my mother, the CIA agent, the Filipino forger, and the meaning of Christmas presents

I’m kind of disappointed my blogging diploma isn’t from Miskatonic, but that’s nothing a little hacking won’t fix.

The University of Blogging
Presents to

raincoaster


An Honorary

Bachelor of
Self Portraiture

Majoring in
Cutting

Signed
Dr. GoQuiz.com
®

 

Blogging Degree
From Go-Quiz.com

And this reminds me, it does, of the time my mother wanted to buy me a Doctorate from Harvard.

She was living in Saudi Arabia, as one does, shacked up with a CIA agent whose job it was to teach battlefield communications to the Saudis. As one does.

Islam was the bane of his existence, as five times a day no matter what they’d all pull out their rugs and face mecca and present a nice, juicy target to the Israelis. No indeed, this did not take him to his happy place, for yea, he was a very conscientious battlefield communications instructor. Over and over he lectured them, over and over he proved that the Israelis could wipe them all out at any of those five, widely known and unvarying times of day. And over and over they happily replied “if the Israelis kill us we will go straight to Paradise as martyrs,” and I believe one of them even made a reference to that bugger, I can’t kill him when he’s praying scene in Hamlet, obviously stretching to try to find some common ground with Jerry the Baptist, out in the wild Arabian desert.

As a sideline, Jerry ran the local casino and house of ill repute, which brought in several times his salary, and which he was allowed to keep because what his bosses were truly interested in was the blackmail material gathered by the tiny cameras placed strategically around the premises. He also had the local distribution rights for Johnny Walker, which was as the mines of King Solomon in terms of putting out the gelt.

Where was I? Oh yes, about to get to the religious police.

Naturally, Jerry was quite conscious of the activities of the religious police. The main trouble with the religious police was, as you can imagine, that they tended to be quite…well, there’s really no way around this, I’m just going to have to come out and say it… quite religious.

And the whole living-in-sin-with-a-Canadian-and-a-socialist-at-that thing was exactly the sort of thing with which they were Not Cool.

At. All.

Now, Jerry and my mother were by no means originals in their living arrangements, which did tend to give a rather louche reputation to even the primmest Mormon that the Yanks sent over, and so, as always happens where there are problems and lots of money around, a man materialized with a solution.

He materialized at the same time every year, swinging through the Middle East like an olden days tinker would swing through, say, Simcoe County, offering his wares.

He was a Filipino forger, and he was a very busy man.

They took one of the American marriage licenses for $250, which is really cheap for a piece of paper that you show the religious police and they don’t have you stoned, when you think about it, really, and my mother pondered long over the very tempting Harvard Doctorate, but decided that even she was not overpaid enough to spend $500 and besides, what would she get my sister, eh? Answer me that!

That year she got a camel saddle and I got a silver veil. Gee, I guess Mom DID love me best, even if she thought I was ugly.

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12 thoughts on “my mother, the CIA agent, the Filipino forger, and the meaning of Christmas presents

  1. timethief says:

    Mine was sooo very right on that I’m posting it.
    The University of BloggingPresents totimethiefAn HonoraryBachelor ofAttention SeekingMajoring inBad PoetrySignedDr. GoQuiz.com®Username:
    Blogging DegreeFrom Go-Quiz.com

  2. timethief says:

    Crap! It didn’t work
    The University of Blogging
    Presents to
    timethief

    An Honorary
    Bachelor of
    Attention Seeking

    Majoring in
    Bad Poetry

  3. raincoaster says:

    That’s great! Yeah, they incorporate tables which don’t work in comments, and forms, which get stripped out when you post them in the blog. But still, fun eh?

  4. davidbdale says:

    Absolutely fantastic story, raincoaster! Full of incredible details. I’m just gullible to think some of it might be true, enough of a fan of fantastic tales to not care either way! Thanks for an entertaining read.

  5. raincoaster says:

    ALL of it is true. Thanks for the compliments: I was just over at your site enjoying some of your stories. In fact, I was thinking about you as I wrote this, thought of passing it along only it’s merely dreary reality. I’m honored you like it, thanks again!

  6. [...] with a dodgy and not very scroll-like degree along with some highly inelegant HTML coding, raincoaster foisted it on the rest of the blogging [...]

  7. The sheer unlikelihood of the tale adds to its verisimilitude. A similar verisimilitude to the tales told by Lovecraft, who lost his soul far too early.

  8. davidbdale says:

    Reality, maybe, but dreary?! Tell you what, raincoaster, I don’t think I’d have to do much to turn it into a Very Short Novel. My concern is the material’s so rich I might just mess it up.

  9. Actually, it was probably told to Rain at the knew of her Gramma Greene . . . .

  10. raincoaster says:

    Seriously, if you think this tale’s unlikely, you don’t know my mother.

    David, I’d be honoured if you would do that. That would totally rock my world! And I’m way too lazy to try it myself! When you give your baby away to another writer, it’s not yours any more: do what you will with it.

    FFE, if you knew Gramma Greene like half of Dubai knew Gramma Greene…

  11. [...] on the ol’ raincoaster blog…my mother used to live in Riyadh with a CIA agent. Her job was at the King Fahd Hospital (I think every Saudi city has a King Fahd Hospital) in [...]

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