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- Newsgroups: talk.bizarre
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!spool.mu.edu!news.nd.edu!news
- From: rvacca@vyasa.helios.nd.edu (robert vacca)
- Subject: The Curse of Jim Morrison
- Message-ID: <1993Jan13.012732.20193@news.nd.edu>
- Summary: True story. Really. I Swear To God (tm).
- Sender: news@news.nd.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Notre Dame
- Date: Wed, 13 Jan 1993 01:27:32 GMT
- X-Claimer: This is a work of non-fiction! It really happened to my girlfriend and her mother! Wow! Gosh! Gee!
- Lines: 88
-
-
- Late December snow turned to slush in Paris. The
- streets were slushy, the sidewalks were slushy, and the chic
- Parisienne sidewalk cafes and coffee-houses were slushy.
- The tomb of Jim Morrison was not slushy, because the
- Cult of Morrison had cleaned it off.
- They were there that day, the day after Christmas, the
- same as any other day. There were only ten of them, uncertain
- of who they were or what they wanted in life, save that Jim
- Morrison fit into it somewhere. Some were Americans, some were
- Swedes, some Brits, some Aussies, most of them French. They
- weren't sure who was of what nationality, themselves included.
- It didn't matter. They rarely spoke anyway, even to each other.
- They just sat at His tomb, waiting for something. In the summer,
- they were an army. In the dead of winter, they were nothing more
- than a rag-tag handful, as if the melting snow turned into members
- of the cult.
- Farther back in the cemetery, two women were walking
- towards the tomb. The casual observer would have thought they
- were related, as they were- mother and daughter. Both were
- exceptionally tall- the mother almost six feet, the daughter
- perhaps three inches shorter. They were talking, English with
- an American accent. The mother had a camera, the daughter did
- not. The daughter was speaking.
- "Mother, I appreciate your coming with me, but did you
- have to bring that camera? We'll look like tourists."
- "Dear, we _are_ tourists. Or do you fancy yourself a
- pilgrim?" asked her mother.
- The daughter thought about that seriously. "No," she
- finally spoke, "more of a surrogate pilgrim. I'd like to see
- this for myself, but mostly so I can describe this to Dave when
- we get back to the U.S."
- The mother laughed briefly, and asked "Then why don't
- you have a camera?"
- "I don't have a camera because that isn't how you're
- supposed to do this. Even I know that."
- "But I thought you weren't a big Doors fan."
- "I'm not, but Dave is. Besides, the batteries for my
- camera are dead."
- They both had a bit of a laugh at that, as they reached
- the tomb. The daughter climbed onto a neighboring tombstone,
- and watched Morrison's grave intently, as if expecting it to
- move. Since this was acceptable behavior, the Cult of Morrison
- left her alone.
- The mother stood to one side, and watched. The grave
- did not hold the same interest for her as it seemed to for her
- daughter or the other scruffy types encamped around the grave.
- The other people did.
- She was an inveterate people-watcher, and found the Cult
- of Morrison (as she did not know they were called) fascinating,
- combining the mannerisms of monks and junkies, which she guessed-
- accurately- they were. At first she was content to watch, but the
- impulse to record on film the people (she found the tomb rather
- dull) became overpowering. She readied her camera, then held it
- at her side, and took a number of surreptitious photos, without
- aiming.
- She'd gotten off almost the entire roll before one of the
- Cult of Morrison saw her. He drew himself to his feet, looked for
- his voice, found it, and spoke a few words in French.
- The mother looked at him blankly.
- The man- more a boy, really, younger than her daughter-
- then spoke a few words in English.
- "They will all be blank."
- "Wh-what?"
- "They will all be blank."
- The mother stared.
- "They will all be blank."
- Slowly, the gazes of the collected Cult of Morrison turned
- towards the mother, silently. She noticed her daughter among them.
- She met their collected gaze for a brief moment, then quailed, and
- turned to go.
- "Let's go now, shall we?" she called over her shoulder to
- her daughter. Her daughter shook her head, as if coming out of
- a trance, then got off the tombstone she'd been sitting on. She
- flashed a sheepish grin at the Cult of Morrison, and ran after her
- mother.
- A week later, the mother was arguing with a Customer
- Service Representative for the pharmacy.
- "I tell you, ma'am," asserted the nervous young man, "we
- did not ruin those pictures. If we had exposed them to light,
- they'd have been black. They're clear, and it's not possible to
- develop exposed film, no matter what mistakes you make, and get
- clear negatives. I'm afraid you must have brought us a roll of
- blank film."
-
-
- ---
- David Vacca, Just an Excitable Boy.
-