chilifest

Today, it’s all about the beans.

And the heat.

And driving Amherstburg to drink boozy hot chocolate and judge between eight different chili makers.

That sweet, sweet chili powder.

Oh, and we’re bringing the dogs.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 1309 words, novel: Father Lightning

Read: Coming Through Slaughter, Michael Ondaatje
Comics: Team 7 v3 4, Gen 13 v2 11-12, Gen 13: Ordinary Heroes 2
Music: October 8, 1989, Omaha, Nirvana

a day of rest

The Sabbath. Black Sabbath, that is.

No, sorry, just keeping. We’re not religious over here.

It’s just a lazy Saturday. FINALLY.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 1996 words, novel: Father Lightning

Read: Coming Through Slaughter, Michael Ondaatje
Comics: Team 7 v3 2-3, Gen 13 v2 9-10
Music: March 19, 1988, Tacoma, Nirvana

how far does this go?

I’m a pacifist, but if things keep escalating this way, I think there’s no chance of avoiding some kind of civil war (or world war 3, but hopefully not that).

I mean, how much more will the people take before they start dragging the ultra-rich from their houses, or turning on each other in senseless violence? How long before guillotines come back to the fore?

I hope sanity prevails before that, or that Donald Trump would have either a) an epiphany or b) a medical emergency that requires him to step down.

No one under him is really any better, but one would have to assume that with the Orange Fuhrer, the cult of personality would break down. I can’t see the masses following Vance or Noem or Hegseth the way they follow Trump.

They don’t have the mystique; whatever bizarre aura keeps people from imposing any kind of consequence on him, something that would have ended all of this right then and there if they had to courage do it when when it was still slumlording in the Seventies and Eighties, or financial corruption, or making fun of a disabled person, or any of the other smaller crimes he was allowed to get away with under the ruse of decorum and impartiality, that made him feel invincible, to himself and his followers, and led us to this.

Consequences, people. Early, often, proportionate enough to be a deterrent without shooting everyone who steals a paperclip.

Think about it.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 2565 words, novel: Father Lightning

Read: Coming Through Slaughter, Michael Ondaatje
Comics: Team 7 v2 3, Team 7 v3 1, Gen 13 v2 8, Gen 13: Ordinary Heroes 1
Music: 867-5309 (Live), Everclear

do you think anything can save us?

I mean, a little kindness, a little leeway, some understanding, could go a long way.

Effort.

Just a bit of effort.

Be nice to people.

It’s not that hard.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 1420 words, novel: Father Lightning

Read: Catch-22, Joseph Heller (I wasn't sure what to think about it at first, but man, what a great book)
Comics: Gen 13 v2 6-7, Team 7 v2 1-2
Music: 80-85, Bad Religion

ultra mundane

“They’re surrounding us!”

Indeed, they were, these Coyotes, these half-men, half-molted scavengers, coming out of bushes and the dark alleys between houses, creeping up on tip toe, giggles burbling under their rotten, growled breath. The sky was green from the pollutants the Mussolinis shot into the sky on a daily basis, purportedly to wipe out the infidel, which sounded disturbingly like the same rhetoric their mideastern equivalents spouted, only the Mussolinis used spreading the faith or bringing freedom instead of fatwa or jihad.

The Coyotes tightened their fetid noose, their beady, inhuman eyes locked on the retreating trio. rotated and circled, padded along with slavering lips and yellow teeth. Jeff, Dmitri and Anja backed into each other and stood in a protective triangle, facing out at their aggressors.

“What do we do?” cried Dmitri.

“I don’t know!” replied Jeff.

“All is lost!” Anja shouted, and they considered the current state of affairs. By any measure, it was bleak; the Pope Over The Mountain had declared himself grand ruler of any nation where there might exist a Christian, this, despite espousing mostly the opposite of the teachings of Christ. The Coyotes were ground troops, street thugs, the regressive dregs of society mutated by the Pope Over The Mountain. Bloodthirsty guns raised on specious lies and bold declarations of unreality. The Mussolinis were the middle tier, the information tier, the money tier, squatting over glowing phones and burning rants and digital money that made no sense, and financed only the worst of humanity. The sky burned; the oceans bled green with corruption. A tweet went out: THEY’RE CRAZY! LUNATICS! EVERYTHING IS THE BEST IT’S EVER BEEN! ONLY I CAN SAVE US! WE’RE TOTALLY WINNING! IT’S A GOLDEN AGE! THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION–

But everything was not the best it had ever been. It was decidedly not a golden age. The world was an orgy of sickness and violence, venal minds and sadistic pleasure, air that choked to breathe, water that killed to drink, and everywhere, unseen hands dipped into the pockets of the damned and stole their contents away into off-shore accounts and untouchable island strongholds where the ultra-rich treated children as playthings. Those who dared stand out from the masses were gunned down in the streets.

“They’re gunning us down in the streets!” screamed a nearby activist. There was no need to know which group they belonged to – it was all the same. Everywhere, people were cancelled, written out of jobs and life and existence, and many and more of those written out of society joined the Coyotes in vengeance, as a way to slake their horrible thirst and cancel those who would cancel them, or at least, those who had a hair colour or running shoes that weren’t the right shade of beige. They cancelled politicians and musicians, actors and bake shop owners, ancient icons and teen hearthrobs. They were definitely going to cancel a few books, while they were at it, and probably some of those illegal immigrants.

“You’re wearing green shoes!” screamed an activist. “You’re not being inclusive of blue, pink and orange! Cancelled!”

“They’re being nice to each other!” screamed one from the other side. “Plus, one’s a girl! Kill ’em!”

“What do we do, Jeff?” Anja clutched Jeff’s arm. “We’re cancelled from both sides.”

“It’s not exactly equivalent, is it?” yelled a third activist. “At least, we didn’t threaten to kill you.”

“You called them names!” screamed the activist from the other side. “Suggested they hate white shoes! That’s just as bad!”

“We did not! And you’re trying to kill them! It’s not the same!”

“You’re too sensitive!”

“You’re not sensitive enough!” they screamed back.

“Bite me!”

“Cancelled!”

“Killed!”

“See? Not the same! False equivalence! Change your shoes!”

“They’re coming!” Dmitri screamed, as the Coyotes, vicious eaters of the dead, vicious makers of the dead, charged in.

And through the midst of them drove a Toyota Corolla, just below the speed limit, with its headlights on, in the middle of the day.

“Look!” Jeff cried.

The Corolla put on its blinker and pulled to a slow and safe stop along the curb.

“It’s Ultra Mundane!” cried Anja. “We’re saved!”

Iindeed, it was Ultra Mundane, who checked his driver’s side mirror before exiting, to avoid potential oncoming traffic. He rounded the front of his car and moved to the sidewalk, so as not to jaywalk.

“One moment, children,” he said, his voice calm and reassuring. “Safety first.”

He walked to the street corner, past the Coyotes, who watched him with confused awe. He was plainly dressed, casual in a breathable golf shirt and khaki pants. He had on a baseball cap. A wristwatch. Several Coyotes started toward him, but the others warned them off.

“He doesn’t look so tough,” said some of the Coyotes. “He can’t take a Coyote, right?”

Their claws snapped in and and out. The older Coyotes shook their heads.

“Can he?”

“We’re tougher than wolves,” one blustered.

From behind a mailbox, an activist cried: “You’re being racist against wolves!”

“And bunnies!” cried another, this one looking out from a sewer, where radioactivitely charged rats and alligators fought for dominance.
“How bunnies?” the Coyotes asked.

“There are bunnies who wish to be wolves, you know!”

“And wolves that wish to be bunnies!”

Ultra Mundane paused at the street corner, looked left and right and crossed. He came down the sidewalk on the other side and stopped in front of what was almost certainly his house. The children exchanged glances, since there was no such house there before. It was an average-sized house, with an average-sized porch, an average-sized lawn and a plain looking garden with a hedge and some flowers on either side of some wooden stairs leading up to the porch.

“Hmm,” said Ultra Mundane. “Looks like it’s time for a trim.”

He turned to the children. The Coyotes exchanged confused looks.

“How would you kids like to help me do some yardwork? We can have iced tea, after.”

“Would we!” cried the children, and rushed toward this hero for the modern age.

Ultra Mundane retrieved some gardening gloves and soft pads for the childrens’ knees and ushered them toward the garden along the front porch. He set a bucket near them.

“I’ll cut the grass while you work on those weeds. Man!” he said, and looked up, holding his hand over his eyes to shade them. “What nice weather we’re having.”

The children set to plucking out thistles and stray dandelions and common burdock, while Ultra Mundane skimmed back and forth across the lawn with a push mower. He hummed to himself, a jaunty but meaningless tune, and every once in a while, dabbed the sweat from his brow with a hankerchief. He’d remark on the good work the children were doing, and the temperature.

“Boy!” he’d say. “Sure nice out. Great work, kids.”

The Coyotes set their sights on other people around them, eating activists, as activists screamed about injustice, as ballistic missiles streaked across the sky, as ground troops invaded the Middle East, and champagne executives popped their tops over oil. Somewhere, the Pope Over The Mountain sent a new tweet: YOU PEOPLE ARE LUCKY TO HAVE ME! EVERYONE WHO DOESN’T LIKE ME IS A LUNATIC! WE’RE DOING GREAT WORK IN THE FIELD OF CORRUPTION AND IGNORANCE! IF EVERYONE COULD BE A LITTLE STUPIDER AND HATE EACH OTHER MORE, THAT’D BE WONDERFUL. EVERYTHING IS GREAT. BEST NATION ON EARTH! I’LL MAKE US GREAT AGAIN! IGNORE THE CONTRADICTION. GOLDEN AGE! EVERYONE KISS MY BEHIND! THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER! WINNING!

The Mussolinis took this for a free-for-all and shot some activists in the head for no reason, then sent tweets of their own about how those scantily-clad activists were asking for it. A popular actress asserted that she would no longer wear low cut dresses, and the Mussolinis got distracted and demanded that she immediately wear nothing at all, because she owed them. Everyone owed them; they were Mussolinis. The nature of their existence granted them unfettered access to the nudity of others. And to shooting people in the head. But mostly, seeing beautiful people naked. An activist chimed in: “Hey, you have to look at us naked too! Just because we used to be men, or are men who used to be women, or just men, or non-beautiful women, doesn’t mean we should be excluded from your viewing pleasure! Bigots! Cancelled!”

The Mussolinis didn’t care for that, and so they sicced the Coyotes on them. Everyone scattered. No one was shot in the head.

“There, a nice big pitcher of iced tea,” Ultra Mundane poured out four glasses with ice and handed them out. They settled into rockers and Muskoka chairs and enjoyed the sun on their faces.

“Refreshing,” he said.

“Sure is,” the children echoed.

The missiles in the sky slowed, and the Coyotes stopped in their consumption of radical activists, who were really just people trying to live, and not actually all that radical. The Mussolinis continued to tweet: somewhere, someone had written a book insulting the Pope Over The Mountain, amazingly, eighty years before the Pope was born. They frothed at the mouth to ban such subversive material, and made plans to exhume the body of its author and do terrible things to it.

“Yessirree. Refreshing,” Ultra Mundane sipped his iced tea and flipped through an old copy of National Geographic.

The Mussolinis stopped their twittering and looked up.

“Hey, what happened to the ballistic missiles in the sky?” they wondered. “And why doesn’t the air burn my throat?”

“Perhaps later, we can watch that old sitcom,” suggested Ultra Mundane. “I sure do like when that one guy calls the other guy Meathead.”

“This water is drinkable,” said an activist. “Am I, am I supposed to like that? It’s not racist, is it?”

“I’m pretty sure it’s phobic,” said another. “ Most things are.”

“Yeah, but…” started the first activist, and he was quickly cancelled. You never but an activist.

“Look, kids. The sun is setting,” Ultra Mundane pointed at the western horizon. Indeed, the first vestiges of pinks and purples, oranges and reds stretched their soft quills up into the sky and painted lines across the horizon in brilliant hue. Some of the Coyotes found themselves looking up, and suddenly, they were no longer all that hungry. Or angry. Several of the Mussolinis put down their phones.

Over The Mountain, the Pope screamed to pick their phones back up, and be more racist. And sexist. And most definitely, phobic.

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO BE BIGOTS. PLEASE DO NOT PAY ATTENTION WHILE I ROB YOU BLIND. I WAS NEVER ON THAT PLANE. I’VE NEVER DONE ANYTHING WRONG. I’M THE POPE. THAT’S BETTER THAN JESUS, PROBABLY. I HAVE NEVER BEEN TO AN ISLAND WITH THE ULTRA-RICH AND THEIR CHILD-SLAVES. THANK YOU FOR YOUR–

Indeed, he had been to the island of the ultra-rich and their child-slaves and the Mussolinis discussed amongst themselves that maybe that was actually probably true, and the activists said things like “told you” and “uh-duh” and the Coyotes decided to take a nap.

“What a nice night,” Ultra Mundane smiled at the autumn-hued sky.

“A very nice night,” echoed the children.

“Peaceful. I could do this every day.”

“You do do this every day, Ultra Mundane,” said Anja.

Ultra Mundane patted her shoulder and said, “Sure do, kid. Sure do.”

He rose from his seat and picked up the empty pitcher of iced tea and said, “Let’s go inside,” and they did. They washed the glasses, ate a grilled cheese sandwich apiece for dinner and then had a good chuckle at that one guy calling that other guy Meathead.

“But, what we do if we’re not mad anymore?” an activist said glumly out on the sidewalk.

The Coyote that stood beside him shrugged. “Be friends?”

“I guess we could do that.”

“Nice sunset.”

“Yeah.”

And they stood quietly, watching the majestic sky paint colours across their eyeballs.

“This isn’t homophobic, is it?” asked a Coyote.

“I don’t think so,” chirped a Mussolini Pope.

“Best to assume it is,” said a radical activist. “Everything’s phobic all around, really.”
“Huh,” said the original activist, and then walked away. She didn’t see much point in getting upset about it. After all, what was to get upset about? Microaggressions? Tiny little baby aggressions? Wouldn’t it be better to relax and chill out and be nice to each other? To have conversations like adults, instead of all this screaming and violence over big things and small?

“I’m pretty sure it’s still phobic,” muttered an activist.

“Okay, I’ll see you guys tomorrow. Have a nice night.”

“Okay, see ya,” said a Coyote, kind of confused. It was weird how things were kind of good when you couldn’t hear from over the mountain.

–NEVER ON THE ISLAND. NEVER DID NOTHIGN WRO–

The Mussolinis shut off their phones and went home to bed.

“I gotta get up early.”

“Yeah, I gotta drive my kids to school in the morning.”

One by one, they drifted off into the night, the Coyotes, the activists, the Mussolinis, back to TV dinners and jigsaw puzzles and movies on the couch with their kids. The stars appeared in imperceptible stages, accompanying them from a sky free of pollution, to replace the fading rainbow of a falling sun.

Inside, the children gathered up their shoes and their backpacks, and headed out into the street. Ultra Mundane’s house became just another house, and the children gathered up their bicycles and waved good night. Ultra Mundane walked down the front steps and waved good night back to them.. He went to the corner, looked both ways before crossing and rounded the block to his car, being careful not to step out into oncoming traffic as he did.

The children watched as he drove away, just below the speed limit, sure to use his blinkers, and to always come to a complete stop.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 1486 words, novel: Father Lightning

Read: Catch-22, Joseph Heller
Comics: Gen 13 v2 2-5
Music: 75 Years Of Barbershop Quartet Champions, Various

never worked that hard

Past the side gate to the back yard, there’s a girl with a nose ring and a pink bang on one side that conveys a sense of effortless cool and belies the disaffected drawl in her tongue as she says, “it’s like, you know, more of a sense of cool, of style, like, I wanna be something, you know, but like, I don’t wanna work at it, so it’s like effortless, you know?” And we do know, because we’re all around the same bent picnic table, listening to the same hardcore growl over a disjointed thud of dance club gangsta rap that conflicts with the wall of hard rock shattering out the back door.

There’s a clothesline, and an inexplicable cream bra and a orange sweater with arms absurdly long and belly absurdly short, hung up at the right wrist, left dragging in the snow, not really drying at all, but absorbing a good deal of cigarette stench from the motley crew of smokers brave enough to dare this cold winter’s eve. Some shiver in their leather leather jackets and short skirts, some shiver in their bare chests, impervious to the pangs of winter through the shield of alcohol and other sundry drugs that float door to door through the party like a plastic pumpkin on Hallowe’en night.

“It’s like, the new sound,” says someone, instantly refuted by someone else.

“It’s like, me, me, me, and terribly boring,” the someone else says. “I’m better than you, girls are objects that want my dick and I got money, die, die, motherfucker. We’re better than that, don’t you think?”

But the other one doesn’t think, and the friend of the girl with the pink hair who is jealous of her effortless cool, and more than a little envious of her figure, and the extra twenty she doesn’t have, says she thinks the rapper’s kind of hot, but no one’s really paying attention to her, except the boy with no shirt, who says something about big girls and black guys and the girl with the pink hair says “you’re fucking racist”, and the girl with the extra twenty thinks, and sexist and mean for calling me fat, but she doesn’t say that and Pink Bang doesn’t even think it and later on that night, Pink Bang will find herself back in the corner of the yard against the shed running a painted nail down the boy’s bare chest to his nipple, as she tells him about a movie she saw, and casually drops that it was deep, and harsh and pretty sexy, if she’s real about it, to which she bites her bottom lip and he smiles at her knowingly, only it’s not really knowingly, it’s only sort of knowingly, because he’s had way too much to drink, and alcohol and THC are the contents of his veins and he’s mostly using the shed to hold himself up.

Twenty Pounds gives up and sits down on the patio table, and the shy boy in the corner whose name is probably Lewis or maybe Levi, gets up and goes inside. He’s barely in the door when a bottle blond throws her arms around him, and says she’s glad he came, and he’s hoping he doesn’t (cum), because she’s never been this close to him before and he can feel her pressing up against his chest and his mind goes into lockdown, and she says, Joey’s in the basement, and Levi/Lewis (larson?) thinks Joey?, like he should know Joey? and he does know Joey?, but not really well enough for the girl to inform him that Joey?’s in the basement, because his plans don’t include Joey?, they include the blonde, and only the blonde, and a walk on a boardwalk by the ocean, holding hands and sharing ice cream, furtive glances, nervous titters and eventually, a moonlit kiss at the end of a pier. There’s a number of other lurid fantasies as well, but he’d prefer to keep those to himself.

He certainly doesn’t want to involve Joey. Joey?

He’s better than that, right?

And she gestures to him to go downstairs, to go, to hurry, to stop wasting time and git, and he starts to go down and he’s a third of the way down, two-thirds of the way down, when he realizes she’s not behind him. The stairs open to a wide, old school, wood-panelled room with a standing bar separated by wooden balusters and a green fridge and blue-red shag and a drum kit, behind which the owner of the house (by proxy of a single mother who works midnights/weekends and doesn’t have time for this shit, and so, doesn’t care, because she had four cardiac arrests and a goddamn methhead freakout in her ward and she’s fucking exhausted, kid, and someone says, i’d never work that hard, and Lewis/Larson/Levi isn’t sure who said it, but one of the stoner kids in the corner stares at him, and Lewis is convinced for a moment the boy’s a telepath.)

Proxy-owner is also shirtless, which is a recurring theme as a girl with frizzy hair cuts the sleeves off the telepath’s t-shirts, while the other one, the stoner with the laidback surfer cool and the handsome grace of the permanently fried, holds out a Red Delicious to the wondrous eyes of his enraptured compatriots. Proxy-owner sits behind a drum kit and launches forward, pounding, with eyes closed, a malevolent and defeaning cacophony of snare and bass, cymbal and rim, with a fervour equal to a headline act at Woodstock ’99 or Glastonbury or Boot + Hearts and then stops, arching back on his stool in a religious trance, a prophet descended into the bowels of this two story and a basement in the lower end of town, but not the lowest end, that’s a few streets away, where windows are slatted boards and the only indication of occupancy are graffiti tags and shadows that sneak in and out of the back door, offering cash for play, or a mouth in lieu. Proxy-owner peaks and falls forward, a badumpbump smash hitting the rim as he hunches, sticks clutched tight, eyes squeezed shut, a trail of drool hanging gossamer from his bottom lip. He will pass out there, but not before going upstairs and finding the main floor bathroom locked, and piss in the front hallway on everyone’s shoes. His mother will cuff him upside the head and curse him up and down as she drags him from bed the next morning to clean it. He will remember that moment as he holds down the beat as the opener for the opener of the headliner of his grand Prairie break, and then again, when he’s strung out and failing, in a dive bar in East York twenty years after that. He will blame circumstance; reality will have other opinions.

Stoner pops the stem out of the Red Delicious and produces a flathead screwdriver from his back pocket. He digs a shallow hole in the top of the apple, just enough to pack, then drives the screwdriver like a drill down the centre of the Red Delicious, as his companions, themselves cardboard cutout characters who will one day go on to be a big shot lawyer and a car wash attendant (and definitely not a telepath), ooh and ahh. Stoner drives the screwdriver once more into the side of the Red Delicious, bores through to the centre shaft, and giggles, as chewed up Red Delicious flesh sinks into the red-blue shag.

“Oooh,” says future lawyer of America.

“Ahh,” says future couch potato (and non-telepath) of Idaho.

Stoner tests the airflow, pops a third hole, the flow hole, he calls its, as lawyer and carwash nod in awe. Stoner packs the apple. Lewis/Leonard/Leandro’s curiosity is piqued, though he’s only smoked pot once in his life, and coughed until his lungs hurt and his face became non-functional, his limp tongue limp having lost the ability to do anything but swerve side to side in his mouth, a mouth weirdly dry and clammy. A miasma of spinning lights twinkled his head, and he was pretty sure if he couldn’t do math anymore. 2+2=holyfucki’mfuckinstoned. The apple is lit, Maui Wowie by way of Kona Crush and Red Delicious, and it’s a hit that would probably kill Lewis/Larson, but lawyer/carwash are duly impressed, and they drawn their own bliss, and Stoner gets up with a permanent smile, and slips behind the drumset and puts Red Delicious to Proxy-owner’s lips, who sucks back on it as though he knew it was there the whole time, even though he hadn’t moved or opened his eyes for several minutes. Then it’s Leonard’s turn, and he’s not really into it, it’s not his scene and he thinks about bottle blonde and remaining coherent enough to express feelings, and the girl with the frizzy hair dips past, this not really being her scene either and she wants to put the scissors back where she found them. She’s wondering if the cut off t-shirt sleeves would make good headbands, as she passes Twenty Pounds, who complains to Pink Bang about why is Shirtless such a jerk, and Pink Bang blows it off as him being drunk, and makes a half-hearted joke about abs, which is what she’s really thinking about, and how later on, she’s going to draw one painted nail down across his nipple and run her fingers across his abs to his…

Frizzy thinks maybe she could be a fashion designer, as she stretches one of the cut-off arms around her head, giving her an Eighties aerobics class feel, which only occurs to her for a second before she accidentally pokes herself in the head with the scissors and then says, “shit” and checks if she’s bleeding, somewhat obsessively, but she’s not, but she’ll ask ten other people anyway, and walk around with the scissors in her hand most of the night. Later, she’ll convince Twenty Pounds to let her cut Twenty Pound’s hair, to give her bangs like Pink Bang, but Twenty Pounds will chicken out at the last minute, like she’ll chicken out of everything at the last minute and deny herself adventures and jobs and boyfriends and one night stands that she might have enjoyed if life weren’t so faught with terrifying risk.

And Lovelorn (which is what we call Leonard/Leroy/Larva now) comes up the stairs, no longer thrilled to watch intoxicated idiots hoot oil off a hot knife superheated on an electric stove, and he searches for Blondie, who we’re calling Blondie now, and scans Pink Bang and registers the attractivenes of her effortless cool, and doesn’t realize Twenty Pounds is there, even though he has to squeeze past her at the top of the stairs, and he stops at Frizzy when she asks, “am I bleeding?” and peels back the cut-off t-shirt around her head and he replies, “I don’t think so,” and then wonders whatever happened to Joey, and who was Joey (?) again, and shit, that’s a contact high, damn it, every week, shit, and a boy with spiked hair and studs on his wrists throws his arm around Lovelorn’s shoulder and tells Frizzy, “yeah, out your vagina, once a month” when she asks, “am I bleeding?” and snatches one of the t-shirt headbands from her and stuffs it over his face.

“I’m gonna tell her,” Lovelorn says, and Studs says “what? Tell who?” and Lovelorn’s all girl, and Spike looks behind him where Girl (what we now call Blondie) is on the couch, way too close to Football Guy, who no one knows who (is that whom?) he knows that he would be here, but he’s got a thick hand on Blondie’s blue-jeaned thigh and it inches ever upward and that’s what we’re calling her now.

“I’m gonna tell her,” Lovelorn repeats.

Outside the back door, someone’s erected a snowman and given it a carrot for a dick.

“I’m gonna tell her,” he says once again.

“Well, fuckin’ fuck, then, man,” Studs shoves Lovelorn forward, as Blondie heads toward the kitchen leaving a confused and irritated Football Guy behind on the couch.

“Fuckin’ prick tease,” he says to no one in particular. The other two girls at the end of the couch make a face like someone dropped a steamer in their gene pool and leave. The room empties, and Football Guy shrugs. His hand dips behind the couch, pops the top on a fresh can of light beer, and wonders how he got there in the first place. Oh, right, he thinks. Football’s going nowhere and Dad wants me to be a cop. He chugs the beer whole, and grabs another.

The two girls with the wry faces bump Lovelorn on the way past and Studs raises his eyebrows.

“I’m gonna have a threesome,” he says, to no one in particular.

“I”m gonna tell her,” Lovelorn replies. Studs disappears after the two girls, who mount the stairs away from the bump and grind of teenage zeitgeist, and the mix of dance and rock, rap and distortion, heavy crashing bass and heavy crashing drums (mostly from the basement, where Proxy-owner has resumed his Concert at Red Rocks), to seek peace and quiet in an upstairs bathroom. They’ll later become lovers, in a moment of great despair, and it will cause them to never speak again, as one discovers something new about her essential self, and the other finds herself disgusted by her own obscenity. She’ll turn Conservative with a capital C, and decide she hates black people and Jews as a result. She’ll also hate her husband and her children. The other will lean too hard into lesbian tropes, and turn every flirtation into marriage.

“I’m gonna tell her,” Lovelorn says again.

“So fuckin’ do it,” Football Guy slaps him on the back and sways drunkenly. He stabs a beer with a pocket knife and shotguns it. “I did.”

Beer dribbles over the floor. No one will remember the stain later, after Proxy-owner pees on the shoes.

Lovelorn is propelled into the kitchen, where Blondie talks with Brunette, who looks Lovelorn up and down like he’s something that got plopped in her gene pool.

“Do you have a minute?” Lovelorn asks Blondie.

“Oh fuck, here we go,” Brunette rolls her eyes. “Try not to kill him.”

She leaves and we follow, as Football Guy follows, and Studs follows two girls to the second floor and Red Delicious comes up from the basement and screams, “I am a golden god!” Someone tells him to shut the fuck up, because that’s from a movie and why was Shirtless so fucking rude about being thirty pounds overweight and Frizzy put a fucking t-shirt arm on the snowman’s head and now it looks like it’s born with craniosynostosis (how do we know that word?), and why is Pink Bang against the shed with Shirtless, and oh my God, what are those guys pretending to do with that carrot. Is that guy wearing a bra?

The thud of drums continues unabated, as Lovelorn stumbles out of the kitchen, having been let down gently, easily, and not at all clearly, and he goes on his merry way, mildly dissatisfied, but still convinced he has a shot, and maybe he could relax and pour himself a celebration, so he finds something hard on the counter, drowns it in Pepsi and takes a sip.

In the living room, a girl in a cigarette-stenched orange sweater with arms too long and belly too short, drying solely from the heat of her braless torso, stumbles and rights herself and holds a red Solo cup up to the sky and says, “When I graduate, I’m gonna fucking go wild, man. I’m gonna go to college and go wild and fuck everyone and everything, and get drunk, and get high and do drugs, and go to school and man, I’m gonna be the fuckin’ president or some shit, president of the fuck club, and the drug club and everyone’s gonna want a piece of this,” she rants, as her midriff-baring sweater, still with too long arms and too wet and cold fabric, lifts and bares bellybutton, creating a hypnotic state for the lazy-eyed boy whose rarely ever comes to these things, but is nicely toasted, and didn’t realize that was Molly and he watches the bellybutton dance across as smooth flat stomach, surrounded by fine down, and it’s a watch swung back and forth and Freud saying, “Fuckin’ go to sleep”, and it’s all he do not to reach out and poke it with his finger.

“Dude! Those chicks are totally into it,” Studs grabs his crotch as he slides down the bannister. “I’m definitely gonna have a threesome, and then, for the rest of my life, I’m gonna be threesome guy.”

“The fuck, weirdo! You poked my belly!”

“I think when you die, you don’t go to like, heaven or hell or whatever. Like, who wants to go to heaven? Sit around, playing harps and worshipping some old dude on a throne? Booooring. And hell, like whatever, man, we know it sucks. I think when you die, you get to like, answer every question you ever had that you never got to answer. Did that person really talk shit about me? Were they a real friend? Are aliens real? What’s it like on another planet? What’s it like to dirt bike or sky dive and really live it, you know?”
“Dude, that’s fuckin’ awesome,” says Red Delicious, on whose shoulder Bottle Blonde is resting her chin (yes, we’re back to that). “I’d get to, like, lay every hot chick I ever saw, like that girl I sketched from the bus downtown? Killer ass.”

“You know you could dirt bike and sky dive now,” adds Studs. “Or have a threesome.”

He waggles his eyes at Bottle Blonde.

“That’s not what I meant,” replied Curly Redhead, who to this point in our story, has only hung out in the kitchen, having quiet conversations about death and life and philosophy in the shadows, and who got stuck there awkwardly watching Lovelorn’s girl tell Lovelorn that he’s got a shot, maybe in the future, but now, she’s not looking for anything serious, like she’s played out with the games and boys, and for now, she only wants a friend, but you know, stick around, friends sometimes grow into things, but mostly not, she warned gravely.

“Like, what would sex be like with some random chick I saw walking down the street but couldn’t talk to, ‘cuase I was on the bus? Could I smoke a bowl out of her crack? Does she like it in the..?”

“It’s not your personal fucking Shangri-La, dork. It’s heaven. The afterlife. You could like, know what Einstein knew, or if they were all in on it, or what it’s like to be super rich. I bet they have the best parties.”

“Or if she likes it in the…”

Lovelorn goes outside, where he bums a smoke off Thirty Pounder, and then thinks he hasn’t done this in a while, and how come this didn’t make him cough like that weed did, and man, he can’t believe she told him he had a shot. He’s going to profess his love. He knows it. He also knows he’s going to profess his love to Pink Bang by the shed, who runs a long nail down Shirtless’s chest onto his abs, but that’s mostly a sex thing and not a holding hands by the ocean thing, and Forty Pounder is also thinking about Shirtless’s abs and what she might think about them later, when she gets home, if she’s sober enough to stake awake, and what it would be like to be married to someone like that, and not just a chemistry major with freckles and fifty pounds too many.

“It’s cold out.”

“I can’t believe where he stuck that carrot.”

“I’m going to profess my love.”

“To who?”

“You know.”

“I don’t even know you.”

“What do you mean? We’re here like every week.”

“Yeah, but we don’t talk. You drool over Blondie and Pink Bang, and when that doesn’t work out, come talk to me. Where is Blondie anyway?”

And Lovelorn goes inside, steps over Football Guy drooling in the hall, who says, “no, you’re not bleeding” to Frizzy Hair, and Proxy-owner smashes his head on the snare, and Redhead tells a new guy about the afterlife of knowledge, and new guy says, “I could never work that hard. It’d be like being stuck in a museum,” and someone says, “yeah, a museum of sex,” and that’s Studs, and Proxy-owner comes up the stairs and pounds on the main floor bathroom after he finds it’s locked and screams, “I gotta go!” before whipping out his penis and peeing all over the shoes, and he bangs on the door again, over and over, heavy pounding rhythms like the ones he plays on the drum, and screams, “I gotta go!” even though he’s already gone, all over the shoes, and then the door bursts open by accident, because but the latch wasn’t latched, and Lovelorn stares in and there’s Lovelorn’s girl (blondie) on her knees, and Red Delicious, eyeballs rolled back in his head, and something drips out of the side of Blondie’s mouth, cum runs out the corner of her mouth and she scream-gurgles and rushes out the bathroom and up the stairs, and someone says to Red Delicious (probably Redhead), “you’re dripping on the bathmat” and Red Delicious chuckles and locks eyes with Proxy-owner, whose penis is also out from peeing on the shoes, and they laugh and pull up their pants and Redhead stores the memory of cum dripping from Red Delicious’ dick for later and wonders if in heaven, she could find out what that was like.

“You could find out now, when you’re done dirt biking and sky diving,” says Studs helpfully, and Redhead wonders briefly if he’s a telepath.

Lovelorn’s girl bursts through the upstairs bathroom door, where two girls from the living room (who will have a brief and passionate encounter that dovetails both of the lives into something entirely else) have gone to hide from Studs and his threesome, and Football Guy and his misogyny, and Lovelorn’s girl spits up cum in the sink and the girls scream, “oh my god, she’s puking!”

“Oh my god, I’m going to throw up!”

And

“Oh my god!”, followed by blech, and another scream and Lovelorn stands in the hallway downstairs, unable to articulate exactly what he’s just witnessed and Redhead says, “that’s fucked” and Studs says, “I guess we’ll find out in the afterlife”, and Frizzy Hair thinks about launching a t-shirt headband line, which she’ll do, for real, before deciding it’s too hard and it’s more fun to eat bonbons on the couch and let her husband rut in her every Friday night. Lovelorn’s girl tumbles down the stairs and trips into her peed-on shoes and out the front door and Lovelorn jumps into his pee-soaked shoes and follows out into the cold with wet shoes and the dreams of a generation blooming like unfertilized eggs and not yet fully formed humans and all of this will end up different, because of laziness or circumstance or trauma or sideways movement and someone else’s will and political events and all of that is here and now and possible all at the same time, and we’ll find out later, as Lovelorn watches as his girl (his friend for the foreseeable future) runs away, as the night sky watches her run away, and he thinks, I should go after her, but doesn’t move and thinks, I should go after her, and his feet get cold in his pee-wet shoes.

He stands until she’s long gone, imagining kisses and futures and cum at the corner of her lips, and the chill in the air and the competing bass and Pink Bang, and how none of them will ever be what they are, and even knowing that, he thinks, I’m going to profess my love.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 1551 words, novel: Father Lightning

Read: Catch-22, Joseph Heller
Comics: Team 7 3-4, Gen 13 v2 1, Gen 13: Rave 1
Music: 74 Jailbreak, AC/DC

skeleton park

They slip through the gate under cover of darkness, basket swinging, grins like school children playing hide-and-seek in the night. Her fingers caress the smooth marble headstones, the basket in his hand grazes the tips of the grass as they wend their way between, toward the hill at the centre of the graveyard. A great maple stands at the hill’s peak, in relief against a sky of equal black. Silhouette trees round the park and obscures it to the world beyond, its phantom visitors open solely to the vault of heaven above, obscured behind obsidian cloud. They come, the two, holding hands. They come, eyes flirting. They come, smiles barely contained on lips that twitch and tickle around the edges. They come, the muscles in their legs burning with slight exertion as they climb to the top of the hill.

He flings the blanket wide, with a flourish, its edge pinched between his fingertips. The blanket drifts to the ground like a mat of feathers, and spreads across the sullen earth, a bistro tablecloth over a mat of late autumn grass. She kneels and opens the basket, plucking out plums and tiny sandwiches filled with green cucumbers and yellow egg and bits of red onion. He seeks and finds two thin flutes and two wide goblets, and brandishes twin bottles, something red, something bubbly. A grins belies him in the dark. In fact, he hasn’t stopped grinning, since he opened the door for the girl in her long, flowing skirt dress and Bardot blouse and raced her out to the car, to drive madly, past reds and greens and silent streets, to arrrive, here, high above the canal, and the town that wound around it, its sparkling lights, reflecting off the rolling surface, patterned after the invisible stars above.

The night clouds roil, not with thunder or anger, but with silence. They churn against a breeze caught high up in the firmament, felt not a whit down below. Down on the cool grass, a cork pops, with a gasp and a giggle, and effervescent gold speeds up the centre of a flute and over the edge. Fizz leaps onto their lips and dances across their tongues and they smile with sly intent. Their eyes meet and flick away. Meet and flick away. There is laughter.

Somewhere, a clock strikes midnight.

It starts slow, imperceptible in the shadows. Here, a passing fancy blinks, there, a gentle spirit stretches a crooked hand. The shadows lengthen, stretch, become things unto themselves. They press against the roof of the earth under which they lay. They steal glances out the gaps, the rough grate of stone sepulchre doors seeps into the night. They climb over the roofs of the mausoleums, and peer from the edges of headstones and tree branch alike. Wind whispers through the leaves, they too mere shadows, their autumn reds lost to a midnight sky, their oranges and yellows muted by the rising ghosts that emerging from cross and tomb.

The blue and purple ghosts of the graveyard finger their way up out of their resting places, their spectral tendons reaching up toward the horizon below which they’ve been buried. They break through the sod and once more the soft, wet dew of autumn grass mists upon their ghostly forms. A shift in the air touches the pair, a soft chill that raises the hairs on their arms and the back of their necks. Still, they smile. He dips a strawberry in chocolate, and touches it to her lips. Blushing, she returns the gesture, teh sweet juices running off his chin. They embrace as the spirits emerge from the soil around the hill, and take up space as the shadows of the night.

They come one by one, at first, then in pairs, reaching out and holding hands as the first tender notes of a widow’s song rises up out of the ground. A mandolin, or perhaps a ukelele, tickled by the fingers of the dead, floats along the breeze, barely a sound. The hymn grows clearer, and pulls the couple to their feet. Wine glasses fall, discarded and dripping, upon the blanket, and feed their bubbling wares to the soil.

The music crescendos, the sound of drum and piano, of bass and horn, as orchestral magic blossoms into the night. The widow’s solitary croon gains a harmony, then another, then another. All around them, the dead take up partners and a slow, graceful waltz commences. Laughing, the man takes the girl’s fingers in his palm, and steps off the blanket into the grass, bowing in a slow, four stepped turn. The music fills their ears, and the dance changes, morphs, becomes a cantata, a rounding blend of falsetto and tenor, bass and soprano. The dead switch partners, tossing each other to and fro with a manic abandon, a maddened cotillion screamed in dusk.

More shadows appear, separating from the crooked and twisted lines of branches that crosshatch the night. They slither down trunks, leap out from headstones and burst from patches in the dirt. They sway and they swirl, and take the hands of the boy and of the girl. She twirls, her skirt poodling out and shredding, freeing her legs and arms to the cool autumn night. The cold snap licks her goosebumped flesh. The man laughs, and takes the hand of a widow, and arches her backwards. They spin away in frenetic loops, as the man and the girl once whirled the frozen canal, their skates carving a sphere into the surface beneath which a river roiled. From the canal come more of the dead, more of the forgotten, more spirits, more shadows. They dance and thrust, wailing and whirling like dervishes, barely distinguishable from the night. More and more, they come, generations of dead, generations of spirits, long-forgotten and never known, piling, squeezing, surrounding until the mass is one vast vortex, a tornado of dead beyond counting, the weight of it curling up into the sky, blotting all, blotting the ground, the graveyard, the maple on the hill, the canal and the town around it.

The woman feels her feet lifting, her heels rising, her toes falling upward from the blanket and into the bottom of a maelstrom, the centre of this vortex of the dead, its toll growing with each passing moment, as the residents of the park, the graveyard’s permanent spirits merge with those of a world long gone, lives long disappeared from the memories of those they once touched and love. The sky fills with souls lost in the valley, lost in the river, in the town, in the forests and hills beyond and before, from time before time, they grow, burying her and the man in shadows of the the damned and the forgotten. Widows screech their horrible forte, their anguished melody, and from the maelstrom comes a hand, his hand, one last strawberry barely holding on in his fingertips, and she stretches, strains, tears limb and ligament to reach it, its bristles in her fingers. She suckles the last bits of flesh. Juice stains her lips and falls away, drops disappearing into the maelstrom.

Then his hand is gone and the song of the damned rages about, no longer a jaunty tinkle, no ukelele, no mandolin, but an orchestra of hell born, in maddening descent, discordant and competing, jagged, dissonant, raucous thunder and crashing destruction, a wall of sound, at ends piercing and hollow, the depth of its sorrow mashing up against the memories of joy, of ecstasy, of frantic euphoria, and she’s swept, swept up, swept out, swept free and distraught. She clutches for something to hold onto, for a twig, a grasp, a headstone, a way to outrun it, to pull free and pirouette off mausoleum pillars and brooding obelisk, dashing against piers and columns, to leap the altars and exedras, searching, screaming, reaching out for a hand, his hand, wherefore art thou his hand, and his voice cuts through the noise, “come sit next to me, my sweetheart”, and at the final moment, she loses all that she is, torn to molecular shreds, and dashes against the tree on the hill, landing gently where their blanket lays, their spilled basket, their fallen flutes and she collapses, at the centre of the maelstrom, set down onto the grass by the low cant of widow’s loss, and soft, dead hands, swept up from the blanket, swept up, up, up into the air, into the sky, into the night, her eyes blind with leaden cloud and tears of widow’s loss become the whimpers of the damned and the ochestra falls beneath their crooning low, and she falls to the blanket, now worn and moth-eaten. The food from the basket is spoiled and rotten, the glasses, desiccated and empty, smeared with patterns of once upon a time. The leaves of the maple crinkle and detach, drift down upon her, and she lays, eyes closed to the earth, and remembers – strawberries and skating, midnight picnics, and lips brushed with chocolate and fizz.

The widows’ song fades to a murmur, and the orchestra drops away, piece by tortured piece. A sweet, sad, lonely flute whistles, a joyful mourn from a lone trumpet peels out in the distance and disappears, and the final polite tings of the ukelele announce their exit. A soft voice hums, spiderthin and insubstantial. The girl slumps to her knees, gathers the basket, picks up the champagne flutes, tucks the tattered blanket under her arm. She starts down the hill, spent and hollow. The last notes ring, as the shadows fade to their rest, and the weight of a history of lives long gone recedes to whence they came, with one more. The woman weeps, silent, single tears that hang on the cleft of her cheek, and in the distance, whispering up the frozen banks of the Rideau, a gentle croon sings her name.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 1869 words, novel: Father Lightning

Read: Catch-22, Joseph Heller
Comics: Gen 13 5, Gen 13 0, Team 7 1-2
Music: 70s Soft Rock Essentials, Various (I mean, I did this for my wife, and while I'm cool with stuff like Ride, Captain, Ride, Ooh La La, and Elton John, like who the fuck thought Boz Scaggs was good?  Take the most generic, corporate, boring fucking bullshit with no heart, no intelligence and no emotional content and put it over music that isn't even fucking catchy?  It's no wonder punk rock blew up.  Between Boz Scaggs and Dan Fogelberg, I wanted to pop my eardrums.)

homeward bound (portugal)

It promises to be a long day of travel today, ending with a joyous reunion with our dogs and cats, all of whom will greet us like we’re returning from war after they thought we were KIA.

Sometimes, love is truly the greatest thing of all (especially when it involves snuggling kittens and overexcited puppies).

Oh, and I begin a thing.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 1865 words, novel: Father Lightning

Read: Catch-22, Joseph Heller
Comics: Gen 13 1-4
Music: 66 Breakout!, MC5

back from vacation and ready to rock

Or at least, will be tomorrow. Valentines dinner with my wife and daughter tonight in Lisbon, return tomorrow and then start posting all this stuff I’ve been writing while I’ve been gone.

It’s short story palooza this week.

Hold on to your gitch, because after that, it’s book number three.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 987 words, short story: Ultra Mundane

Read: Catch-22, Joseph Heller
Comics: Fables 160-162
Music: 54-40 Essentials, 54-40 (nice to love you, baby)

vincent

This is the third time I’ve written this post, and for whatever reason, WordPress refuses to save the draft and when I come back to it later, it’s MIA. It’s the bronze medal post, I guess.

Speaking of bronze medals, how good were Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier in their final performance? Vincent is one of my favourite songs (mostly through the NOFX version, but the Don McLean version is also great, which is what they used).

I’m not a figure skating expert by any means, but I always question the subject nature of the judging.

I mean, France was good, and the Americans technically sound, but Piper and Paul brought actual tears to my eyes. The story, the skill, the moment – I legitimately cried. How the fuck that rated a bronze is beyond me. The Kazakhs were brilliant as well, their high energy performance was head and tails above the eventually top two finishers.

The Americans shouldn’t even have rated. Sure, they were technically perfect, but there was nothing eventually remotely connective about the performance. Nothing about it touched me in any way. Nothing even seemed to be connected to the source material, in which they were were the fourth team to do Romeo and Juliet. The only part that actually seemed to be connected to the story was the ending, in which I’m pretty sure one of them stabbed themselves?

I thought they died by poison?

Anyway, Vincent was the performance of the games, better than any other performance we saw, and we’re very proud. Fuck the judges. Fuck America.

Paul and Piper, you were fucking brilliant – one of the all-time great performances ever at an Olympics.

Target: 1500 words
Written: 1419 words, short story: Ultra Mundane

Read: Catch-22, Joseph Heller
Comics: Fables 156-159
Music: 50 Cent Essentials, 50 Cent