tucson square dance

TPD 10-18 unconfirmed data report

7 post-University of Arizona female graduates go to Cactus Moon for several drinks and dancing then drive to Bashful Bandit for more drinks and dancing 2 women get into scuffle victim Brittany Garner 23 years of age race #5 (Native American, Eskimo, Middle -Eastern, Other) 5’ 2” long black hair cut-off blue jean shorts clingy light blue top falls hits head on side of bar dies of fatal blow to skull forensics report crushed occipital lobe assailant Stacy Won 31 years of age race #4 (Asian) 5’6” black jeans black leather jacket red helmet Honda motorcycle still at large

witness accounts

Jess Delaney female 33 years of age race #2 (White) 6’ tight black pencil skirt white sleeveless undershirt no bra 3” heels blond ponytail “that squirting little slut deserves everything she got she lied told Stacy i’m a whore i never cheated on Brittany i don’t understand we were all having a good time getting buzzed and dancing we should never have left Cactus Moon damn Kerrie thought some biker dude might be hanging around the Bandit hell maybe the Bandit was a biker bar once but now it’s just a college sink hole full of drunken frat boys when Monique flashed a little tit they went crazy cheering and buying us shots it just got out of hand never should have happened the way it happened Stacy didn’t mean to kill Brittany it’s fucked up i need to go home please let me go home”

Sabrina Starn 29 years of age race #2 (White) 5’8” trendy corporate gray suit black pumps red shoulder length hair “i have to be at work at 8 AM Stacy was drunk out of control she gets crazy when she drinks Brittany was trash talking pushing all Stacy’s buttons then Stacy accused Brittany of sleeping with Monique and all hell broke loose i didn’t see what happened i was in the powder room it’s a terrible tragedy unfortunate accident can i please be released this is madness”

Kerrie Angeles 27 years of age race #1 (Hispanic) 5’ 6” black pants white shirt black hair cut stylishly short silver crucifix around neck red fingernails “when we got to the Bashful Bandit i was horny soaking between my legs thinking about a cowgirl at Cactus Moon ready to fuck anyone i saw fantasized pulling a train with those frat boys Monique had been kind of quiet at Cactus Moon but when we got to the Bashful Bandit she lit up dancing wild unbuttoning her top jacket Sabrina went to the ladies room to snort coke with biker dude Kerrie wanted but he wasn’t into her then Brittany started saying crazy stuff accusing Stacy of stealing Monique from Jess Jessie goes through women heartlessly she doesn’t give a shit about Monique Jessie knows if she wants Monique back she can simply fiddle a finger my guess is Stacy is half way to Argentina she never meant to kill Brittany I’m going to miss her real bad she was a good kid”

Ann Skyler 28 years of age race  #2 (White) 4’ 11’’ green white red Mexican peasant skirt black t-shirt black high-tops hair in messy bun “i’m confused i saw them dancing laughing grinding up against each other Rage Against the Machine came on then Nine Inch Nails the room felt quaking dizzy sweaty claustrophobic then they were pushing each other shoving yelling frat boys cheering the next thing i knew Brittany was supine on the floor blood pouring out maybe she just slipped hit her head i don’t know what to think i feel real sad confused sick to my stomach scared”

Monique Smithson 24 years of age race # 3 (Black) 5’ 9” blue jeans jean jacket cowboy boots nose ring braided pigtails “Stacy had it in for Brittany from the start I could see it in her eyes at Cactus Moon she made several clever toxic remarks they snapped at each other i never thought it would escalate to murder poor sweet Brittany was always so susceptible i was looking down adjusting my jeans over my boots when it happened i heard felt a big thump glanced up Brittany was lying there lifeless blood spilling everywhere Stacy ran out fast i heard her bike engine take off in a hurry”

The Masticating Sophisticate

Jean-Pierre Kensington’s reality show ‘The Masticating Sophisticate’, in which he would travel the world to eat all kinds of strange and singular foods, had opened extremely strongly but quickly fallen in ratings. It was cancelled after only 3 episodes. In retrospect, perhaps that blockbuster pilot episode, where he’d flown to Papua New Guinea to expose the world to cannibalism, would have been best saved for the series finale. None of the later episodes could really recapture the spirit, novelty or outright audacity of that first escapade.
Years later, he could be found at dives in Manhattan, ‘just chasing tail’, as he would tell associates. You wouldn’t think many women would go for a man who has partaken in the flesh of the long-pig, but Jean-Pierre didn’t seem to have any trouble. In this vein, then, transpired this one night where he managed to convince a ranking executive of a prestigious bank (this is only hearsay from Jean-Pierre) to sleep with him, which is only interesting in terms of the dialogue overheard by the myself, the snooping bartender.
By the time the woman — ‘Pamela’ being the only name I heard spoken that night — arrived, Jean-Pierre was already in that parched, dying-fish state of inebriation. In fact she had woken him from the sound of laying down her satchel bag as she settled into the bar stool next to his. Jean-Pierre was completely startled, and began staring at her a stare that, now I recollect, never actually ended. It had merely transformed as time and conversation went on, into different kinds of stares, with different dimensions and intensities. To begin with, however, it was a stare much like a hitherto dozing lion may warrant a playful monkey that drops a mango onto his head from a reachable branch above. The lion refrains from attacking out of sheer incredulity. Pamela of course ignored this stare and began ordering shots for herself in the plural.
It was only after her eighth hit of snakebite that she finally turned to Jean-Pierre and asked him bluntly if ‘everything was okay’. By this time Jean-Pierre’s stare had refined to the one I call ‘The Sheriff’. The head is tilted upwards about thirty to forty-five degrees, and this is accentuated by a protruding jaw and jutting lower lip. The eyes are squished into tiny dark holes, yet still piercing, as though carefully studying the subject. I had learned from Jean-Pierre that this is a good stare to use in order to mask a yet confused state of mind.
“You seem to be having a lot of shots,” said Jean-Pierre, maintaining his gaze, “will you come back and sleep with me?”
The woman coughed and ordered another shot. Now, at this point, I might have walked up and struck some kind of conversation with Pamela to disengage her from Jean-Pierre. It is part of the service a good bartender provides, and also sometimes one gets lucky. I did think about it — she wasn’t that bad looking at all. But tonight I was a little tired, and anyway, I thought it would be more interesting to hear what possible conversation could occur between the couple. So I gave her her shot and walked off to a faucet nearby, and pretended to wash shot glasses.
At first there were only the usual things you hear in conversations between people. “What do you do?” “Where do you come from?” “What is your bloody name, for god’s sake?” I began to wonder how long I would be able to pretend I was washing shot glasses, at that rate. I began to wonder if Jean-Pierre had gotten too old. That all his stories about travelling the world and eating the strangest things (starting with human beings, who are certainly the strangest of them all) were bygones. Has-beens. Ancient artifacts, old silverware. Your great-grandmother’s IMAX 3D movie. Then the magic started to happen.
“Wait,” said Pamela. “You look really familiar. Where have I seen you before?”
I turned from the faucet to look, and saw that ‘The Sheriff’ was slowly morphing into ‘The Cyrano’. ‘The Cyrano’ is a stare that is difficult to pull off even from a generic face posture, but to do it from the cynical depths of ‘The Sheriff’ is something only a true master can accomplish. To do the Cyrano, you have to look at someone as though your nose is completely distorted — completely messed up — yet deliver a level of confidence and poise that makes them realize that you realize that they realize that your nose looks like pig shit, but that your inner soul is so strong, none if this matters. And you have to be very careful — you cannot over-do it, or you will turn into ‘The Pinnochio’, and people will begin to pet your head, or even worse, ask you to tell them a lie (as a joke). ‘The Pinnochio’ stare has its uses — whenever you need to tell a lie that is so obvious, but also need people to accept it happily, for example. But unless you want the girl to pet your head, ‘The Pinnochio’ is not something you want to express in a pick-up situation. You want ‘The Cyrano’, which of course, is certainly a very powerful stare. After all, to pull it off, you do have to stare in such a way that the person sees that beyond the chaos of your face (see subscript), there does lie the raging bullstorm heart of a virile poet. My doubts began to fade as I watched them, lulled by the warm water from the faucet and soapy curves of the current shot glass.
“Was in a TV show,” said Jean-Pierre, almost meekly.
After a few moments, Pamela spat her shot all over the table. “OH MY FUCKING GOD!” she screamed. “You’re that cannibal guy!”
‘The Cyrano’ gazed back at her from the chaos of his face.
“Y-you ate people!”
“I ate some people, yes. But I didn’t murder them. Wasn’t like I hatched some contrived or diabolical plan to entrap some human beings and then take pleasure in their slow, tortourous deaths. It was just the meat of some people. It was given to me by some other cannibals, and I ate it.”
I heard the squeak of Pamela’s barstool as it inched a little bit away from him. When she spoke, it was as if she was gagging. “Ugh. Stop — stop staring at me. Why are looking at me like that?” I turned again, and I saw that ‘The Cyrano’ had done it’s job, and that now Jean-Pierre was using what he called his ‘finishing move’. He called it ‘Le Jean-Pierre Kensington’, and threatened to eat me if I ever described it in my pitiful writings.
“Well, for example, right now you find me very parched from drink, and,” (I don’t know how he did this, but his stomach actually growled a little), “a little hungry. And so I stare at you, wondering what you might taste like after broiling for a spell over an open pit fire. Or perhaps stir-fried with a little ginger-soy sauce.”
“What do I look like to you,” spat Pamela, “a piece of meat?”
Jean-Pierre smiled a little. “Like one of those steak chops in the cartoons, actually,” he said.
“And you want me to go back and sleep with you?”
“Come on, I’m starving,” said Jean-Pierre. “Come back with me to my hotel room. We can order some pizza and then have sex.” Seeing her face, he added, “What, you don’t like pizza?”
“You’re going to fucking eat me!” shouted Pamela.
Jean-Pierre laughed and laughed. “No, no, my dear. The hotel doesn’t provide the right kinds of utensils to cook such a delicious little mignon as you. And anyway, there is no stove. What am I going to cook you with, my zippo? We will have to do with pizza, I’m afraid.”
Now I tell you the truth when I say that, about half an hour later, the two did leave together. And I can provide the comforting knowledge that Jean-Pierre did not in fact eat Pamela, since I saw her a couple of days later, having some drinks with some other people. She looked pretty happy with her life. Later Jean-Pierre would tell me she was a big executive of something at a major bank, and that she had been a real animal in bed. I don’t really know. If that is what matters to you, I assume you will have to make do with being the chicken nugget in life, shooting for the french onion soup position.
* Elderly gents may substitute ‘The Cyrano’ for ‘The Ernest Borgnine’, with varying luck.

Jean-Pierre Kensington’s reality show ‘The Masticating Sophisticate’, in which he would travel the world to eat all kinds of strange and singular foods, had opened extremely strongly but quickly fallen in ratings. It was cancelled after only 3 episodes. In retrospect, perhaps that blockbuster pilot episode, where he’d flown to Papua New Guinea to expose the world to cannibalism, would have been best saved for the series finale. None of the later episodes could really recapture the spirit, novelty or outright audacity of that first escapade. Continue reading