My entry in the 2023 Author's Hangout Challenge -- 'Karaoke Story Event'. Nothing to do with actually murdering a song in a bar, but writing a story that resonates with a particular song title.
The story is also part of my 'Cottage Industry' series about a group of New England women setting up a porn collective. See the Series page for details. All stories in the canon can be read standalone.
Prologue
I really shouldn't have been watching what I was watching in an airport departure lounge. Given the content, I just couldn't resist.
Besides, it was six in the morning and there were only a handful of us waiting for a company charter flight from Boston to Bar Harbor.
I only intended to watch a few seconds, but inevitably got caught up in it. I was so engrossed, I never even realised Mac was in front of me until he spoke.
"Whaddya watchin' O'Hara?"
I acted quickly at the sound of the stentorian baritone of Mac Bernstein, the man with the loudest voice in the Western Hemisphere. Most people called him an asshole but being from England via Irish descent, to me he was an arsehole.
Either way you cut it; the epithet fit.
I looked up wearily. Given the early hour it had already been a long morning. "Oh, nothing Mac. Just waiting for the call to arms."
"Yeah, like I believe that. Way you shut the lid of that laptop and the look on your face, reckon you're havin' a sneaky peek at sumpin' maybe you shouldn't."
"I'm a grown man, Mac. Unlike some I could mention."
"Yeah, and maybe just a little desperate since the divorce came through?"
I resisted the urge to punch his fat face or place a kick to the groin. It was never advisable to argue with Mac as he just kept on getting louder of voice and redder of face until most eardrums in the room were at bursting point. The inevitable shower of spittle was also to be factored in. Not wishing to draw any unnecessary attention, I relented and lifted the lid of the laptop a little.
Mac's pudgy face came closer and he adjusted his glasses. He saw the image that had frozen onscreen when I hit the pause key.
He drew in breath. "Sheeyit, what a pair of babes. Blue-haired kid's a bit freaky-deaky but also kinda cute. But that MILF? Don't get me started on that prime piece of hot ass! What was that old song? 'Some Guys Have All the Luck.' Shit, Steve -- they sure do. I mean, guys like us don't get that lucky, do we?"
"Guess we don't, Mac."
"Imagine that sweet l'il thing twerkin' on yer pecker and the older lady grindin' herself down on yer face like that. Two red-hot pussies - some lucky guy is having a helluva good time."
To my unbridled relief we were requested to board the aircraft. I looked out onto the apron thinking it looked more like an oversized drone than an aircraft. I didn't like flying at the best of times and this was not the best of times. I killed the file, shut the laptop and put it in my tote bag.
Mac turned towards the gate. "Yeah, that kinda shit's for the lucky guys, Steve. They get to fuck 'em, we get to watch 'em. As I said, some guys have all the luck. That guy is one lucky dude. One lucky muh-fuckin' dude."
When he turned back, his smile was almost stomach-churning. "Just send the link and your dirty l'il secret is safe with good ol' Mac, capiche?"
I followed on behind and smiled at his retreating back.
Maybe guys like you don't have that sort of luck, Mac.
But some guys do.
And when you watch that video, you'll never know that the guy having all the luck is one Steven Cormac O'Hara.
One
Smugglers Cove seemed like a nice little place to lay low for six weeks. I hadn't done much research - just picked the first place that looked good within half a day of Boston and went with it. A place to hunker down and come to terms with what had been falling apart for three years but had finally collapsed in a smouldering heap of debris a few weeks earlier.
Nineteen years of love, hope and despair gone in an eyeblink.
I needed to get away and did so at the earliest opportunity. My boss was good and she gave me time off. I wasn't looking for anything other than a chance to get myself into a new headspace and come to terms with being single again aged forty-two.
I arrived in the early afternoon and didn't bother to unload the car. There was plenty of time for that. I collected the key from a numbered lockbox on a post by the door and headed straight to a well-renowned brewpub on the harbour called The Dockyard. I had tried their beers occasionally in Boston and liked them, so it was my first port of call.
The walk along the river was pretty and the town small, but characterful. Built around the point where the river estuary meets the sea, it was all old-fashioned boardwalks, clapperboards and fresh air.