A typical Sunnyvale resident back in the days I spent there. He never attended groups because he would sit on his own face.
Written at Sunnyvale Mental Rehab in Fermonga, Ohio.
A Short Excerpt From A Book You'll Never Read
Chapter 41 Vito Nazarini and Monk Spitzanelli watched as the man they were supposed to kill stepped from a parked car. In a moment, they were at his side.
"Hey, Frankie," Vito said to the victim. "Big Elmo says dat you is supposed to take a ride wit us, ha-ha."
Frankie Garbaroni knew his executioners well, and though trapped with two ice picks jabbing his back, he had a plan.
"Big Elmo who?" Frankie said.
Vito and Monk looked at each other, and Frankie knew their limited third grade education might save his life.
"Frankie, you know who it is," Monk said. "Big Elmo Maraconzon, uh, Maracuzzo, uh, you tella him, Vito."
"Hell, Monk, I can't a pronounce dat name, either. It's Big Elmo Macaroni, I think."
"It's a not Macaroni," Monk said. "Anyway, you knows who it is, Frankie. It's da Boss."
Frankie rubbed his forehead. "I know several Big Elmos. You sure you gotta the right guy?"
"Ha," Vito said. "A course we gotta the right guy. You stold Big Elmo's money."
"Well, then you tella me what's his last name?"
"Aw, come on, Frankie," Monk said. "We hafta killa you ass. What difference does thata make?"
"Because a guy should know whose a having him killed. Spell it for me."
Vito and Monk lowered their ice picks and sat on the curb.
"Spell it," Vito said. "Geez, letta me see."
"M, uh, A, uh," Monk said.
Frankie Garbaroni eased down the street and around the corner.
"M, uh, A, uh," Vito said. "Hey, Frankie, you went to da sixth grade. Help us out. Frankie, oh, darn."
From the novel: Dumb Mafia Hit Men (taken from my book /Waiting For An Open Bed) Waiting For An Open Bed |
(This entry has had a lot of comments, and I'm glad it can help bring Nam vets together or to help find each other. If you have a comment, please attach your name to the comment or from this point forward it won't be published. I've received many comments that are phony and obviously made up, submitted by anonymous submission. I do screen all comments. Click the photo to enlarge. Semper Fi.) This is the Liberty Bridge (click to make larger) in Quang Nam Province in Vietnam during July of 1968. Of the 14,000 Marines killed in Vietnam, 10,000 were killed in Quang Nam Province. (Figures in comment section show a little under 7000 KIA in Quang Nam.) This was late in my tour on July 2. The bridge had been blown once again by the enemy to isolate the Marine base at An Hoa. I was a 50 caliber machine gunner on a convoy to resupply the An Hoa Firebase. I called this the River Styx because it had a ferry boat. Once you crossed the river you entered a nightmare hell on earth cal...
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