Grey
Squirrel
David Holub
I’d always hated
my voice.
I’d heard it on
video recordings and outgoing messages and felt nothing but
embarrassment. I sound as if I struggled to control the pitch
or tone or cadence of my delivery.
My voice was also a bit
high for my liking. As a boy I hoped for a deep voice as an
adult. When I turned 27 and still lacked the deep voice I
was after, I began to take action. I once spoke with an English
accent for seven months. I felt the British as a people sounded
quite respectable if not downright elegant, even with high
voices.
I listened to a voice tape, which promised to lower my voice
two keys in three months by listening just 10 minutes a day.
I hired a voice trainer but fired him in the second month
after he showed up in a cowboy costume trying to hide a stutter.
With nowhere left to turn, I went as far as considering surgery
to permanently alter my voice.
It was a TV news exposé that made me rethink. The show
featured a doctor, who, after performing numerous voice alterations,
was speaking out against ethics violations within the field.
However, due to controversy surrounding his appearance on
the show, the doctor requested his voice be distorted to protect
his identity. But already having had voice-altering surgery
himself, to make his voice any lower would have made it inaudible,
thus the show was forced to make his voice higher. When the
alteration was done, the doctor sounded quite normal and was
later blackballed for the appearance by colleagues who knew
him before his voice alteration.
Visualizing similar dangers,
I reconsidered, ultimately deciding to live with the voice
I had. I said I was proud of it, but who was I fooling?
• •
The call came at 6:46.
It was a deep voice. It was an altered, identity-concealing
voice, I was sure. I took a quick liking to the speaker —
his voice’s slurred baritone qualities.
Hearing the fellow’s distorted voice on the phone put
the idea of permanent surgery back into my head. But my attention
quickly turned from fascination with his voice to fascination
with his reason for calling.
Identifying himself as
Grey Squirrel, he claimed that he was holding my concrete
lawn donkey against its will at an undisclosed location. To
get it back, I would have to meet a ransom of $55.
I was told to wait for
another call for further instruction. And in the meantime,
instructed the distorted voice, I was not to do anything irrational.
“Or what?”
I asked, my pitch soaring too high on the word “what.”
“You don’t
want to know,” he replied coldly.
Given Grey Squirrel’s
vagueness, I was left to ponder how one would threaten and
torture a cement lawn donkey.
I squirmed over the thought
of masked men threatening it with hammers and chisels or intimidation
using concrete figures shaped as coyotes or mountain lions,
both natural predators of the donkey.
I sensed there was more to Grey Squirrel than a man who kidnaps
concrete lawn figures for ransom. Yet, it was a clever scheme,
I had to admit, just intriguing enough for me to go along.
•
•
I could tell by his tone
that Grey Squirrel wanted to move fast on the exchange and
got a call the next day (although he called while I was out
juggling in the front yard. I had a message waiting on my
machine when I got back in the house).
Grey Squirrel’s
instructions were to meet him on the swings at Chan Ho Park
at 1 p.m. the following day. I was to identify myself with
the password “Honky Tonk.” As far as the money,
he wanted it in nickels and placed in a sealable freezer bag
wrapped tightly in newspaper.
“And
one more thing,” he said, his low voice dragging and
slurring, “nothing funny. I’ll have my people
scattered throughout the park incognito. Believe me, they’ve
all been trained in ...”
The machine had cut him
off, mid-threat.
“Trained in what?”
I thought. “Management applications? CPR?” The
possibilities were endless.
• •
Chan Ho Park was perched
at the top of a mound encircled by a protective army of bushes
and massive Styrofoam sculptures shaped to resemble members
of the brass family. I walked between a euphonium juniper
and a French horn cypress, which began my trek up the hill
where more bushes and sculptures were interspersed.
Thinking back on it, I should have paid more attention to
my surroundings. At the time I thought my eyes were playing
tricks on me. I caught a man dressed in a rabbit suit peering
from behind a cornet. I turned and looked at him and his head
darted back behind the sculpture. The same scenario happened
with a chipmunk behind a sousaphone bush and a marmot peeking
from a row of trombones.
With the playground in site, I identified two figures sitting
on the swings. One was dressed in a gray squirrel suit, the
other, a nicely groomed man wearing tan office apparel, eating
from a bag of mixed nuts. I assumed the man was taking an
early lunch break. Walking past him, I approached the squirrel.
“You
must be Grey Squirrel” I said.
“Wha-?”
he replied.
“Honky
tonk,” I countered.
With that, the squirrel darted up and sprinted off. Before
I could shout and give chase, the man in the tan suit spoke
up.
“I
believe you’re looking for me.”
It was the voice, deeper than it had sounded on the phone.
“I
believe you’re looking for me,” I monotoned. I
then slapped the palm of my hand to my forehead as I had meant
to say, “I believe you’re looking for me.”
Regardless, I didn’t think he noticed.
“Do
you have the money?” he said.
I slightly lifted the paper bag I was carrying.
“Do
you have my donkey?” I asked.
He lifted his newspaper off the ground, revealing the donkey.
Catching me off guard,
he snatched the nickels from my hand. He stared blankly as
he calculated the package’s weight in his head.
“Actually, there’s
more,” he said. “It’s not your money I want,
or your donkey. What I want is your voice.”
“My voice,”
I responded, the inflection on “my” instead of
the intended “voice.” “Who would want my
voice?”
“Ah,
your voice.” he said. “The cadence of your delivery
is one-of-a-kind. Your inflections and nuances beam with perspective
and insight. Your voice plays by its own rules, yes? It operates
by its own set of ...”
Grey Squirrel cut himself
off, distracted by the honk of a bullhorn and commotion behind
me.
I swung around only to
see a man in a hamster suit dive into the bell of a sousaphone
water sculpture that was stationed in a wading pool.
When I turned back around, Grey Squirrel had bolted. Although
admiring Grey Squirrel’s gracefulness — considering
his suit, the bag of nickels in one hand and the concrete
donkey under his opposite arm — I saw no other option
but to pursue.
Despite his head start,
his coat tails and impeccably shiny loafers slowed him down.
Running alongside playground equipment, Grey Squirrel darted
between a rainbow-shaped jungle gym and a teeter-totter. Identifying
the moment as my best to catch him, I dove and swiped at his
foot. The hit knocked his right foot behind his left which
sent him tumbling to the ground. I heard a thud, catching
a glimpse of his head smacking the base of the jungle gym.
Expecting blood, I jumped to my feet and saw something more
intriguing. Lying three feet from Grey Squirrel’s body
was Grey Squirrel’s head. With further inspection, I
learned that the head was actually a mask and Grey Squirrel
really was a gray squirrel — a giant of a rodent —
wearing a human costume.
As the squirrel slipped in and out of consciousness he tried
to formulate words.
It wasn’t supposed
to be like this, he explained. He was prepared to make a generous
offer for the rights to my voice. Something had gone wrong.
He had received a signal from one of his men that told him
to abort the meeting abruptly, forcing him to panic and run.
As a host of rodent suits
came to the aid of Grey Squirrel, I grabbed the donkey, left
the sack of nickels, and sprinted out of the park. I glanced
over my shoulder every 12 paces for one of the minions but
none had followed.
•
•
Back
at home I hadn’t displayed the lawn donkey for three
hours before a neighbor claimed ownership and questioned where
I had gotten it from. I knew she was mistaken but I casually
offered her the donkey, finally speaking with confidence.
David
Holub has been publishing absurd, humorous, surreal and off-the-center
short stories since 2002 with work appearing in more than
a dozen print and web publications. He is a newspaper designer
at The Miami Herald and lives in Miami, Florida,
with his wife and two pups.