“Not Afraid
Of Man Nor Beast”-The Continuing Saga Of Sand-Bagger Johnson-Part Five
“Just like
my people before me I fear neither man nor beast when the deal goes down.
Certainly I fear nobody on any of humankind’s golf courses, even that one we
played yesterday, Tranquillo, or whatever the damn place was called,” blurred
out Sand-Bagger Johnson to the fellow members of his foursome, Earl The Pearl,
Roger The Dodger, and Jerry Jeff, as they say around drinking their drinks
waiting on a table at La Mesa, one of a never-ending chain of steak houses in
the never-ending strip malls that dot the Orlando landscape (some of a more
genteel nature say mar the landscape but those fools adhere to some quaint
Harvard Square, Rockport notion of the world so should be immediately discounted
out of hand).
Sand-Bagger,
maybe into his third, no, fourth glass of chardonnay (the wait at these never-ending
chain of steak houses is also never-ending) was recapping the previous day’s
adventures at the that Tranquillo course when he was challenged by Earl The Pearl
to put up or shut up about his manly virtues in light of what he had just told
the group about what had happened to him on the way to the seventeenth hole, a
hole adjacent to the street and to some swamp refuge land -a hole which they
all found out later was called Alligator Run. Needless to say as an early riser,
a guy who liked to run early before the sun hit the skyline he had decided that
he would take to the streets near and in the golf course they would play later
that day.
As he jogged
his painful miles (jog, not run, for the “purists” who only call somebody running
who is like some Kenyan madman whirling dervish as “running”, you know those guys
who sit around bragging about how they are going to beat up the course like a
gong when they run a sleek half-marathon), flashing his little light before him
to guide the way he finally got in to a pace where he stopped thinking about
his knee, shoulder, ankle, hip and assorted other pains and ailments and got
lost in the beauty of the run (okay, okay jog). When he ran down the dirt road along
the outer edge of the seventeenth hole he noticed a bunch of what looked like logs
near the large pond just after the teeing-out areas and decided to get a closer
look-Jesus Christ the damn logs started to move in his direction as he suddenly
realized that these were the well-known alligators who populate half the golf courses
in the state of Florida. That recognition caused Sand-Bagger to pick up his pace
a bit-he was able to slice a tenth of a second off Michael Boit’s world record for
the 100 meters. And live to tell the tale.
Later in
thinking about the matter, before being rudely challenged by the Pearl, he
attributed his safe passage to the manly virtues inculcated in him since
childhood, maybe some genetic disposition from generations gone by. “Yeah, old
Sand-Bagger could say with no smirk on his face that he feared neither man nor
beast on or off the links.
Oh yeah,
summary for Casey-a sparkling 99 on a tough Tranquillo course and a pair of-two-two-
and two victories against Jerry Jeff and Roger the Dodger. These guys never
heard of five dollar bets like such a sum would only be proposed by some kind of
golf hustler. The Pearl proved to be a bit faint-hearted claiming that he did
not take to the idea of “paying” for his fellows golf excursions. He was taken
for three bucks in the dangerous category of putting. Sand-Bagger did just then
wish for the manly company of Lucky Pierre, Casey and Zow who knew how to put their
monies where their mouths were. Selah.
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