Ode to the Double-Crossed Lackey in ‘Thunderball,’ by Tara Laskowski
September 11th, 2009
5 Comments
They really did you in Mr. Angelo, didn’t they, just when you thought it was going to be ok and the quarter of a million dollars they offered to transfer to you via a square white briefcase would be your ticket out of here, new face or old. And the rotten part is that no one will ever recognize you for who you are, outside or in, or that you did it all for Lorraine, who thinks you’re still abroad somewhere doing secret work for the government.
You went for it all, two excruciating years of extensive pilot training, voice lessons, film clip analysis, multiple, painful plastic surgery operations. They stuck needles in your cheeks and piled ice packs on your swollen neck until it grew numb and hard and blue. You became him, some Bond girl’s brother, all for the elaborate ruse hatched by some guy you never even met — a guy with a cat, for God’s sakes. You always hated cats. They made your hands itch and your throat close up. No amount of plastic surgery can change that.
You flew the plane and stole the atomic bombs like they asked you, and landed that plane gorgeously on the water right next to their luxury cruise liner—so precisely your own sister would be proud if she knew. You remembered as kids flying remote control planes, watching them dot the sky like birds, double crossing each other’s paths again and again. As you unlocked the plane’s wheels and thumped them on the ocean floor, you thought of your sister’s laugh and it made you sad.
If it makes you feel better, days after the henchmen sabotaged your seatbelt, cut your oxygen mask and left you at the bottom of the ocean to drown, they, too, died in painful ways—spears through the heart, torn apart by sharks. This is the price you pay working for evil.
It’s a shame. All that work for that ungraceful, undignified end. You’ve read the O’Henry tales of irony and might’ve even heard stories of the British government releasing Nazis back to Germany with lies on their tongues. We’ve glorified the villains and incorporated them into our language and lore — Benedict Arnold, Judas, Tokyo Rose. But for you, nothing. No term or song, no grand explanation or chance to escape. Just a stillness after the panic ceases, a gentle rocking on the bottom of the ocean, and those dreams, the flickering film strips of what might’ve been.
Tara Laskowski is the 2009 Kathy Fish Fellow at SmokeLong Quarterly. Her fiction and nonfiction are forthcoming or have appeared in numerous journals including Pindledyboz, The Rambler and So To Speak. Tara lives and works in a suburb of Washington, D.C. She and her husband are slowly making their way through all the James Bond films in order of their release dates.























[...] “Ode to the Double-Crossed Lackey in Thunderball“ (in Barrelhouse, Sept. 11) [...]
great job, tara! this was really funny. and, to tara’s hubby, it’s all good. i’d be braggin’ too.
Wow you have said it all. Excellent job. Love to read your issues…
You make Bond–or rather, his villains–sound interesting. Would that the movies themselves had as much appeal to me as you little summary. I think I’d read 678 of these summaries–or however many Bond villains there are by now–if you provided.
[...] of 1000 words or fewer that can be read during your lunch hour, on transit, or even over breakfast.Ode to the Double-Crossed Lackey in Thunderball,’ by Tara …They really did you in Mr. Angelo, didn’t they, just when you thought it was going to be ok and the [...]
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