands and cuddle close. And sometimes, occasionally, she wanted more than that. Lily’s mind raced as she thought of her current danger. BOOTS (CONT’D) 19. What if he has to tie me up to keep me captive in here until dark. Surely, she thought, he’ll have to strip me naked, to eliminate the evidence for identifying the body. What would she do? Could she handle the brutal treatment he would dole out? He would be like a wild animal, grunting and tossing her around. Was she strong enough to handle being raped by a merciless brute? Women are made of strong stuff, she told herself. What if he raped her and then picked up her nude body and tossed her over the side? She imagined herself in that moment, not on the ship, not in the sea, but flying, arms out, with the wind cooling her bare skin. This was the moment she froze in her mind. She’d been a swimmer, so she knew she would hit the water properly, and swim away from the boat. That’s what you are supposed to do, right, swim away from the boat so you don’t get sucked into the propellers, like in Titanic. Swim away from the boat. Then she heard footsteps approaching. The light came on and she wanted to sink into the ground. She hid, motionless, as the man ran some water, went out and came back. He was cleaning the blood, she thought. Then the light snapped off and the man went away. She heard the door latch, over the pounding of her heart. She waited in the room so she might escape unseen. When it was finally dark, she unlatched the door and went out. The tape was gone. (looks up) That’s it. That’s enough for tonight. The crowd whoops and claps. Boots waved, yelling, go buy the book! KIRINI Great job, Boots! Here’s a fresh Hurricane. You earned it! BOOTS Thanks, Kiri. That was fun. Right Neil? NEIL Well, my thin beer doesn’t stand a chance against your well-plotted pot-boilers. Good suspense. BOOTS So Gordo, you going to give it a go? GORDON You’re the professional, Boots. I am but a woeful amateur. (MORE) 20. BOOTS Oh, come on! Give us a sea-chantey or a Yo-Ho-Ho and a Bottle of Rum! NEIL Captain, I think the crowd tonight will listen to just about anything. Give it a go. KIRINI You don’t have to if you don’t want to, Gordo. GORDON Well, perhaps, for demonstration purposes. BOOTS That’s the spirit! Gordon makes his way to the stage. The crowd applauds. They know him. He waves them to be quiet. GORDON Thank you. I’d like to tell you a tale of the sea, if you will permit me. (crowd cheers) When I was seventeen year old, I signed on with a tuna boat, a real blue water voyage. We left Machiasport on April first, 1994. We returned in November of the following year. There were six regular crew, the captain, the first mate and the cook. Two of the regulars acted as the Marines on board, as needed. In a couple of weeks, we’d sailed on down along the coast of New Jersey, down to Virginia and rounding the Hatteras Cape. This is known as the graveyard of the Atlantic. We caught some good fish. We would gut them and put them on ice. In the warmer waters, we watched dolphins, sharks, whales and mermaids. Yes, mermaids, it’s true. One afternoon, late June it must have been, we were clearing Fryingpan Shoals, off North Carolina. We were a hundred miles off shore but there were rocks and shoals all around. It was slow going, mind you. And a quick squall overtook us, there among the sharp shoals. Captain had us full-stop and drop anchor. He didn’t want us drifting blindly. That afternoon it seemed like the entire Atlantic Ocean was pouring on our heads. But when the weather broke, there on the nearest rock was the most beautiful GORDON (CONT’D) 21. mermaid I’d ever seen. She had long black hair, thin arms and a fin like a seal. I guess she’d come up to see what this strange thing in the water was all about. Captain ordered us to take up the anchor but Wally, a Marine, shouted that he wanted to catch her and bring her on board. Before we knew what was happening, he dove over the side. We weren’t as far as me to the back of this room, and Wally swam strong and true. When he got to the rock where she was sitting, he waved, smiled and climbed up onto her rock. She had the most placid and serene look in her eye as she watched him. And when he was on the rock sitting next to her, he moved to kiss her. But she, the dark devil, she grabbed the hair on the top of his head, pulling him back and she bit right into his neck. She chewed and pulled the flesh until his blood went spraying out, his screams gurgled with his choking on his own blood. When he was dead, she set about eating him, there on the rock, just as a lobster might crack open a clam and eat it calmly, enjoying each bloody bite. Mikey, the other Marine, shouted that he would shoot her. But Captain waved him off, ordered him to stand down. The other men grabbed him and pulled him away from the sight of his comrade being quietly devoured. With a cold command, Captain ordered, anchor-up! And we motored away. Tuna fishing is not like war. We don’t swear to bring everyone home. We lost two more men on that voyage. One fell overboard in a storm near Fiji. He was drunk and I’m glad he was gone. The other was a hardened, experienced crewman, a first-rate fisherman. He got tangled in the line while hauling in a sailfish. It ripped his arm off at the elbow. We stopped the bleeding, landed the fish and carried on. But he was too experienced to keep going. He knew we were still in the middle of the voyage and a one-armed sailor is no good to a crew. Dead weight. That night he walked the plank and went to the bottom. These are but some of the adventures and misadventures on that trip so many years ago. Lessons learned and wisdom hard-won. That is all. Good night. The crowd whoops and yells, applauding like mad. Gordon returns to the bar with Neil. 22. NEIL Wow. Really fantastic. BOOTS Great stuff, Gordo. Is any of that true? GORDON Heh! Well, you’ll never know. KIRINI Cold Harp for you, Cap. GORDON Thank you, dearest. Was it alright? KIRINI Couldn’t get better than that. I mean, here, in Milbridge, Maine. With an open mike, we get dazzling poetry, a reading from our very-own best-selling author, and authentic seafaring tales by an actual seafarer. Fantastic! BOOTS Quite a night. KIRINI Quite a night is right. END