Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Thanks, Kenny


            “Step right up, and see the shoes!” the street vendor with a shit-eating mustache yelled enthusiastically at the passers by.  “The shoes, ladies and gentlemen, that will turn you into a money making machine! I guarantee it, come ask me why, don’t be shy now.”  His vest and slacks were such an intense yellow that it brought to my mind the most obnoxious twinkie I’ve ever seen.  That was the point, I guess, it definitely grabbed my attention.  I had walked by this guy every other day for the past three and a half months, and not once had I paid him any mind. 
            That day had a unique feel to it, though.  There was just the right combination of bored with life’s shit, an adventurous feeling, and optimism to make it the right day to go up and see what the hell this obnoxious twinkie was talking about.  Rather than stubbornly avoid eye contact and walk right by him, as I had every other time I’d seen him, I walked up to that vendor, shook his hand, and asked him to tell me more.  I thought I would have to feign interest, but to my surprise, it came up naturally.  I found myself incredibly curious about the shoes this man had been trying to sell to the world for months, and I guess he picked up on that.  His response had much more enthusiasm in it than what I would have expected.
            “Thank you, sir! Thank you, thank you!  You won’t regret this foray into the novelties of our world! In fact, I can say with no shade of uncertainty that you will always remember this day as the day that your life finally turned around from the dull, useless life that you used to lead. And how pathetic it was, as you very well know.”  The man’s face and arms were getting more and more animated as he spoke. I didn’t think he could have gotten any more animated than he was before I had talked to him, but he proved me wrong within half a minute.  It was almost disturbing how much this man moved.  He seemed to vibrate in place from sheer excitement. I asked him to go on.
            “Absolutely, absolutely! Now, what we have for you today is our lovely, yet highly controversial, Jew Shoes.  I’m sure you know that Jews are hated throughout the world, but do you know why? It is because the rest of the world is jealous of the astounding success of the Jews!  For centuries, Jews have been more successful in life than almost any other group of people, and their success can be attributed in part to the shoes they wear.  The shoes I bring you today are the same Jew Shoes that they wore when Israel was created by America, and that was a great day for Judaism around the world!  Buy these shoes, and you will be successful, I guarantee it!  Your friends will hate you, your neighbors will most assuredly try to kill you, but you will rise above them all, and become the object of finger pointing for numerous global conspiracies because of the massive amount of wealth and influence you will accumulate in a conspicuously short amount of time and effort!  The secrets of how to get anywhere in the world are known only to Jews, as their Torah contains knowledge of the inner workings of the universe –on a quantum level, no less- that only they can read or understand because they are the only ones that dare to wear these shoes! The only step left is for you to seize this glorious opportunity, unlike the rest of these poor, ignorant peasants you see walking by us.”
            I nodded, and thought to myself for a minute.  That was a lot for one person to say without any prompting. Had he memorized that entire monologue? Had he even stopped once for breathe?  I couldn’t remember him breathing in at all during that whole pitch.  He claimed to know about the universe, yet I had a trick that I thought he wouldn’t know.  If shoes were equivalent to power, Mr. Bill Gates would own a shoe company.  Since he didn’t, I could easily deduce that this man was spewing a fountain of gilded bullshit.  Time to show him my knowledge of the inner workings of the universe, then. 
            “Ok, I’m in.  I don’t have any money on me at the moment, though. Mind if I drop by the store across the street, so that I may get some method of compensation for you and your time?” I asked him, hoping he’d take the bait.  What salesman could resist the chance of a sale, anyway?
            “Oh, that’s quite alright. I’ll sit here, you know where I’ll be. Just be sure to come back, or you’ll miss out on the best enhancement of your life!” He said, flourishing a shoe box at my face.
            With a poorly suppressed smirk, I turned away and walked over to the Wal-Mart on the other side of the street.  They were the only store I knew of that sold orange hoodies without any zippers, which surprised me when I found the power those specific hoodies held.  Why hadn’t anyone else tapped this incredible power?  I bought one ($15 is a small price to pay for power no one but Trey Parker understands), and returned to the twinkie-ish vendor.
            “I have money now, but I also want to give you this hoodie as a token of my appreciation for your patience and acumen. Never before have I known anyone to study the universe as well as you, please accept my offer.” I said as I extended the hoodie toward him.
            “Thank you, sir! I’ve never known anyone to offer clothes for shoes, but this is perfectly acceptable!  I treasure the novelty of such an occurrence, thank you!”  He took my money and the hoodie, while I took the bullshit shoes with a smile.  I walked past him for a few seconds, then turned around and watched.  He had donned the hoodie already, who could resist such an eye-catching garment?  As he returned to his daily routine of shouting at passers by to buy his line of shit, a Fedex truck swerved drunkenly across the road, ran up the sidewalk, and crushed him to death.  Seeing my success, I smiled and threw the shoes away in the closest trash can.
            Jew shoes, indeed.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

The Neighbors


            Midgets in camouflage arrived at the house by car that morning.  They wandered in and out of the house for a few hours, with no apparent goal. At one point, Siamese twins came to the house, and brought their Chinese dragon costume into the house. Once the dragon and the Siamese twins were inside, the midgets filed into the house one at a time, and the place was quiet for most of the rest of the day. At around 7:34 p.m., there was a thunderous crash from the house, and everyone ran out of it with hot dogs and rum.  Soon, they had found a grill from God knows where, turned it on, and the smell of burning hot dogs soon permeated the entire neighborhood. 
            When they opened up the rum, things got really crazy.  The little bastards took most of the trash cans on their street, and used them for midget gymnastics and racing down the street in the trash cans themselves.  The cops were called at least once, but they weren’t any help. They just got out of their cars, took some rum, and laughed their ways back into their cars.  One of the Siamese twins found a box of fireworks, and all hell broke loose.  Both of the twins lit and shot Roman candles all over the place, singeing some trash cans and scaring some of the midgets back into the house.  Then, a two of the midgets picked up some fire works and fought back.  One midget got on another one’s back, to get a higher vantage point from which to fire the fire works.  Thankfully, everyone passed out by 2:00 am, and peace was restored to the neighborhood.
            At least, that’s what the neighbors saw. What I saw was the best family reunion I’ve ever been to!

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Brain Baby


            The operating room rang with triumphant laughter, only slightly muffled by a surgical mask. The metal walls, floor, and ceiling lent their metallic feel to the laugh, and made it slightly more mechanical and maniacal, despite the soft femininity the laugh originally had.
            “That should do it.  Wake him up,” Dr. Matilda said, stifling more laughter as she placed the blood-and-puss-covered mass of meat into a jar beside the operating table. The assistant saw that one of the thing’s eyes was still moving. Vomit sprayed across his previously-clean scrubs. The irony of his scrubs needing to be scrubbed eluded him for another day or two afterwards.
            The man on the operating table slowly awakened from his sedated state, rubbing his head over the fresh staples that spanned the back-right side of his cranium.  He felt as though something was missing, and wondered why laughter still haunted the room.
            “So good to see you awake, John,” Dr. Matilda said to the newly-conscious man on the table. “How are you feeling?” Her voice seethed with relentless mirth.
            John groaned and continued to rub the stapled area. “I don’t feel right, to be honest. What the hell happened, anyway?” He looked at Dr. Matilda, confusion filling his eyes. “How did I get here? What was wrong with me?”
            “Oh, it was a simple matter, really. You see that horrible thing in the jar?” She pointed to the mass with the eye that she had removed from his head just minutes before.
            “Oh, God, no! Bertando!” John looked at the jar, hopeless to help poor Bertando. He glared back at Dr. Matilda, “You monster!”
            “See, now, I wouldn’t have had to do that if you had just given me the information I needed to know beforehand,” Dr. Matilda scolded.  “I tried the nice way, but to no avail. You left me no choice. Tell me what I want to know, or your precious Bertando dies!” With a snap of her fingers, her assistant got a handful of scalpels and held them menacingly over the jar by the operating table. His face was a resolute mask.
            “Never! I would die before telling you anything, you vile bitch!” With that, he tried to spit on her face, but only managed to dribble spit onto his chin. The sedatives had some residual effects, it seemed.
            “So be it,” Dr. Matilda said with a sigh. She gave the signal, and the assistant began stabbing Bertando again and again and again with a trained malevolence and fervor. The jar and surrounding area were soon covered in blood.
            “Lights out, John,” Dr. Matilda said, placing the air mask over his face.

Say My Name


            Wait, what was that? I think to myself as I turn my attention away from my work and look around, searching. Who called my name? It’s not like everyone knows who I am, or random strangers happen to know my name somehow. I think one of my friends has to be close by, so I get off of the park bench I have been sitting on to get a better look at the passers by, hoping to find a familiar face hiding in the crowd.
            “Xavier!”
            There it was, again! The voice sounds vaguely familiar but I can’t place who it was, exactly, or where it’s coming from. This doesn’t normally happen; I’m usually pretty good at finding people. This was the second time someone called my name within a minute, though, and I have no idea where this person is. “Yeah? Where are you?” I call out, hoping to see a hand waving somewhere, a distinguishing movement, a talking pig, something, whatever was calling my name! I don’t even have a common name, it’s not like Xavier’s are all over the place. I was about to give up the search and hope whoever it was would just come to me when I feel a sting on the back of my neck. I think it’s a bee, so I try to swat at it, but I can’t move.
            When I regain consciousness, I realize that I had lost consciousness, presumably right after I got stung. Did I really get stung? I wonder, as I look around, observing the cold metal table I am now strapped to. “Hello? Anyone home, or is it company policy to leave new captives alone in a sterilized room to contemplate what they’ve done?” I hope they react to sarcasm, otherwise I would be talking to myself, and I’ve heard that isn’t a good sign.
            I hear movement in the hallway beyond a door I only found a few seconds before (the walls are shiny to a degree that makes it hard to distinguish anything about them). Oh, good, I think, sarcasm does work, after all. The door opens, and I immediately wish that sarcasm didn’t work at all on the thing that came through the door. I desperately wish that the anything I might have said had sailed far over its heads. The creature coming at me doesn’t even make any sense! How can the body be blurred like that? Is it vibrating? I want to ask something that isn’t the horrid thing in front of me, but sadly my options were out. I try to count the heads, just for something to do as it waddles up to me, but they move to quickly, and they are too blurry to be able to distinguish one from the others. One of them starts shrieking something at me that I don’t understand, and another one starts saying “Would you like a cracker? Would you like a cracker? Would you like a cracker…” endlessly. Why does that head sound like my downstairs neighbor? The other heads remain silent, and an arm comes out- I didn’t even notice the arms until one reached for me, I had been preoccupied with the heads. It unbuckles my straps, grabs my neck, and holds me down. Before I can try and figure out what’s going on, intense pain flashes through my body, and I scream.
            I wake up again in a little room, very much the inverse of the other one where luster is concerned, suspended from the ceiling by chords of some sort. “Why are you doing this to me?” I scream at the walls and floor, and I get no reply.
            I wonder how long I’ll last here.