The Spider Lady: Final Episode

The Spider Lady
by Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez
From The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry

     A few months went by and I didn’t hear anything concerning the spider lady.  A little after five in the afternoon one day I got a call at a doctor’s office.  I had never been there before.  I was impressed when I read on the sign that was next to the door of the office that it was a woman doctor who was a naturopathic doctor.

     A very pretty, young, brunette woman who was close to my own age at the reception desk smiled.  She seemed especially friendly and cheerful.  She said she would go get the person who called for the taxi.  She returned and smiling she said, “She’ll be just a minute.”  There were women and children in the waiting room.  Then I saw her in the semi-darkness of the room approaching me.  It was the spider lady.  She was wearing a long, dark print dress.

     I went to open the back door of the taxi for her and she said she wanted to sit in the front so I opened the front passenger door for her.  As we were riding along I thought how strange that we were riding in a car together with daylight all around on a warm, sunny afternoon with a touch of coolness in the air.  She seemed calm, patient, relaxed and humble.  She was gazing off into space.  She sat in her long, dark print dress with her arms resting on her lap.  Her wrists and hands were placed just above her knees, her palms up.  Her fingers were delicately curved as if she was posing in a peaceful, serene and beautiful position.

     Then I saw it!  On both of her wrists were plastic, stick-on bandages.  I kept looking in disbelief while she remained calm and serene.  She was gazing into the distance ahead with slightly lowered eyelids as if in a surreal state of melancholy and peacefulness.  I looked again at the bandages in exactly the places on someone’s wrists where a person would slash with a razor blade to commit suicide. 

     I looked at her face so calm, serene and transcendent.  Except for glints of light that reflected from her eyes as we drove along she seemed motionless and in a state of relaxation.  It seemed as if she had wanted me to see her bandages.  She wanted me to know. 

     When we were on her street and getting close to her house she asked me to stop a few houses away from hers.  She said she wanted to walk the rest of the way.  I offered to get out and open the door for her but she insisted on letting herself out.  She reached for the door handle.  She seemed listless as if drugged.  I patiently pointed to help her find the door handle.

     The afternoon just before sunset was in a golden glow as I watched her walking ahead of me with the skirts of her dark, elegant dress swaying while she walked past the yellow and green lawns of the neighborhood towards her own home.  She walked with sadness and serenity as if introspective.  I never heard anything of the spider lady again.

    I remembered I had told the cab drivers and dispatcher that no such spider that is completely black with a smooth, hard skin of that size exists in this area that I’ve ever heard of.  It was larger than tarantulas which I have seen in Arizona and tarantulas are furry and brown.  Was it just a spider?  Where did those webs come from on the porch that I had just walked through?  What was that smell of death?  Did she practice evil magic and lure men to their death, murdering them in the belief that she could gain power from death like a female spider that seduces males to have sex with her and then devours them?

When I read in a magazine about how a man turned in Jeffrey Dauhmer, the serial killer, to the police because of smelling an unusual smell that made him think of death and then he looked into Jeffrey Dauhmer’s bedroom to see bed sheets covered with caked, dried blood it reminded me of the smell in the spider lady’s house.

     Did I break her magic spell by writing a verse of poetry?   Did she use poetry for evil, magic purposes to cast her spells and did I defeat her unwittingly because of being a poet myself?  Was her seduction spell over me that important to her that when I used her own medium to break her spell she attempted suicide?  Or is the writing and publishing of this story the final breaking of a spell that may have gone beyond the grave?  At this point I know there are people who practice magic, both good and bad. 

Continued from:

https://markalbertoyodernunez.blog/2019/07/24/the-spider-lady-episode-three/

Indie Bookstores Selling The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry (Paperback) By Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez

Type in your zip code to find indie stores near you that are selling The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry

Available online or in store.

eBook on Kalamazoo Public Library: The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry

eBook: The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry
by Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez
Kalamazoo Public Library

In Memory of Bogie and Bacall

In Memory of Bogie and Bacall
From The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry
by Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez
Photograph by author

I walked into the shade and cool of this bar to get some relief from walking the city streets on a hot, weekday afternoon.  The overhead fans were slowly turning.  It was uncrowded, mainly empty, just as I wanted.  I asked the bartender for a cool drink and took the drink to one of the empty tables away from the few people sitting at the bar.  There were lots of empty tables and at the far, other end of the place a dance floor and a stage. 

I was minding my own business, daydreaming and sometimes looking absent mindedly at the doorway where the sunshine sneaked in when suddenly she appeared.  It was her.  “Hello, Joe.  How have you been?”  Dressed in a long, elegant, black dress she was leaning over me where I sat.  We talked.  She said, “I have to sing a song now”.  Mysteriously there were musicians now on the stage.  “Yes, Joe”, she said, “I work here”.  She walked away from me. 

Soon she was onstage, holding the microphone in her hand.  “I’ve got you under my skin.  I’ve got you under my skin”, she sang.  She was looking right into my eyes.  Of all the songs she could have sung she had to sing that one.  I felt angry and gripped my glass. 

     I was feeling forlorn, lost in thought when she was in front of me again leaning towards me over the table.  “I’m leaving, Joe.  I’m leaving town.  This is my last day here.  Goodbye, Joe”.  She disappeared through a door in the back.  I tried to memorize every movement of hers as she walked away and disappeared so I would always remember.  She was gone. 

     I walked out of the coolness and twilight of the bar into the hot, afternoon sunlight.  I walked with my head down staring at the sidewalk in front of me.  When I looked up I was on streets that I did not recognize just as I had been when I walked into the bar.  I was hopelessly lost but I didn’t care.  I wandered aimlessly. 

     Why did it always have to be this way?  Every time I find her again and there’s hope, she’s telling me goodbye.  She makes me feel I will never see her again but this time there is no hope.  I felt as if my heart had been torn to pieces and was being held together with pins and needles.  It’s like an itch that I can’t scratch. 

The Talisman: Part one by Mark Alberto Yoder Nuñez

The Talisman
Photograph by Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez

It was a sunny day but with a chill from the ocean when I was on a pier looking at the ships and gazing out to sea.  Lost as I was in thought I turned and started walking with no purpose back along the wharf to the narrow ways along the waterfront.  Between the same, old buildings, wandering, eventually my feet led me, as I was between memories and fantasies, to the realization that I wasn’t sure exactly where I was.  I turned a corner down a narrow lane and a few shops down to my left I saw the curio shop.  I was drawn to the front window and looked inside at all the curious items from exotic places, the teak wood boxes and jade figurines. 

     I looked at the door and started towards it.  I opened the door and walked in.  I looked to the left and right consciously aware that an elegant, oriental woman beautifully dressed in dark, oriental clothing with dark hair stood behind the counter.  She was gazing at me with slightly lowered eyelids and with a small but curious smile on her face.  As I took a few steps within and continued to look about I was drawn more toward her than to all the ivory, beads and exotic décor I was seeing.  I started to walk toward her.  She seemed so serene, calm and wise.  There was a light in her dark eyes and she had a knowing smile.  She was very beautiful. 

     We spoke for quite a long time about many things but I cannot remember what was spoken.  My eyes fell upon the talisman beneath the glass counter top.  I asked her about it.  She reached under the glass counter top and gently grasped it.  She paused a moment and then gracefully pulled it out from its resting place.  Soon she was displaying it in her two hands in front of me. 

When I took the talisman in my own hands with her soft hands brushing against mine I felt the smoothness of it.  There was something about the craftsmanship of it and character and the feeling of it in my hands made me feel an attachment to it, a connection to the worlds within and without myself.  There was something about the perfect balance of it. 

I purchased the talisman, said goodbye to the oriental lady and smiled as I turned to leave.  She smiled back mysteriously.  I wasn’t sure why I had purchased the talisman that felt so smooth and good in my hands.  I admired its craftsmanship.  It had fallen into evening and began to grow dark as I wandered aimlessly.  Somehow my weary body made its way to the tenement building I stayed in.  I made my way up the outside stairs to my room. 

     That night I fell into a deep sleep and had many vivid and curious dreams.  I was in exotic places with strange and unusual birds and plants.  I was with foreign people who spoke very little but said strange and mysterious things. 

     I felt I was lost in a foreign country I had never heard of and would not be able to find my way back when I suddenly awoke.  I could tell by the light in the room that it was already late in the morning.  The talisman was still there on the table next to my bed.  I took it in my hands and walked to the window.  I opened the curtains and opened the window to smell the fresh, sea air.  I looked out beyond the harbor at the open sea. 

Continued on: https://markalbertoyodernunez.blog/2019/11/27/the-talisman-part-two-by-mark-alberto-yoder-nunez/

  スパイダーレディは、非常に奇妙な年上の女性に出会う若いタクシー運転手に関するものです。それは暗い回顧録です。マッカーサーストリートは、60年代にツーソンで育った少年と、善と悪との闘いに関するものです。

The Spider Lady se refiere a un joven taxista que conoce a una mujer muy extraña y mayor. Es una memoria oscura. $475.63 Nuevo y Envío GRATIS a Ciudad de México premium-libros-mexico

Enlightenment

Poem from The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry

Enlightenment
from The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry
by Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez

Enlightenment

I’ve started on a path

A path of knowledge and enlightenment

Having no idea where it will lead

Only knowing that it will never end

But only open doors with more to open

One never reaches a plateau

Where everything is easy

And one has all the answers

And everything goes smoothly

The only goal is more knowledge, more awareness

More consciousness, more Living

The path of knowledge and enlightenment

Is a door that opens on more doors to be opened

There is no knowing where it will lead Only that it will never end

تتعلق سيدة العنكبوت بسائق سيارة أجرة شاب يقابل امرأة أكبر سناً غريبة. إنها مذكرات مظلمة. يهتم شارع ماك آرثر بصبي نشأ في توكسون في الستينيات وصراعه مع الخير والشر. إنها أيضًا مذكرات. الكثير من القصص الخيالية والخيالية. والكثير من الشعر. إلهام جيد لمن يحبون القراءة ويطمحون إلى الكتابة. جيد للشباب والكبار. الأمثال الأصلية والفكاهة.
The Spider Lady se refiere a un joven taxista que conoce a una mujer muy extraña y mayor. Es una memoria oscura. McArthur Street se refiere a un niño que creció en Tucson en los años sesenta y sus luchas con el bien y el mal. Es, también, una memoria. Muchas historias de no ficción y ficción. Y mucha poesía. Buena inspiración para los amantes de la lectura y que aspiran a escribir. Bueno para adultos jóvenes y adultos. Proverbios originales y humor.

mcarthur street: episode two

McArthur Street
Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez

Continued from: https://markalbertoyodernunez.blog/2016/06/06/mcarthur-street-creative-non-fiction-episode-one/

Eventually my brother and I got over the ordeal once the game was done.  Jimmy and John returned to seeming nice again.  To my brother and me at the time it didn’t matter anymore.  We’d made a new friend and got to visit his apple orchard and nice house.  We’d played a game and lost but in the end we were happy.  We’d had fun and it was a good day to us.  I never returned to John’s house but Jimmy and John became the best friends of my brother, Daniel.  My brother and Jimmy returned to John’s house often.  My brother eventually became known for dominating when playing board games.  He read the rules thoroughly before playing any new game and my brothers and sisters and visiting children in our own home were proud of him for his abilities.  I thought of him as the king of playing Monopoly.  He played fairly though.  We had fun trying to beat him.

Once I was standing with Jimmy in his front yard, talking to him.  His little brother, Donnie, ran up to him and started talking to him.  Jimmy started hitting him over the head with a rolled up newspaper.  I watched the expression on Jimmy’s face.  He seemed angry and vicious in the way he looked at his little brother.  Poor Donnie ran away crying.  He ran off with his little brother, Ronnie.  I must admit I did not know what to think.

One Saturday I went with my brother, Jimmy, Jimmy’s mother and Jimmy’s younger brothers to the Tucson public library.  We went into the children’s section to look for books to check out.  I found two books I wanted to read as I usually would at the library.  When Jimmy saw I had two books he asked, “You’re only going to check out two books?”  I noticed then that Jimmy had a big stack of books to check out.  I told him I would only be able to read two books in two weeks otherwise I would have to renew books to be able to finish them.  He took me over to the book shelves and started pulling out books for me to read and stacking them on top of the two books I was holding.  I protested but he would not stop.  I finally got him to stop it when I was holding a stack of seven books.  I was mortified.  Jimmy’s mom seemed to think this was normal.  I only read the two books that I had originally wanted to check out and returned the rest of the books unread.  My brother, Jimmy and Jimmy’s mother would ask me if I wanted to go to the library with them.  They just couldn’t understand why I didn’t want to go to the library with them.

The family with the pretty, teenage girl who lived across the street from Jimmy had moved out.  The house wasn’t vacant for long before a new family moved in.  When we came to visit with Jimmy again he pointed to the house across the street which had a medium high, chain link fence around the front yard and told us to watch out for the boy who lived there because he cussed a lot and was very ba-a-d.  Being from Catholic school my brother and I were sensitive to the fact that some public school kids could be very bad.

To be continued.

The Spider Lady concerne un jeune chauffeur de taxi qui rencontre une femme très étrange et plus âgée. C’est un mémoire sombre.

La Spider Lady riguarda un giovane tassista che incontra una donna molto strana e anziana. È un memoir oscuro.

Sammlung von Gedichten und Kurzgeschichten mit Aphorismen und Humor. Illustrationen und Fotografien des Autors. Zu den Sachbüchern gehören Memoiren und das Schreiben von Träumen. Fiktive Geschichten sind, wie der Autor seine Gefühle ausdrückt, indem er Geschichten in seinem Kopf erfindet. Die Schrift spiegelt den amerikanischen Südwesten des Autors wider. Inspirierend für alle Altersgruppen.

La Dama Araña se refiere a un joven taxista que conoce a una mujer muy extraña y mayor. Es una memoria oscura.

Aphorisms on active rain.com including a quote from the spider lady

“-Truly, freeing oneself in one’s own mind is only the first step on a path of freedom.-” 
― Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez, The Spider Lady and Other Short Stories and Poetry

For sale at these fine bookstores:

Denna samling noveller, dikter, aforismer och humor av Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez är tänkt att vara underhållande och inspirerande för alla som älskar god läsning.

Mark Alberto Yoder Nunez의 단편 소설,시, 경구, 유머의 모음집은 좋은 독서를 좋아하는 사람들에게 즐거움과 고무감을주기위한 것입니다.

Spindeldamen handlar om en ung taxichaufför som möter en mycket konstig äldre kvinna. Det är en mörk memoar. McArthur Street berör en pojke som växte upp i Tucson på sextiotalet och hans kämpar med gott och ont.

スパイダーレディは、非常に奇妙な年上の女性に出会う若いタクシー運転手に関するものです。それは暗い回顧録です。マッカーサーストリートは、60年代にツーソンで育った少年と、善と悪との闘いに関するものです。