Julie Goyder

Overload #30

The Happyness Shop

I am reading the newspaper…

Entrez-vous designer matchmaking for professionals. Seminars conducted by Rosalind Neville, Australia’s leading authority on courtship, and author of Dial a Woman, Dial a Man – specialising in women age 25-65.

… and suddenly I find myself in an enormous shop full of colour and sound and energy. Throngs of people shout, leap, sparkle. Everybody appears metallic.

‘Where am I?’ I ask one of the gleaming shop attendants and she says that I am in the Happiness Shop.

‘Here,’ she says ‘you can buy any sort of happiness you like.’ She pauses, smiling, then adds, ‘As long as you have the money!’ with a wink of her coppery eye.

‘Oh I don’t think I have any money,’ I say rummaging around in my pockets. I look down because the pockets feel unfamiliar and see that I am wearing a pair of jeans that I have never seen before. They are fluorescent, multicoloured and the pockets are bulging with money. I realise that this is probably not really me but I am so preoccupied by my sudden wealth that I don’t care. The shop attendant is chatting to someone else now, so I look around.

 

In one corner there is an ice-cream parlour. I go over and order a banana ice-cream cone.

‘Oh,’ says the girl serving, ‘We don’t have banana. You choose according to colour. It isn’t real ice-cream – you do realise that don’t you?’

I nod because she is looking at me in an ironic way and I am beginning to feel a bit of an ignoramus.

‘This,’ she says knowledgeably, ‘is the first step of happiness – you buy it in a cone. Perhaps you haven’t read your brochure. Not to worry. Just tell me what colour happiness you prefer and that will be $100.’

‘$100!’ I exclaim, shocked.

‘Oh, that’s nothing,’ she says, ‘It gives you a whole 24 hours of happiness guaranteed or your money back. You will even be happy while you are sleeping so don’t feel that those hours are wasted. In fact there’s a stall here that sells dreams. You can choose comedies or fantasies; some even choose horror. Whatever makes you happy! Oh, but I’m rambling. The simplest and cheapest happiness package we have here is coloured ice-cream. What you get is the feeling of happiness. You’ll find that after you’ve eaten it – lick it slowly it’s more effective – your face will curve into a beautiful smile like mine, see?’

I have already noticed that the girl has such a wide smile that it is difficult for her to speak clearly. But I buy a cone and wander around licking and, yes, immediately I am smiling. It is a little painful at first, but by the time I have finished the cone the smile is beginning to feel marvellous. It is obvious that most of the people in the shop have eaten their cones; I have never seen so many teeth. The whole place is bubbling and buzzing with laughter and movement. I cannot help giving a great leaping shout at being so utterly filled with joy and I wonder if the cones are addictive.

 

The next counter is spilling over with enormous brightly wrapped boxes and I see a sign –

The Happiness Spousetry one, you will not be disappointed. I nearly bypass this and then decide, why not?

‘What colour?’ the guy behind the counter asks. I say that I quite like the look of a particularly large red box. ‘$2000,’ he says and I pay him without hesitating now because I have such a lot of money in the pockets of my bright jeans. He shows me how to press the button and out springs a very red but rather gorgeous man.

‘Oh thank God!’ the red man says. ‘They forgot to feed me this morning and if they forget, they forget and that’s that until the next day. I saw you coming through my spyhole and sent you some of my happy hope. How wonderful! There is a happiness celebrant here so we can get married straight away if you like!’

I am smiling so much that it is preventing me from feeling shocked. The man is far too talkative and I feel I have wasted $2000. The salesman is giving me my receipt now, and says, ‘Feel free to take your purchase to the Happiness Trade Centre if you are happy with it but feel you could be happier.’

Meanwhile my red man is still babbling. I say very kindly through my thick smile that I think he is lovely but as blue and yellow are more my colours it might be better to trade him in.

‘Absolutely wonderful!’ he says and his smile is even broader than mine. I see that he has somehow acquired a red cone and is licking it in a frenzied way.

 

The Happiness Trade Centre is very exciting, with coloured lights, shooting stars and a band called Euphoria playing. I see that there are hundreds of people doing trades and I very quickly find a blue man in a box and make the swap with a charming woman who grins at me then says conspiratorially, ‘It’s fantastic isn’t it! And did you know that there is even a Used Happiness Spouse stall? That means you can use them for awhile and then bring them back and either swap them or get most of your money back. I have some shopping to do so I’ll just pop this red gentleman back into his box for awhile and come back. Nice doing business with you, lovey.’

I smile happily at her because I can no longer help it, but don’t reply as I am too struck with wonder at the ecstatic feelings that have sprung up between my blue man and me. I help him disengage himself from his box and we begin to make our way through the crowds to the happiness celebrant at the back of the shop. I notice that my skin is turning a pale yellow, a little like the tan I once developed after drinking too much carrot juice. My blue man chuckles as I tell him this and he cannot help stroking my skin as we hum and giggle and breathe our beautiful colours into each other. On the way we pass counter after counter selling every imaginable type of happiness. There is a stall for confidence, one for wealth, one for orgasm, one for quality friendship and so on. My darling says that he has been in his box for so long that he has forgotten who his friends were so we buy him a couple of friendship packages on the way. I ask him how he came to be in his box.

‘Oh, it’s one of the most exciting happiness deals you can get,’ he replies. ‘You buy the happiness of fate package and then wait. Inside the box you develop your colour and learn various things like how to blend hope with happiness.’

‘After we are married I’d like to have some children. Is that okay with you?’ I ask him, tentatively, with a seductive little smile.

‘Aaah,’ he replies in his lovely deep growling voice. ‘Yes, I used to have some of those and it didn’t work out, but,’ seeing the frown trying to crease my smooth brow, ‘I am willing to do it again and if that’s what you really want, then we must go to the Happy Offspring stall which is on the way. The celebrant is bound to suggest this anyway so we may as well have a look.’

He is so wise, I think, with my heart bursting and, as we pass a bar selling Amenability cocktails, I realise, with a sense of engulfing joy that we will soon be sharing a drink together.

 

At the Happy Offspring stall the choice is enormous and it takes us some time to understand what is on offer. It is possible, for instance, to choose offspring of various ages so I choose a four-year-old boy with blonde hair and a cute face. He, like all the other offspring, is smiling and giggling at the Happy Happy show playing on a huge television. He’s a greenish colour which seems a perfect mix of my yellow and my fiancee’s blue so we don’t hesitate despite the expense. My blue man wants a girl so we look through the catalogue before roaming around amongst the children. A beautiful girl of about fifteen approaches us with a shy smile. She has a light olive green body, almost mermaidish, and my fiancee is immediately taken with her. He says to me that as she seems past adolescence she will be less troublesome and I immediately see the sense in this. We pay a deposit and tell the children we’ll be back soon.

 

‘Would you like a pre-nuptual drink?’ my fiancee asks and I say ‘Yes!’ We go back to the bar and order cocktails. I have a Slim body and he has an Virility and, like the ice-cream cones, the drinks seem to work almost immediately. I feel my tummy flatten and my collar-bones protrude becomingly. My rather round face narrows slightly and my fiancee immediately notices my beautiful cheekbones (previously hidden). At the same time it is difficult not to notice how my fiancee’s lower parts bulge with desire for me. We smile and sip and chatter about our happy future together and I confide in him that I used to be a worrier. He takes his cue and confides in me that he used to be shy. We both laugh happily at our quirky little pasts and decide, just for fun, to go to the Happiness Cinema around the corner.

 

The movie we choose is one called Nicole and Tom, a beautiful film about a couple’s love for each other. I am moved to happy tears at the way Nicole, being too tall, goes all the way to China to have her legs shortened while Tom simultaneously has his own lengthened. There is an intense scene where Nicole actually donates parts of her tibias to Tom. I whisper to my fiancee who I’ve noticed is quite short that I don’t mind a bit and I see his white teeth flash a reassuring grin in the darkness of the theatre. A moment later he takes my hand and places it warmly between his legs and I let my fingers play happily. The movie leaves us both exhausted and hungry so we go to the nearest restaurant and pay an enormous amount of money for two steaks and a bottle of sparkling wine. The steak comes out, rare and quivering and we both laugh and hoe in, ravenously.

 

On our way to the Happy Marriage stall we notice one called Illicit Happiness and the temptation is too great — we buy some tickets and go into a dark room. It’s a bit of a shock to begin with but my fiancee doesn’t seem fazed at all. He says he’s been here before so I simply follow him. Once my eyes have adjusted to the darkness I see that hundreds of people fill the room. Most are dancing but some are actually making love. I watch one couple engage then disengage and then, almost immediately, engage with other people. I am in the midst of an orgy of sighs and giggles that is irresistible once my sense of surprise subsides. My fiancee and I begin to dance and then he flings me into the arms of a large man who quickly encompasses me in an embrace that leaves me swooning, then flings me back to my fiancee. My laughter rises as I am thrown into yet another man’s arms who whispers ‘Isn’t the anonymity great!’ and, once again I am ravished expertly. I realise, with a sense of elation, that my fiancee is also having a good time and I see his silhouette in the distance, naked and charming, his mouth joined to someone else’s. As I return to him again, he rips my clothes off and I begin to tango. It strikes me that I didn’t know how to tango before and that I am doing it extremely well, so well, in fact, that I am being watched by the crowd. Everyone is screaming with delight at my antics and as I begin to change my steps to a splendid gyration, men and women flock around my thighs and I experience an unspeakable series of pleasures that widen my smile even further.

 

Eventually my fiancee scoops me up into his arms and we collect our clothes at the exit door, get dressed, and re-enter the bright lights of the Happiness Shop. I mention to him that my sister would never approve and for a moment he looks at me with the tiniest bit of concern behind his big smile.

‘There is a special stall for those who need it and it’s right beside the Happy Marriage stall,’ he reassures me. ‘The Dissolving Unhappiness stall is a must, I feel. Yes, I’ve done it myself – several times actually,’ he adds, seeing my confusion. ‘One token will get you five sessions and all you do is simply hook up to a big computer and then list your five most pressing, previous unhappinesses and the doctor presses a few buttons and gets rid of them. Now what’s this about your sister?’

‘Oh, I don’t actually want to get rid of her!’ I laugh. ‘I just don’t want to feel so guilty.’

‘C’mon,’ he says, guffawing, ‘You definitely need some buttons pressed!’

 

I am fascinated by the Dissolving Unhappiness set-up; the computer is enormous and nearly fills the room. Its screen is divided into hundreds of screens and, as I watch, tiny clips of people arguing with — even hitting — each other are suddenly replaced by scenes of love and joyful reconciliations between those same people. Some of the tiny screens, however, simply flicker and then go blank.

‘What do the blank screens mean?’ I ask my beautiful blue fiancee.

‘Oh, that means the unhappiness has been totally eradicated, cancelled, gone and this includes the person who has made you unhappy. Isn’t it fantastic!’ he replies, then whispers, ‘I did it to my ex-wife.’

‘Can I choose, though? I mean my sister isn’t that bad. That’s the problem really; she’s not bad at all, she’s good. She’s such a good person it makes me feel bad. Could I put that on my list?’

‘Of course! Problem solved! Did you hear that, Doc?’ he says. I turn around and there is a moustached man behind me with one of those beatifying smiles you see in some paintings from the Renaissance. He takes my left hand and directs it to a “delete” key. ‘But what am I deleting?’ I ask, a bit alarmed but still with that warm and toasty, yellow ice-cream feeling.

‘You are deleting all previous unhappinesses. It’s as simple as that,’ he says, lovingly and presses my fingers to the key. The small screen with my sister’s anxious face on it disappears and I feel an enormous weight lift and the idea of a life of freedom insinuates itself into my psyche. And the happiness — well, the happiness is indescribable.

 

I give my fiancee a look of gratitude and we go to pick up our lovely, new children. They are clamouring happily for MacDonald’s Happy Meals and I smile at my fiancee who winks and whispers, ‘We can always trade them in later if they don’t work out.’

‘What about having one of our own?’ I ask, hesitantly, revealing a hidden wish, and he pats my hand reassuringly and says, ‘Of course, my darling, whatever you want. Beginning from scratch sometimes works quite well and to impregnate you would be an absolute pleasure.’ He says this with such feeling that I wonder if sarcasm is an allowable part of happiness or if, perhaps, I’m imagining it. But my longing to bear my own child surpasses my slight suspicions and I squeeze his hand with excitement. He returns the squeeze and says, ‘You know, my love, I feel that I am much older than you. Have you noticed?’

‘Oh, well, I suppose I have noticed but it doesn’t matter to me at all,’ I reply, smiling into his deep blue eyes.

‘I was wondering,’ he continues, ‘if, perhaps, in light of your desire to have our own child, I should visit the Youth Forever stall. I’ve heard that there’s a pill that regenerates youthfulness and apparently, if that doesn’t work, it is possible to freeze-dry whatever youth is left and incubate it for a later date. I’m not sure how this works exactly but it’s certainly tempting now that I’ve found you.’

‘Actually, I found you,’ I say, giggling, ‘but that does sound absolutely fascinating. What a good idea!’ His smile of relief touches me and I am reminded of Nicole and Tom.

‘Of course the pill would be available to you too, if you wanted,’ he says, stroking the little crease in my otherwise smooth forehead. I take his point.

‘Yes, of course,’ I say, smilingly, ‘Oh, I just love the way you think ahead.’

 

The Youth Forever stall has an extremely long queue and our tickets show that we are number 212 so we decide to do some shopping and come back. We buy each other a last little pre-nuptial gift. He buys me a small golden container of beauty and I buy him a twinkling packet of personality. We exchange our gifts tenderly and notice immediately the improvements. Then we return to pick up our Youth Forever tablets and, finally, our two, problem-free offspring who follow us, frolicking like happy little lambs. My heart swells with such a feeling of everything-being-exactly-right that, once again, I give a great leaping shout of joy.

 

Then, holding happy hands, my darling and I approach the back of the Happiness Shop. By now, the happiness celebrant is smiling and beckoning to us. He asks for the money – $50,000 — and I look at my fiancee expectantly. He shakes his head, grinning sheepishly and I dive into my fluorescent pockets, confidently, remembering the way I felt at the start — that this might not really be me. I dig deep, laughing at my own silliness, but there’s no money left. A flicker of alarm shows in the celebrant’s jolly face and I look around me at my happy family, my happy life, my happy future and, just as I’m about to doubt that any of this is real, a tall, dapper man in a beautiful, black Italian suit taps me on the shoulder.

‘Don’t worry,’ he says, laughing friendlily, ‘Come into my Happy Bank and I’ll give you an overdraft.’

… I emerge from my daydream and flick over to the next page of the newspaper, with the faint sound of laughter reverberating in my head.

Tired of being broke? The path to wealth is easier than you think. Our seminars guarantee your success…

Marjana Gaponenko

Overload #30

Neue Texte

Abschiedszimmer

Wahrhaftig zeigt sich das Gesicht des Nichtmehrgeliebten. Im Augenblick, wenn ich es streife, zerfleischt der Wolf, das Gedächtnis, sich selbst und es kommt ein Wölflein zur Welt. Wahrhaftig ist dein Gesicht, du mein Nichtmehrgeliebter. Ich streife und streife es und vergesse dich, du, den ich unzählige Male in meinen unzähligen Träumen malte. Tränen, die ich verbarg, um dich nicht zu betrüben, wiegen sich nun hinter dem Fenster.
Wir treten als abschiedliche Rosen zum Fenster. Als ungeschickte langstilige Rosen, die vom Leben nichts wissen. Wir treten ganz nah zum Fenster und die Tränen drücken sich an festes dünnes Glas, wie Besucher in einem Gefängnis ihre Stirne an die Strine der Gefangenen pressen. Dein Gesicht, Geliebter, entflieht meinen Netzen, meinen sanften langsamen Händen und es findet den Weg zurück zu sich selbst. Es wird fremd, fremd, wie alle Dinge im All sind. Denn alle Dinge, die wir zu besitzen glauben, gehören immer sich selbst. So kam und geht nun das Gesicht, das ich liebte. Es geht und ich laufe ihm nach, es streifend und vergessend. Dein Gesicht… Geliebter… nicht mehr…

 

Mir träumte:
Ich bin allein in einer Stadt.
Ein Nestling stürzt im Schlummer in den Hut des Bettlers.
Die zarten Ohren der Angst flattern überall.

Einsame Frauen.
Ich sah sie von fern.
Als sie vorbeigingen, glimmte ihr Lächeln auf,
wie altes süßes Heu.

Das Pflaster war schwarz und naß.
Einsame Frauen rasten und rutschten wie toll.
An manchen klebten Kastanienblätter.

Mich peitschten die zarten Ohren der Scham,
als ich als Mann verkleidet Rosen schenkte:
jeder Frau, die ich in dieser dunklen Stadt traf.
Dabei sprach ich: schöne Frau, ich liebe dich…
Leb wohl, schöne Frau…

 

Gut jetzt Witze zu machen. Wir lachen Tränen und umarmen uns fest.
Ich rede gerne und viel darüber und glaube nicht wirklich daran:
«Als alte Frau werde ich bestimmt wie ein Kind sein,
und es wird mir das Herz rasch wie in der Kindheit wachsen».

Wir werden vergehen wie Kapitäne.
Vor den Häusern der Freunde werden wir
uns nicht mehr drängen und die warmen Katzen streicheln
werden wir nicht mehr. Nicht mehr lang und wir sind Gleiches und für immer getrennt.

 

Sommerhaus

Schön ein warmer Vogel in deiner Brusttasche zu sein…
In der Nacht knarrten die Fenster im Wind.
Du standst auf und du gingst
mit schnellen Schritten durch das Zimmer.

Wie ein Greis murmeltest du auf der Treppe.

Bald kamst du zurück,
als hättest du den Wind beruhigt.

Ela Fornalska

Overload #30

Melbourne in Graz

Gedichte, Tagebücher und Fotos

Wäre mein Haus in Flammen,
Würde ich diese Dinge retten:

Gedichte
Tagebücher
Fotografien

Sie sind für mich Zeltboden
Zukunft, Präsens, Vergangenheit

Sie sammeln mich
in der Realität.

Das unersetzliche Papier
wohnt in einer leicht entzündbaren Welt
für immer ist nicht sicher.

 

Hält mich fest
Flüstert
Mein lieber Freund
glänzt wie die Sonne
deine schone Haut
ist entzückend …

Mein leeres Herz weint
Dunkler Winterhimmel
Tote Frau bin ich
Sie ist die traurige Göttin
Der süße Kuss macht es sanft und besser …

 

ich schlendere durch den Garten
und finde einen Stern in der Nacht
er scheint wie ein Diamant
ein Pfirsich von dir
ein Geschenk …

der Mond ist nackt mit mir
ich träume von meinem Mann

Trafford Fehlberg

Overload #30

First Works

The Scream

The scream ripped apart the darkness of the night. It was the same scream that had her sit bolt upright in bed. The same that had awakened in her a burning desire to protect. It was a child’s scream, an infant scream of pure terror and it had driven her out of her house and into the forest, searching. For what, she did not know but she couldn’t ignore the pure terror in that voice. It tore the night again and she started to run, the catch in the voice spoke of inexcusable pain, she didn’t know what she could do to help but to sit and do nothing would have been murder.

She ran, stopping was not an option, the noise drew her, called her, was in her blood. Soon she had left the open path and ran on through the undergrowth, snags caught her. She fell. Thorns scratched her. Branches bruised her, but that scream still called her, sometimes it was close, sometime to her left, but always moving, always in front of her somewhere. It was inside her head now, pulsing with her heart, keeping her moving, how could anyone do this to someone so young? It was getting louder now, and changing slightly, but she didn’t notice, how could she? She was obsessed with chasing, finding, helping.

Then the silence fell like a doona on a freezing winters night, muffling all. Her chase ended with the noise and she stood in a glade, panting so hard she almost broke a rib. The silence was almost as daunting as the scream, it to worked it way inside her, infecting her and soon her heart wasn’t beating from the chase. Where were the natural forest sounds she had grown up with and loved? They were always there, in the background, but not tonight, it was different, tonight there was nothing. As she stood listening to the blood pound in her ears she felt something on her arm. Hoping against hope it was a simple, natural spider she brushed at her arm. It didn’t go away, as the touch got firmer so grew her panic, she tore at her arm, but there was nothing to stop, and only her already tattered dressing gown was moved.

The touch turned into a caress and she realised she knew what it was, a hand, a child’s hand, and the voice that had once been a scream giggled. It felt along her arm and was soon joined by another, and another, and another. They were swarming over her, touching, fondling, grabbing, tearing at her clothes, the giggling became frenzied, a crazed cackle which spoke of a lust for pain. They covered her from head to toe but were as invisible as they were real. The scream that broke the night this time was no child’s.

She fled. Terror had gripped her as she started to sweet blood. She flew through the trees, her adrenalin giving her feet wings. As she ran the hands started to lag behind, more and more started to drop off her body which only fuelled the inferno of her feelings, they were back there, somewhere. As the last hand fell off her body her muscles chucked in the towel and she collapsed. She willed herself to crawl to a nearby log; every brush from a stalk of grass froze the fluid in her spine. She curled up as tight as a slate bug and blocked out everything but the tremors of her heart with her knees covering her face.

“Shona,” whispered the singsong voice of child, searching, feeling, for her. “Shona, come and play. Why wont you help me? Why do you hide?”

Her voice caught as she heard this, how did the … thing … know her name? Why did it call her? What did it want? The questions were in vain because she shielded away from any answers, ignorance was easier than the truth. She lay hunched by the log, hoping and praying that it was over, but for a second time she felt the light touch of the first hand. A finger, just a small one, trailed its way up inside her leg, every muscle of hers that it touched tensed as hard as rock. Soon the frenzy of the hands was back, along with squeals of delight, she thrashed around trying to escape but only succeeding in bruising herself. She had to run again, to get away, her muscles burned from the acid being created but she pushed herself and managed a stumbling run. But this time the hands had her scent. They clung to her and the innocent questions or laughter of the child was always in her ear. Adrenalin rose to new heights and she drove herself onwards but nothing would make them let go. They started to push and pull her, causing her to stumble and with one mighty effort they tossed her aside.

As she landed she felt pain. It wasn’t normal pain, it was so intense it cleared her senses and slowed time. The branch passed through her back, tearing skin and muscles, breaking her spine, squiring her lungs and reappearing through her chest. With cleared senses she saw two beautiful green eyes smiling down at her. The last thing she felt was the hands, feeling her wound, exploring it. She died; glad to be rid of her horror. Whatever it was stayed quiet for a while, listening, then satisfied, they left in search of someone else who would play.

Ever wanted to help someone but were too afraid?
Do you feel bad?
Maybe you’re just lucky…

A Story not about …

He didn’t know why. When had also slipped through the greasy fingers of his mind. How was lost in the hazy mist of utter lack of knowledge. Who may have been slinking around somewhere in his subconscious, but Piaz suspected that it had also deserted. What, however, was painstakingly obvious. Painstakingly seemed quite an appropriate word choice, because Piaz happened to be in incredible amounts of pain and also staked to his bed. He was also missing his pancreas, which seemed to explain the pain, but if Piaz’s job had taught him anything it was to never suspect the obvious. Actually, to be brutally honest, that was a lie, Piaz was an accountant and he was always dealing with the routine, but he liked to pretend that he was a private detective or something.

Piaz decided that it was time to get things under control. He was going to act manly and escape. He looked at his options and chose the best one, which was crying like a girl and hoping that someone would hear him. This happened to both succeed and fail, sure, people heard him, but who is going to stop and help a middle age, overly plump, homophobic, balding accountant who had been thwacked with the ugly stick when born, especially when he’s blubbering like a pansy? Piaz realised this wasn’t working so he untied his left hand, pulled out his mobile, called a random number to get help, realised he could untie himself, did so, and promptly hung up.

This story is not about Piaz. It is not about what happened to him, or even about who happened to cause what happened to happen. It is not, and this may come as a surprise to you, about sitting in a log cabin on the slopes of Whistler, sipping pinna-coladas, eating veal parmigiana and watching the fire. It is, however, about that certain phone call that Piaz made and its consequences.

Licola groaned a cough and her body made exactly the type of frothing gurgles that make you want to slowly back away, then turn and piss bolt, from the person excreting those noises. This was terribly bad for the Golden Flamingo, which happened to be a snobby restaurant bordering on the less fashionable and more seedy areas of Sydney. Not surprisingly, the materialistic high and mighty’s of today’s society tended not to venture from their manicured suburbs into these areas, most probably because their Monaro’s would have quickly received some new racing stripes with the help of a rather annoyed bum and a key. This, combined with the fact that the dredges of society who had ‘accidentally’ stumbled onto some money, possibly from the wallet of a Monaro driving capitalist, were afraid of the shine in the silverware, meant that the Golden Flamingo didn’t get what you’d call a solid clientele. That was until they employed Licola as the head chef. Now you wouldn’t really be able to say that they received a clientele, for the simple reason that Bill the blind and deaf regular was not plural, and he was the only one ever to eat there.

Licola didn’t have many friends, but she did have a pet turtle. She didn’t have any friends because she rarely met anyone, for a simple reason. This reason is roughly the same as the reason why a sexy, fragrant, demure warthog with raunchily long and smooth legs doesn’t have any friends. People simply tend to run away from creatures such as these two. On the odd occasion when some poor and unsuspecting victim stumbled into Licola’s restaurant they were quickly sent running (often to the nearest psychiatric ward) by some noises that eked nastily from her body. Not even her family liked her; they were all beautiful people and thought that she was a throwback from way down the ancestral line, possibly even further than the apes. The only reason she still had the turtle is that turtles are moderately slow and cant run away very well, and anyway, she had him in a cage.

Licola didn’t seem to get many phone calls, so the fact that she had a mobile phone would have seemed weird to her friends, if she had any, but she like the thought of people being able to call her and listen to her abusive answering machine. She also liked to play snake. On one particular day when Licola was concocting one of her more deadly recipes for Bill, who was building up quite an immune system, her phone rang. Licola’s nerves had simply not been conditioned for this kind of thing and she jumped, accidentally slicing off part of her hand with a custom-made cheese grater. This made her angry and she started to attack the small, and to be politically correct, North Korean dishwasher with a rolling pin. She had good aim and most of her shots were connecting but with one miss she sent the pot of whatever it was she was cooking, and I use that term very loosely, out the window.

The food decided that it had had enough of this and that it could probably sue Licola with something to do with safety, health or terrorist activity so it crawled of in the direction of the nearest sewer to try and find a good lawyer. After a while of trudging it found its way into the cities water supply, where it killed the chemicals that were supposed to kill the other nasty bugs and proceeded to infect everyone in the city with Ythehelldidntidrinkbottledwater, and they all died a slow and painful death. Except Bill, who had eaten more potent things cold, from a can.

What’s the moral of this story???
Mobiles will be the death of us all, unless you eat really really bad cooking.

Chris Duncan

Overload #30

The Winner of the 2002 Publishers Clearing House Sweepstakes

Sam Hayter, through an absurd amount of effort dedicated to a task so without import, manages to drop a single salt crystal wedged precariously between a grubby thumb and index finger into a glass of warm water: the star performer for the wriggling ray of sunshine that has found its way through the mostly closed Martha Stewart curtained window above the kitchen sink. Sam rests his head on his folded arms plopped like a couple of pieces of skinny firewood atop the card table/ kitchen table. Sam, grinning, is watching the execution of the crystal with drug-induced stupidity. He watches it disintegrate, seemingly without pain, creating an ethereal warping of space, a visible absence where earlier there had only been absence. Sam chuckles, and his fifteen-year-old blond-white hair vibrates stupidly. Sam drools. His eyes are dilated brown vortexes, sucking the glass of water eagerly into a world of machine-gun firing neurons, hijacked by three tiny squares of Daffy-Duck paper. The acid disintegrates much earlier that morning under Sam’s tongue, protruding from a cherubic set of red lips, O-shaped in recognition of the seriousness of the jack-off session proceeding farther south. Getting high and jacking off: a summation as good as any of Sam’s young life. And cutting. He needs to cut himself.

Wanda Hayter, forty, thrice divorced, and a board certified massage therapist, leaves her trailer and Sam, her only acknowledged son, to fend for themselves yesterday (Friday) morning. Johnny, one of Wanda’s regular customers, comes over Thursday night for a session that, as usual, begins with Wanda telling Sam to “Go play in the road or something, shithead.” After an hour, Sam returns and oddly, the session between Johnny and Wanda is still in full swing. Usually, Wanda’s clients are in and out in less than an hour.

“Mom must like this one,” Sam thinks, meandering to the fridge and taking a gulp of barely in-date whole milk straight from the half-gallon jug. Just before turning on the TV to catch a rerun of Magnum P.I., Sam hears his mother scream out with, he guesses, joy: “OHMYGODFUCKYEAH, JOHNNY!”

Sam rolls his eyes and is glad to muffle the ecstatic wailings of his mom with the comforting hum of T.C.’s chopper and Magnum’s Ferrari. He needs to pee, but the bathroom is next to his mom’s massage parlor/ bedroom and, given the current amount of activity emanating from the business end of the trailer, Sam really has no desire to be closer to the action than necessary. Sam jacks up the volume of the TV, sticks in a bag of popcorn in the microwave, waits for a commercial, and steps out of the sliding glass door in the kitchen to the wooden, dilapidated excuse for a deck attached to the trailer but barely. He yawns, pushes his beltless pants halfway down his thighs (Sam enjoys the feel of the night air on his bare ass); his body is handsomely silhouetted under the star canopied night. Sam urinates into a plastic, K-Mart brand, toddlers’ swimming pool, crumpled on the ground and filled with dirty rainwater, a McDonald’s Big Mac wrapper, and an obviously used and recently discarded condom. “Some people,” says Sam out loud, his tone one of repulsion. However, he’s oblivious to the fact that pissing off a deck with one’s penis exposed for God and the world to see is just as much a violator of societal mores as flinging a used condom anywhere but in a trashcan. He shakes off the last couple of drops urine, yanks up his pants, and steps back inside the trailer to hear his mom exclaim, “INTHEASSOHYEAHBABY!” Sam slaps himself in the face, hard, numbing the grotesque reality of his life. He gingerly withdraws the steaming bag of popcorn from the microwave, grabs a Rite-Aid brand quasi Dr. Pepper–Dr. Thunder–from the fridge and sits on the couch, watching Magnum sit in his kayak, paddling in a calm Pacific, and Sam wished more than anything in the whole entire goddamned freaking world that he were Magnum P.I…or T.C…or Rick…or even Higgins–anybody but himself. He’d even trade places with one of those stupid Dobermans that are always chasing Magnum.

Sam takes a couple of bites of popcorn, swallows a mouthful of Dr.Thunder, burps, and then digs out a bone handled Case pocketknife stolen from K-Mart (the only place he and his mom ever shop) from a pant’s pocket. He flips open a blade and without taking his eyes from Magnum’s muscular hairy chest (of which he is envious), Sam guides the stainless steel tip of the blade into his left forearm and pulls toward the ceiling, as if the blade were the zipper of his fake Member’s Only Jacket. Up up up, Sam provokes the Case up his arm, slicing a freckle in two in the process. The cut isn’t deep, only deep enough to barely seep blood, just deep enough so that you can look at the arm and know that the blade had been there. Without removing his fixed gaze from the TV, Sam folds the blade and sticks the Case deep in one his front pockets and stares with wonder as the scene of Magnum paddling dissolves into a flashback of Magnum as a little kid, his father’s oversized navy issued watch dangling from his wrist. The young Magnum is saluting his dead father at a military funeral a la JFK Jr’s poignant salute to his fallen daddy.

Early the next morning, a laughing, black spandex wearing Wanda, arm in arm with Johnny, emerges from the message parlor/ bedroom. Sam is asleep on the couch, the TV still blaring, when Wanda whispers in his right ear, “All yours for the weekend, shithead. Love ya bunches.”

Wanda kisses Sam on the forehead, reaches into her purse and leaves a twenty with a Post-it Note sticking to it lying on the card table. The Post-it Note reads in wild cursive: “Gone to Crazyhorse! B BACK MON!” Crazyhorse is the name of a campground in Gatlinburg reputed (and disputed) as having the world’s largest (longest? widest? steepest?) waterslide. Sam doesn’t hear the motorcycle leave the trailer, carrying the couple to the Smoky Mountains for a weekend of drinking Bud and fucking…pointless, ponders Sam, when they could easily drink Bud and fuck at the trailer for free.

* * *

Sometimes you wanna go where everybody knows your name sings the TV two hours after Sam has watched the salt crystal dissolve. Sam Malone and Woody are stationed behind the bar. Sam Hayter, in his altered state, believes himself to be sitting between Norm and Cliff. Sam sees himself as one of the cronies, one of the regulars. When he enters the bar, everybody yells, “Sam!” just as they do for Norm. He’s one of the gang. Hey, thinks Sam, me and Sam Malone have the same first name! As this notion enters Sam’s discombobulated brain, he starts to giggle, and he sees himself inside the Magnavox only inches away from his wasted frame, sitting at the Cheer’s bar saying, “Hey, Sammy! I’m a Sam, too. I’m Sam I am. You know: green eggs and Sam. Get it!? Sam instead of ham. You know: Dr. Shit’s book–I mean Seuss–Dr. ShitSeuss!”

Sam drools and cackles on the carpet. He laughs hysterically. He is naked. He has harmless slash marks all over his body, paper-cuts and bee-stings–nuisances more than real honest to God wounds. Sam’s thin body, borderline albino in its artic starkness, looks as if someone had taken a red Sharpie and haphazardly drawn all over his body; there’s even a vertical red slash, thin and precise, dissecting the top epidermal layer of his penis, unclean, and covered with a two day supply of come residue clinging to its skin like steam to a mirror.

The phone rings.

Sam is still buried in the comedy playing in the TV in front of his eyes. He sees himself bantering with Carla and eating pretzels. “Woody,” says Sam Malone. “Give little Sammy here a drink.”

Sam giggles, oblivious to the ringing phone. “Yeah, Woody! Sam wants a drink–not Big Sammy, silly, Little Sammy, you know, ya goof ball: me! I’m a Sam, too. I’m Sam I am! Woody? Hahaha! I’ve got a woody, Woody! Get it: a woody, a boner!”

On the twenty-sixth ring, Sam grabs the phone and says through slurred speech, “Hay-lo.”

“Is this the residence of Wanda Hayter?” inquires an important sounding voice, probably a fucking bill collector.

“Mom’s in Crazyhorse,says Sam, staring at the kaleidoscopic colors of Sam Malone’s sweater; the colors are swirling like a tornado and they’re so beautiful.

“Pardon?” says the voice on the phone.

“Crazyhorse. Uh oh, um, if you’re with AT&T she’s got Real Failure like my Aunt Woozy. That’s what mom said to say the next time one of you sonsabitches called,” says Sam, blitzed, and staring at his fingertips, at the minute capillaries just underneath the surface, at the blood nets and streams morphing every stretching second into mighty torrents of gushing red rivers.

“Um…is this Ms. Wanda’s Hayter’s residence?” asks the voice with a tone turning slightly peevish.

“Huh?” asked a fucked-up Sam, who has in the past eight hours ingested another eight tabs of Daffy-Duck acid, contributing only in part to his bodily mutilation. “This is Sammy Hayter, and, uh, the check’s in the mail, MOTHERFUCKER! Hahaha! My mom’s in the hospital with Real Failure. You get that? Wait a minute: are you with Sprint or AT&T? HEY! JUST WAIT A FUCKING MINUTE! Mom doesn’t even carry long distance anymore. She buys them calling cards from the lobby of that Perkin’s Restaurant off exit seven going toward Bristol.”

Sam changes expression. He is perplexed, but not alarmingly so. Sam’s eyes glassily reflect Sam Malone’s giant laughter. “If you aren’t with Sprint or AT&T, who are you, uh, with? MCI? Who is this? This and piss. Hmm, this and piss. I’m a poet, and I by-God know it!”

Sam stares at the gigantic holes in the receiver’s mouthpiece. He moves the receiver farther from his mouth, afraid that he may fall in one of the cavernous death traps threatening to suck him in and kill him. He possibly could be disemboweled during the fall by the treacherous, knife-welding eagles sure to be on the attack.

Ike, the confused man with whom Sam is speaking, furrows his brow in confusion. Ike works as a people-finder for Publishers Clearing House and is simply trying to determine if their next multi-million dollar winner, a Ms. Wanda Hayter, is going to be at home on Monday. On Monday at 7:30 PM, tucked between game-shows airing on the east coast, the Sweepstakes team will arrive in a van, a reporter with his camera crew will emerge and bounce up to the front door, ring the doorbell, and the reporter will shove a microphone in the face of some lucky winner and proclaim happily that “Mr. or Mrs. or Ms. Soandso, you’re the winner of the Publisher’s Clearing House Sweepstakes!” The telecast is supposed to be live. One of Ike’s job duties is to make sure that the lucky someone is home to answer the door. Ike is to make sure that the lucky winner isn’t naked. Ike is to make sure that the lucky winner looks surprised when the doorbell rings. Ike is insurance, baby.

Ike, known affectionately among co-workers as “Wife-beater” for no other reason than the color of his skin–black–and his sharing the same first name with Ike Turner, world famous wife beater, turns to his immediate boss, Lewis Epstein, and says, covering the phone’s mouth piece with a cupped hand, “Louie, did you give me the right number.”

“Five-five-five-forty-two-oh-two, Beater,” answers a bald Louis, employee at Publisher’s Clear House the past twenty-four years.

“Excuse me, sir,” says Ike to Sam. “Is this five-five-five-four-two-zero-two?”

Sammy, growing increasing afraid of the ever-widening holes in the telephone receiver, says, “Our telephone has only been disconnected because the government didn’t send the check on time like they said they would–MOTHERFUCKERS!”

“I didn’t say anything about your phone being disconn–”

“I need a parachute. If I fall into one of these holes, I’m so shit out’a luck–”

“I’m trying to reach Wanda Hayter–Hi-ter or Hate-er, I’m not sure which. If I’ve got the wrong number I’m sor–”

“Mom’ll be back on Monday,” says Sam abruptly before yanking the phone’s cord from the wall and flinging the receiver across the room before one of the widening mouths can swallow him whole, like that octopus in the bible that ate that submarine.

* * *

Sam’s sad. Sam is trying to laugh at Garfield, but he can’t. Sam, too, tried earlier to laugh at Born Loser but to no avail. The only thing about the Sunday comics that Sam Hayter finds even remotely amusing is the space murdered by the strips themselves. The very frames of the comic’s strips shoot the emptiness of the delicious void the finger; the void is that nothingness that Sam can’t articulate, but for which he longs. To sum up: Sam wants to die.

For Sad Sam, Daffy-Duck has run out of luck, leaving our self-mutilating, masturbating anti-hero of this tale stuck with a slothful tick-tocking time, dripping slower than a leaky faucet. Acid kills time: everybody knows that. Sam, with the acid losing its punch, is alone with himself and the rank and dank trailer in which every object withers and wilts under the moisture and heat of poverty, ignorance, and desperation–all expressed and more easily classified under the umbrella category known as FUCKED. Nobody can spread his or her legs like members of FUCKED. Wanda, a member of FUCKED since she was fucked as an eight year old by her own father (also a member of FUCKED since the day he was forced as a four-year-old to ingest a meal of honest to God gruel, flour and water, looking like a bowl of come, because that’s all there was to eat) was as FUCKED as FUCKED can be. Members of FUCKED beget other members of FUCKED quite easily, and Sam, our fucked up little hero is in the hinterland between SCREWED and FUCKED, but a member of neither at the moment, is disturbing close in proximity to that wonderful club, better and more esteemed than FUCKED or SCREWED or LAMBASTED or STUPID (of which we all are members) known as WASTED. Many members of WASTED are the taints and tweeners of human anatomy and society respectively. Taints and tweeners could’a been somebody worth a shit: a Shakespeare-type or the discoverer of a cure for AIDS or even, if anything, a carbon cutout but moderately happy suburbanite; but, being in the taint of existence, they must flop like a trout on a stringer being carried to Judas’ pickup truck. The people of FUCKED must evaporate and disintegrate, just like Sam’s salt crystal in water and the squares of time-death known as the extended come, or the Technicolor OZ, or the eternal giggle, or the hand thrown over the shoulder by Jesus, or Buddha, or LSD, or Ecstasy, or Psilocybin, or an eternal round of golf at Pebble Beach, or a good cry.

Sam’s sad, and it’s early Sunday morning, and he’s not high anymore. Sam takes out the Case, flings open a blade, turns on the tube to a rerun of The A-Team, and just as B.A. and Murdock are about to kill one another, Sam plunges the knife a half-inch into his forearm. Sam stares at the blade doing nothing. He waits. Nothing. Nothing. And then, finally, there it is: a pool of blood, dark and velvety, rushing to surround the Visigoth, as if each iron rich cell were a teenaged wasteland, rushing for the rock group who’ll tell them who they are, what they are; many don’t make it to the music. Many get their necks broken, their backs broken, their spirits broken. The picture of Sam’s hunched body, staring with glazed eyes at his arm, could be the cover shot for a magazine celebrating the white trash Zeitgeist of southwest, Virginia and upper east Tennessee. Sam’s a taint, dangling precariously on the tightrope separating shit and come, and he’s not FUCKED or SCREWED but by the grace of God and the devil of capitalism and dumb fucking luck, he might avoid the sentence of WASTED and end up being in that club endeared by all: LOADED.

The phone rings only a half-ring before Sam grabs it and barks, “Mom, when are you coming home?”

Ike responds, “Excuse me. I’m looking for one, er, I’m looking for a lady by the name of Wanda Hayter. I think I spoke with you the other day.”

Sam watches Murdock prance crazily around B.A., all the while listening to B.A. scream: “You a fool, Murdock! You a fool!”

Ike says, “Sir? Still there?”

“Huh?” answers Sam. “Mom uses calling cards she buys in the lobby of Perkin’s Restaurant, that one off exit seven going toward Bristol. We don’t carry long distance anymore. Mom told me to tell you she’s suffering from Real Failure and that she’d call you–”

“Son, I’m just calling–inquiring, really–to see if Wanda might be home tomorrow evening, from, say, six o’clock on? You see, to cut to the chase, your mom’s won a lot of money. Son–what’s your name?”

“Sam Hayter,” answers Sam, turning off the tube. “I’m Sam Hayter. What did Mom win?”

“Son–Sam–your Mom has won a lot of money–A LOT OF MONEY. If she’s at home, let me speak with her for a moment. Um, you’ve heard of the Publisher’s Clearing House Sweepstakes, haven’t you?” says Ike.

“Is that where you get twelve CD’s for a penny? That’s bullshit, man. I–”

“Sam, can you hold on just a minute? Please don’t hang up?” says Ike.

“Alright,” says Sam, turning the TV back on.

Ike sighs and rubs his temples. “This dumb kid–I think he’s her son or something–he’s a fucking retard, Louie. And you know I don’t throw around the word retard loosely with my family history,” says Ike, once again cupping a large hand over the mouthpiece of the phone.

“Beater,” says Louis, “death, taxes, and dumb motherfucking trailer trash winning lotteries and our sweepstakes: things you can count on. Just tell the dumb shit that he and his mommy can ditch the government cheese next week. Tell him that we’ll be knocking on his trailer door tomorrow, and that maybe he and his mommy should abstain from incest just long enough for us to get them on camera, crying, and screaming their goddamn heads off, ‘I cant believe it! I can’t believe it!’

Ike smirks. “Kid,” he says. “I just want to know if your mother’s going to be home tomorrow evening. Am I going slowly enough for you? Tomorrow evening? Wanda has won a lot of money. OK, kid? You getting’ any of this?”

B.A. has Murdock in a full nelson and Sam is laughing so hard he can’t breathe. Sam loves it when B.A. and Murdock squabble, because Sam knows they love each other. The really do. Big Black assed mean motherfucker B.A. and daffy, quacky and lilly white Murdock: LOVE. They are LOVE and so funny while expressing it. Sam laughs and laughs at the antics of the television duo. Ike screams into the phone: “SON? YOU THERE? SON? GODDAMNIT! DO YOU HEAR ME?”

Ike slams down the phone, digs into a pocket and starts sucking wildly on a cherry Lollipop. “FUCK!” screams Ike. “FUCK FUCK FUCK! I hate this shit. I DO NOT–I repeat–I do not get paid enough for this shit.”

Louie, playing a bowling game on his computer wristwatch answers, “Well, you made forty-two last year, and I cleared fifty-five–I’d say we’re both obscenely overpaid for what we do–mainly tracking down dipshits all over the place, so we can give them free money.”

Ike pounds his hands on the desk. “Well, they don’t pay me enough to deal with Virginia dumb shits.”

Louie, still bowling, says, “Wife Beater: dumbshits are everywhere. They’re in every nook and cranny. Dumbshits make the world go round. Dumbshits pay our salary. Dumbshits pay everybody’s salary.”

“Deep thoughts by Louie. Just what I need,” says Ike, through a chuckle. “Well, I’ve got to go early to Virginia. I can’t show up at Wanda Hayter’s goddamned trailer, and she’s off nailing her brother or something.”

“That’s true,” answers Louie, his watch beeping, indicating the end of his game. “What do you know, I finally broke one hundred.”

* * *

Sam misses school. One more month, and he’ll be back. If Sam could kill a month with his bare hands, it’d be August, so heavy and hot, and wet, like carpet with soup spilled on it in it fuck it you can’t clean that shit up. August is Wanda’s slowest month. The weather’s too hot to fuck. August is a shitty month. Sam sits in the floor, naked and self-mutilated, his stomach gnawing and gnashing and gnarling. He’s very hungry. Daisy knocks a half-knock on the trailer’s front door and steps inside. “Jesus Christ!” she says, seeing Sam’s sad body.

Daisy sits on the couch, her butt perched on the edge. She runs her hands through Sam’s dirty hair, sticky and oily. She thinks, He needs to brush his teeth comb his hair I love him this boy sitting here all hurt it’ll be a miracle if he isn’t dead by twenty a wife-beater a weirdo freak axe-murderer I love him this boy my boy his cuts every cut a river a torrent rushing into a hurting soul I will ride his boat his ship into a sea of eternal love Jesus my love is cornball shit for this boy this boy who’ll amount to probably nothing everything maybe. Daisy says, “Well, we’re back.”

Sam stands up and sits on the edge of the couch with Daisy, who, two years his senior, lives two trailers down from Sam’s. Daisy lives with her grandmother. Daisy was the product of one of those druggie moms, who sticks their kid in Foster Care because the new boyfriend doesn’t want the baggage, and the grandmother swoops in to say No No No, I’ll take her (or him). I’ll take her. She can live with me. And the grandmother thinks, Here’s a second chance. I’ll do it right this time. I’ll save this one. Daisy’s face is burnt red. Sam can tell she’s been to the beach. She’s thin and usually pale and has grown up with Sam, two trailers apart. She’ll start at the community college next year. She’s wearing a John Prine concert T-shirt. Her fingernails are cut–not bitten–short. She hates makeup. Her hair is simple, pulled back into a ponytail. She’s good.

“Hot?” asks Sam.

“Myrtle Beach sucks. God it sucks. I hate that fucking place. It’s hotter than hell. I missed you the whole time.”

“You’ve only been gone since Friday night,” mutters Sam.

“Well I missed you the entire time.”

“I don’t know why.”

“I do.” Daisy turns to Sam and kisses his lips. “You seriously need to brush your teeth. Jesus, Sam, look at you! Where’s Wanda?”

“With Johnny. They went to Crazyhorse.”

Daisy shakes her head.

Let’s go get in the shower, Daisy thinks. She smiles and traces a finger over a humpbacked multiplicity of red lines strewn between Sam’s left collarbone and nipple. She feels like she’s she gone too fast over a bunch of unnoticed speed bumps. Good God, she thinks. He’s so gone. Let’s take a shower. Let’s take a shower. Let’s take a shower. He’s so gone. She takes Sam by a hand and her clothes magically fall to the floor. They get in the shower, and Daisy doesn’t bother turning on a light. She turns on the water in the shower, letting it run awhile before getting in, allowing the shitty water heater to do its thing. Sam brushes his teeth and spits, all in the dark. He pees, doesn’t flush. Daisy slides in the shower. Sam pushes himself against her, his penis hard against her ass. Sam was hard before he stepped into the shower. Sam was getting hard mid piss. Just the proximity of Diasy’s nakedness, just the thought of it, and his cock is straining, like a hitchhiker thumbing for a ride underneath a rainstorm, one of those summer storms, out of nowhere, a deluge, c’mon and stop goddamnit! but they drive on on on down the goddamned road. Now in the shower, he’s on her and trying to shove himself into her, to fit into her, and it is this second that Daisy understands that sex can be so desperate, so like a drink of water for a thirsting to death man. Sam doesn’t kiss her neck; he isn’t moaning; he simply wants. He wants. He fucking wants. Wait a minute, Wait wait, she says, Wait wait, and she steps out of the shower, goes into Wanda’s room, opens The Drawer, grabs a condom, steps back in the shower, Wait wait Sam says, coming, already coming, must’ve finished it while she was out, and she wipes him off with a washcloth thinking, he’ll last longer anyway, and she slides the condom on his penis still quivering and leaking come, their bodies wet and warm in the water, and he sits down, his ass making a sucking sound on the floor of the shower, and she lowers herself slowly, both hands on his shoulders holding tightly, John Prine’s lyrics bouncing inside her head like flailing children running in a field, arms outstretched, running little airplanes, sometimes colliding, nobody getting hurt, lots of laughing, the kids singing when you’re in my arms I know you’re happy to be there…just as long as I’m with you I’m happy anywhere and a multiplicity of water droplets explode on the rocking backs of Daisy and Sam, killing time the time-honored way.

* * *

Ike has just arrived at Tricities Regional Airport when his cell phone rings. “Ike,” he answers.

“Wife Beater? Ike? I can barely hear ya.”

“Louie? That you?” says Ike.

“Ike?”

“What?”

“I can barely hear ya?” complains Louis.

“This is Ike, Louie, goddamnit! What?!”

“You’re not going to believe this shit.”

Ike opens the driver’s door to his rental, a white Malibu. It has an ashtray full of cigarette butts. Goddamn smokers, Ike thinks.

“Ike? You there?” asks Louie.

“What happened?” responds Ike, getting into the car.

“Wanda–our winner. She’s dead. Motorcycle accident. She and her boyfriend, both of them.”

“You gotta be shittin–”

“I called the brat back–Sam–and his girlfriend answered. She said the cops had just called fifteen minutes before I called. She said they need the son to identify the body. She was crying and shit, Beater, but she sounded like she’s got half a brain you know. This shit is fucking horrible. Beater?”

Ike is shaking his head. “Goddamn, Louie. Dead? Jesus Christ! Dead? Goddamnit! I hate my fucking job.”

Louie’s voice is suddenly hopeful. “However, Beater. This shit can still work. Could even work great. The best. Shit this might be fantastic. POVERTY STRICKEN SON WITH DEAD MOMMY AND NO DADDY WINS MILLIONS FROM PUBLISHER’S CLEARING HOUSE! Does that not sound fucking unbelievable, Beater? C’mon, Beater. Does that not sound delicious? I’m like, give me a goddamned break this is too good–horrible, yes, but good, Beater, oh so goddamned good. Might as well make some chicken soup out’a this chicken shit. That’s what I say. The Coats say go for it. They say get on with it. Ike? Ike?”

“I’m here. Jesus H. Christ. What do you want me to do?”

“Listen, Wife Beater. Sam’s gone–to identify his mom, OK. The girlfriend is with him. Now, uh, Sam’ll be back at their trailer in say, I don’t know, probably four hours. Your responsibility hasn’t changed–well, it’s changed a little–instead of making sure Wanda is there to answer the door, you make goddamned sure that Sam is there to answer the door. Of course, uh, make sure he’s somewhat lucid while he’s on camera, OK. Ya got that, Beater? This could be good. The crew’ll be on sight by–what time is it now–OK the crew’ll be on sight by six thirty tonight. That’s uh, it’s just after six now, that’s a little over twelve hours–”

“I can fucking add Lou–”

“So you need to make sure the kid is in decent shape for the camera. If we could just tape the response, well, well fuck it, we wouldn’t have a goddamn worry, now would we?”

“No, Louie, we–”

“So get him halfway cognizant for his shot on camera, OK, Beater. I’d go ahead and go over to the trailer. I told the girlfriend that you were coming, so she’s leaving the door unlocked for ya. Go make yourself at home and complete the goddamn mission. I feel so freaking discombobulated, Beater. The kid…his mom kicking off, jeez man, ya know. What’s the world coming to anyway? This’ll be great though, you know, Beater. You know.”

“Louie, how’s the kid dong? Sam? Under the circumstances I’m sure he’s all to hell but—”

“That’s the thing–that’s the thing–that’s just it, Beater. The girlfriend said he just started giggling and laughing like a goddamned drunk banshee monkey. Can you believe that? Giggling and laughing when a cop tells you that your mother’s dead. How bazaar is that? Jesus Christ, these kids, ya know, Ike? Anyway, the girlfriend says that Sam is actually highly intelligent, borderline genius, but that he’s high out of his mind on acid. The girlfriend actually has half a clue, Beater. Maybe we should give her the goddamn money. He’s all right. He’s fine and dandy.”

“Is there any fam–”

“Way ahead of you. Nobody. An ex-husband that’s doing time. Her mom’s dead. Her dad–nobody’s knows. Anyway, Sam’s the big winner. Two point three million. He can get a whopper double-wide with that, can’t he, Beater!” says Louis, laughing.

Ike sighs and closes his eyes. “Go to the trailer and wait, right Louie?”

“That’s right. Go to the trailer and wait. You OK, Beater. You sound a little disturbed.”

“Christ, Louie, you just told me that–”

“Yeah, yeah, I know, I know, I’m Mr. Insensitivity. Well, anyway, just wait. And call me. Call me before, uh, nine o’clock. OK? Call me. I’ll need an update for the Coats.”

Ike starts the ignition. “Sure,” he says.

* * *

Sam’s eyes are closed, but he isn’t asleep as is Daisy, her head propped against Sam’s left shoulder, her mouth barely open. A patrol car is whisking them to Gatlinburg, so Sam can identify the body. Mink, the cop who’s doing the driving to the morgue, keeps saying, “Buddy, you OK? We’ll get you there ASAP.”

Mink looks like he’s about twenty, not much older than Sam. “You wanna listen to the radio or something.”

Without opening his eyes, Sam says very clearly, “Officer, that’d be great. If you don’t mind, could we listen to Public Radio?”

Mink, taken slightly off guard by the calmness of Sam’s voice, answers, “Sure, sure. You got it. Classical music, right? That’s what those Public Radio station’s play isn’t it? Classical?”

Sam, holding his eyes as tightly shut as possible, says in a congenial tone, “Yes. If you could play come classical that’d be great. Thanks.”

While Mink is scanning the stations, Sam runs a hand up his T-shirt and places it over his left breast, his right index finger on top of his left nipple. He can feel his heart beating but so slowly. Sam is upside down in that the more a situation worsens, the calmer, the more subdued is his reaction. Sam figures that right now, in the back of this patrol car driving to a morgue where his no doubt highly disfigured mother (burned up? ripped apart? her eyeballs dislodged?) lay on a metal table, naked and stiff, his heartbeat is no more than forty-five beats a minute. Calm. Mink finds Johnson City’s WETS and the sound of Debussy’s “Water Music” drowns the car’s engine.

“You want a biscuit from Hardee’s?” asks Mink. “Cause I’ve got to eat something–if you don’t mind stopping. I’m getting’ the weak shakes, you know. I think I’m hypoglycemic or something. Runs in the family. My dad’s diabetic. But, hey, we’ll go straight on. It won’t bother me a bit to go straight on,” says Mink.

“Go ahead and stop. Mom’s not going anywhere. And thanks,” answers Sam, his eyes still clenched shut.

Mink doesn’t know what to say. “Huh?” he asks.

“Thanks for finding WETS,” answers Sam, opening his eyes. “I contributed fifty dollars to them last year during their fund drive. I stole the money from my mother. If I remember correctly, mom earned the money by blowing this trucker named Riley; he delivers plants to greenhouses or something. He was an old bastard, and he kept telling Mom about how his wife was a member of the Eastern Star and how she was so great and all, but that she had back problems and diabetes and couldn’t fuck anymore and what’s a guy going to do. Mom just laughed and laughed. They didn’t even bother to shut the bedroom door. Mom thought I was asleep, but I wasn’t. Anyway, the next day, I stole that money and sent it to WETS. Mom never even asked me about it. That’s funny, isn’t it, officer? My mother, in her own dead, small way is helping me listen to Prairie Home Companion.”

Jesus Christ, Mink thinks, turning up the music.

“You might want to consider stopping at a McDonalds, officer,” says Sam. “I know you said you wanted Hardee’s but McDonald’s is quite good too and not as crowded.”

“Thanks, kid, uh, call me Mink, OK.”

“Mink?” says Say. “Wow. That’s a fucked up name–no offense intended officer. Mink? Sounds dirty like pussy or something–the word not the actuality.”

“Just shut up back there. I know you’re upset and all…” says Mink.

Sam hugs his skinny legs and shakes his head no when Mink asks him if he wants a biscuit. While Mink is driving and “Watermusic” fills the patrol car and the tires are now cutting through predawn day-night, Sam surreptitiously digs out the Case and opens a blade and without any hesitation, he plunges the knife into his thigh through his jeans, just a half inch or so, just the tip, just the head, poking its way through the wet hole, the entrance to something better. Mink chews with his mouth open. In the rearview mirror all he can see is Sam’s face staring straight ahead, his eyes blank, his expression neutral save for the thinnest of smirks. Sam pulls the knife from his leg, folds the blade, and puts the Case back in his pocket.

“You OK?” asks Mink.

Sam nods his head and opens his eyes for the first time since getting into the patrol car. Sam’s face involuntarily scrunches like a toddler’s. He didn’t want to see, not like this, not now. His mouth opens but there is no sound. His hands shake. His body shakes. He cries. The early morning stars are boring. All the light that fills his brain is so boring, so lame, so K-Mart, so shitty, so dirty, so unexploding, so unromantic, so unspectacular. He cries open-mouthed and without sound, his usual method of crying. He had every intention of not opening his eyes until he saw his dead mom.

* * *

Ike parks his rental Malibu, sighs, farts three times, rechecks the address on a piece of crumpled paper, takes a drink of stale, fizzless Diet Coke, and thinks, Fucking trailers.

He walks through the small, overgrown yard. An emaciated calico cat with dangling tits weaves its way between his legs. “Fuck off,” says Ike. Entering the trailer the smell of White Trash hits him flush in the face: Fried food, cat piss, cat liter, stale milk, dirty carpet, a backed-up septic-tank, spilled goldfish food ground into the fifteen year old carpet, a sink full of dirty dishes, cigarette butts squashed in the unlikeliest of places, empty beer bottles, the wafting latex fuck-stench of condoms tied in knots, hidden not well in clumps of tissue paper, dog shit, coffee grinds, old bananas, piles and piles and piles of unwashed laundry on the floor, in the kitchen, on the couch–shit everywhere.

Ike grabs his cell phone from his pocket and dials up Louis. After a few rings there’s an answer.

“Yeah,” says a tired voice.

“I’m in Mayberry, Louie, and it fucking sucks.”

“Now, now, Beater, it can’t be all that bad. Are you in Virginia or Tennessee?”

Ike laughs. “I’m in both–isn’t that wonderful? I’m in Bristol, which lies on the Virginia Tennessee line. Jesus Christ all these fuckers know how to do is fuck their brothers and sisters, worship Winston Cup Racing and Awesome Bill from Dawsonville, and chew tobaccy. Jesus H. Christ. I’m in Wanda’s trailer right now. I swear to God I need to break out the Luvox or something. I feel like bugs are crawling all over me. You know I’m a clean creak.”

“Except for your women, Beater,” answers Louis.

“What?”

“Nothing.”

“It’s after eight,” says Ike, stepping back outside and heading for the Malibu. “The kid and the girlfriend’ll be back in a couple of hours. I’m going to take a nap in the car, maybe listen to Yanni or something, I don’t know. I’m sure as hell not going back in that shithole. I probably already have fleas.”

Louis laughs. “Well, everything’s looking good. The crew should be there on time. You know what you need to do. Why don’t you get some beauty sleep–you can use all you can get.”

“OK, baby,” says Ike, closing the door to the Malibu and hitting the automatic door lock button, incubating himself in the rental car with its nice leather seating. Ike slides Yanni’s CD “Live at the Acropolis” into the CD player and closes his eyes seeing he knows not why his smiling, fat, and blacker than coal Grandma cooking greens and frying country ham.

* * *

Maurice is a fallen Catholic, maybe thirty-five years old, and wears tiny diamond studs in both elf-like ears. He stands maybe five feet tall. His hair is bleached blond, cut very short, and stiff with styling gel. He wears a Celtic knot ring on his right hand. His tongue is pierced. He is gay. He is Gatlinburg’s medical examiner. He shrugs his shoulders indifferently when Mink asks him how he is doing, not really caring, just making conversation.

Maurice answers, “Heureux je ne suis pas mort.” Glad I’m not dead. Maurice minored in French in college and likes to rattle it off as much as possible, amusing himself with the blank looks of the people to whom he is talking.

“What?” asks Mink.

“Nothing oh nothing. I guess you’re Sam,” says Maurice, his voice accented with kindness and a slight lisp, his words sounding like I geth you’re tham.

Sam doesn’t respond. He’s staring at the speckled VCT industrial strength vinyl flooring. Daisy answers for him. “Yeah, he’s Sam. Sam Hayter.”

Maurice stares at Sam noticing a half-dollar sized bloodstain, now a deep burgundy, on his right thigh. Maurice touches Sam’s shoulder. “Did you hurt your leg?”

Daisy and Mink both look at Sam’s leg.

Sam looks at Maurice and smiles. “Nope–not lately. These are old pants.”

“Well. Okay then,” says Maurice. “Let’s head on back. It’s too late for this stuff–or early.”

Mink, Daisy and Sam follow Maurice through a couple of sets of stainless steel, banged up doors. The smell of rubbing alcohol and Lysol burns Sam’s nose. Daisy pinches her nose closed with a thumb and index finger. Mink sees her and follows suit. Sam lets his nose burn. His eyes burn too, as if he were submerged in a swimming pool, deep and clear, and someone had just dumped in a gallon of gasoline.

Just before going through another set of doors, Maurice stops, clears his throat, and says to Daisy: “Perhaps you should wait out here. Your decision but, you know…”

“Sam?” asks Daisy.

“Stay out here,” Sam answers.

“Definitely,” says Maurice in support of Sam.

“Let’s go on then,” says Mink, motioning for Maurice to go ahead and open the door. Daisy wrings her fingers nervously. Sam’s face actually looks healthy and pink, a contrast to his usually pallid complexion. There is even a slight bounce in his step as he follows Mink and Maurice into the refrigerated room of dead people, the stainless steel door swinging shut behind him. Daisy looks as if she’s going to cry.

The room is cold. While a radio plays a Randy Travis song, Maurice calmly motions for the cop and Sam to follow him. Maurice quickly goes to a wall of doors and pulls out a body. He throws back the part of a blue sheet covering the head. Sam laughs; he can’t believe it. Wanda Hayter is missing her nose. The rest of her head seems to be without injury. Sam keeps laughing. “Son…,” says Mink. “Uh, I know you’re upset and all–”

Maurice interrupts Mink, saying, “It was sheared off.” He offers no follow-up explanation.

Sam is laughing so hard he can barely breathe. Daisy pokes her head in the room. “Sam–you OK? Is it–she–not Wanda? Is Wanda alive?”

Sam stops laughing on a dime. With a serious face he says: “She’s dead all right. She always told me she could smell bullshit from a mile away. I don’t know if that holds true now, do you, officer?” Sam starts laughing again and Mink takes him by the shoulders. “Boy,” he says forcefully. “For the record, this is your mother, correct?”

Sam stops laughing, clears his throat, and says, “Yes. That’s Mom.”

Maurice shakes his head sadly and says, “Aide de Dieu ce gosse.” God help this kid.

Mink says, “Huh? I wish you’d speak English, little man.”

Maurice ignores Mink and ushers everyone out of the room and back into the hallway. Sam collapses onto the floor at Daisy’s feet. As Mink and Maurice rush to his aid, Randy Travis’s voice echoes throughout the hallway: I’m gonna love you…forever and ever…forever and ever amen…

* * *

Startled awake by his ringing cell phone, for a second, Ike has no idea where he is. He looks out the Malibu’s driver’s side window and sees a trailer, then another, then another. Oh yeah, thinks Ike, now I remember. Fuck. “Yeah,” he says into the phone.

“Wake up, princess. It’s after seven. I let you sleepy-sleepy, because I know you’re a grouchy-wouchy if you don’t get your rest.”

“Louie?”

“What?”

“Shut the fuck up.”

“As usual, I’ll ignore that. The kid’s back at his trailer. You slept through their arrival. I’ve already talked to Daisy–she’s the girlfriend. She’s with the kid in the trailer. The crew is in a van not a mile away. Everything’s a go,” says Louie, his voice excited and high.

“Was it–”

“The mom? Oh yeah. She’s dead. Of course it was her. Cut and dry. It had to be. Oh oh, Beater, get this: she got her nose wacked off. Can you believe that? Her nose. That’s some sick shit. Blaghhhh! Anyway, get to the trailer; make sure the kid is clothed. If the kid’s crying, well shit, now that’s OK. Here me, Beater? If he’s got the waterworks going, great. But I’d rather him not be sobbing it up uncontrollably, now. I don’t want any hysterical shit going on. We want him to look happy, for Christ’s sake. Happy crying: that’s what we want.”

“The kid’s mother just died. Jesus, Louie, you stupid fucker. You want happy crying? What the fuck are you talking about?”

“Why’re people so sensitive about their mommies? I hated my bitch of a mother. Fuck her. Your damn basset hound–smelly little fucker–could fuck her up her dead asshole, for all I care. Fuck her. Fuck my mommy.”

Ike sighs then smirks. He’s heard it all three hundred times before. “You’re right, you’re right, Louie. Everybody should hate their mothers. They ain’t nothing but stupid whores. Maggot shit is worth more than mothers. I agree, Louie–wholeheartedly.”

“Mock me, Wife Beater. Go ahead and mock me.”

“Tell the crew I’ll have the kid prepped and ready. No worries,” says Ike, trying to will away his sleep-bone.

“I love you, baby,” says Louie.

“Back at you, baby. Back at you.”

Ike puts his cell phone in a jacket pocket, steps out of the Malibu and walks to the front door of the Hayter trailer. Ike doesn’t bother knocking. He goes on in. The TV is smattered with blood and turned on to a rerun of Family Ties. There’s no sign of Sam or Daisy. The trailer is just as sordid and disgusting as it was several hours ago. Ike sees a cockroach scurry across the top of the cigarette butt laden top of the TV. How can people live like this? thinks Ike. “Kid! Sam! It’s Beat–uh–it’s Ike. Where are you?”

No answer.

Ike checks every room. No Sam. No Daisy. The place stinks like rotten eggs. Ike takes out his phone and dials Louis, who answers on the second ring. “You always gotta call me while I’m on the shitter, don’tcha, Beater?”

“The kid’s not here. I feel like I need some RID or something. This place is nastier than that ten-gallon fish tank of yours you clean once every ten years.”

“My fish like to eat here own shit–what can I say? Where’s Daisy? She’s not there either?”

Ike can definitely feel something crawling up his damned leg. He rakes one leg up and down the other. “She’s not here. Nobody’s here. The crew’ll be here in how long?” Ike looks at his watch. “Oh shit! The crew’ll be here in fifteen minutes! We’re going live in twenty! You should’a woke my ass up, Louie!”

“Lemme think, Beater. Lemme think,” answers Louis, flushing the toilet.

* * *

Unbeknownst to Ike, Daisy is eating a bowl of Golden Grahams in her granny’s trailer. She left Sam watching an episode of Family Ties. Sam likes Meredith Baxter’s character. Her long blond hair is a picnic on a sunny fall day, temperature maybe seventy five, perfect, a bit of a breeze blowing. Sam has swallowed the last of his acid–maybe ten or twelve hits. He laughs at Alex, at dumb Nick, Justine’s boyfriend, at wacky Skippy, Alex’s best friend. Sam digs out his Case, opens the blade, still laughing at the TV. He presses the pad of his right index finger onto the tip of the blade, and he likes the cotton candy sweetness of his blood, traversing down the back of this throat from his tongue, bitten in time with the knife’s blade making contact with the bone in his finger. Sam glances at his bleeding finger, the blade still grinding into the bone, and he laughs. Fingertips always bleed like motherfuckers but not enough to drain the body dry–at least not completely. Sam refocuses on Alex and that stupid briefcase he always carries. Sam giggles: Alex is such a fucking trip!

Sam pulls out the blade; he plunges his spouting finger into his mouth; he swallows himself again and again; the acidic saltiness of his blood fills his empty tummy. For no reason save Daffy-Duck, Sam thinks he’s swallowing rotten oysters, pungent, disgusting rotten motherfucking oysters that emerge without stop from his bleeding finger. His stomach bucks. Sam covers his mouth with an open hand and blood flies across the room, splattering Alex and Mallory Keaton, fucking up their family ties. Sam sees assassins carrying machine guns and wearing pantyhose over their heads, and they storm into the Keaton’s kitchen and shoot Alex and Mallory in their heads, splattering their brains across the front of the TV. Sam starts shaking and crying. Bloody snot bubbles out of his nose. His bare torso is, hairless and pale, anathema to everything comprising Maganum P.I. Sam’s pink dots for nipples are covered with blood. His mouth is open wide, silently screaming. Sam loses his pants, his underwear; he plunges the Case into his left thigh, again, down to the bone. Sam twists the blade and he’s sees a blinding white light, at the end of which is his mother, on her knees sucking goateed Johnny, black leather clad and standing in front of her, stroking her head. He’s moaning and looking upward, toward the sky. Sam blinks and sees his mother and Johnny entwined in a hard fuck, Johnny shoving it to her from behind, and, all the while, they are sliding on a blue rubber mat down Crazyhorse Campground’s world’s largest waterslide.

Sam rolls from the couch and still bleeding profusely, he walks into the kitchen and opens the refrigerator door, takes a drink from the half-gallon jug of milk that is two days out of date, leaving a circle of blood around jug’s mouth. Sam drops the milk onto the floor and then staggers out the sliding glass door and onto the deck. The air feels good against his bare ass. Sam, bleeding, pisses off the deck. After a couple of seconds, he wobbles and falls face first off the deck and into the plastic pool, mid-piss. The obviously used rubber snakes its way onto his bareback, resting like a castaway collapsed on the strange beach of a strange island. Sam is motionless. His eyes are wide open, and in the dirty rain water he doesn’t see muck and old Big Mac wrappers. He sees his mother, noseless, lying on a stainless steel table. The hole in her face grows wider and wider until there is no head at all, just a deep chasm, at the bottom of which flows a thin winding river, looking like a blue string of thread. Sam opens his arms wide, pretending to be a flying airplane, and he jumps into the chasm, falling his way toward the far away river.

* * *

Ike, desperate to find Sam, storms out the back door and sees Sam floating face first in the plastic pool, both his feet dangling over the edge. The water looks like Cherry Kool-Aid. Sam is still.

Ike runs to Sam, yanks him out of the water, checks for a pulse. Thankfully, Sam’s heartbeat is strong. The color in his face is a warm red, matching closely the Kool-Aid colored water in the pool. Sam smiles. Sam stretches out his arms, for he is freefalling toward the river, his hair swept back, and his sliced skin healing, closing, and smoothing over.

“You’re a millionaire, you little bastard. You better be fucking breathing.”

An ambulance’s siren screams in the distance.

The winding river, a blue artery in the bucolic grounds in which it winds amidst weeping willows and manicured lawns, sucks Sam faster and faster to its surface. The sun, acting the part a jaundiced baby’s curing lamp, warms his back and soothes his cuts, taking away the stings and the bites. Sam’s head enters the water and he opens his mouth, gulping as fast as he can, willing his lungs to full with water, begging for death in this clear water.

Ike slaps Sam’s face. “Wake up, you crazy little bitch.”

Sam opens his eyes to a blurry Oz-like consortium of worried looking people, staring down onto his naked body as if he were Dorothy just awakened from her sleep; Sam is cradled in Ike’s thick arms. Daisy is running her hand through Sam’s wet hair. An EMT covers Sam with a blanket.

A camera crew emerges from around the side of the trailer. A man with slicked-back black hair and very white teeth sticks a microphone in Sam’s face and says, “Sam Malone, you’re the winner of the 2002 Publisher’s Clearing House Sweepstakes.”

Watching the action from a closed circuit TV, Louis says to himself, This is some quality shit.

Anne Dernelley

Overload #30

Poor Digestion

There’s a McDonald’s store that’s not operating that well. The kids who work there aren’t organised properly and fart about, which makes it hard on a certain manager who is quieter than the rest.

‘Justin, we need two Macs please.’ And this manager rests her arm on the hamburger outflow and waits — remaining calm and together.

But only one slides down.

‘We’re waiting on one more!’ Her voice rises a little.

Something needs to be said to the customer so she turns to a fat lady with kids.

‘We’re just waiting on one more. I’m so sorry for the delay.’

Back her arm rests on the outflow tray, and waits some more. But there are more customers queuing. She bends down to look behind the burger stand.

‘Justin! We need one more Mac! Now!’

‘I’m not a fucking dumb! It’s coming,’ and the second burger’s thrown on the outflow tray.

But it’s squashed. Discreetly, unassumingly the manager tries to stretch it back then puts it on the fat lady’s tray. It is a bit risky, but she figures the fat lady will probably take the mangled burger — she’s been waiting a bit too long and the kids are starting to play up.

But she’s figured wrong.

‘You the manager girl?’

‘Yes.’

‘This place is run like shit! And now you’re giving me shit to eat! Look what you give me! Would you eat this? Would you feed your kids this?’

The manager looks at it again. No — it doesn’t look too good. She then apologises to the fat lady and reaches over for a fresh Mac, (miraculously another two are already there) and puts it on the tray next to the mangled burger.

But the fat lady is waiting for something more.

So the manager offers 3 complimentary thick shakes.

‘I don’t like thick shakes. Give me 3 chocolate sundaes. Big ones.’

But as the manager explains, policy allows her to only offer complimentary sundaes in a regular size.

‘No regular! I just want a big size — three chocolate sundaes for my kids. Do you want a argument?’

 

The lunchtime shifts are the worst ones to do, still Carolyn’s well mannered about it, except perhaps for the squashed burger. But it’s the kids working there that she’s supposed to manage. The 16, 17 year olds who’ve ended up here through a subsidised work program. They’re nearly all boys and they’re constantly eating, so by the time it’s deducted from their wage they don’t have a lot left. And this is why there’ve been wrapped burgers returned with huge bights taken out of them. Pay for one? Well you’re only getting half.

This isn’t the only place Carolyn’s worked at, but coming next April will be her ninth year. And sitting in the small office cubicle at about 2.30 to do up a new roster, she begins feeling really pissed off.

But you wouldn’t know it. If you are Justin, standing by the frystand (she moved him from the burgers) you’d only see her writing, with her head lowered. Not writing fast, nor really slow, but doing it in that careful of hers.

What a contrast:

Carolyn knows the manager who does the shift after her. He can slam the top shelf of the burger tray demanding all burgers be done now! And he’s young, only a couple of years older than the kids he’s barking at. But seeing nine years in McDonalds, most do grow up, move on. And with this tall guy Carolyn sees, banging and striding about as he feels a manager ought, will in a year have finished his degree and left here for his new job.

His name is Milos and he and Carolyn seem to get on well. He talks about heaps of things and always asks her advice or opinion on the latest thing.

‘Carolyn, what do you think? I’m still trying to develop a theory on that.’

She’s good at answering. Intelligent responses that gets Milos thinking more.

But this one time, it’s different.

‘Carolyn, what about this. What if the human brain had to lose 20 percent of its matter, what parts would you get rid of for it to still be fully functioning?’

This isn’t him joking. And Carolyn knows where he got the question from as well, one of those extra-curricular classes. Moving her head rightways she tries to assess it but can’t. He picks up on this.

‘But Carolyn, don’t you find this interesting. That as a mathematical possibility, if there’s a way of compressing the brain matter by 20 percent for it to be configured with greater accuracy — could it work faster, quicker?’

But Carolyn can only shake her head.

‘You know Milos. You’re a really smart guy, but you can also talk a lot of crap.’

‘What do you mean?’

He lowers his head for her to answer. If it was one of his girl friends, he wouldn’t have cared. But none of them would say that: ‘I don’t understand this shit’, may have been the closest they’d come. But that’s a different thing.

She may have been trying to make him look like shit, because he had plenty of that, from older women and also men — who were frightened: 20 years older and still they’d never slam a burger tray like he does. But replaying how she tilted her neck to think about his question, and when she’d decided on it, looked at him, straight on.

‘You know Milos, you talk a lot of crap.’

‘So you think it’s stupid what I say?’

It’s turned busy and she doesn’t answer.

 

But Milos doesn’t dwell on it, analysis of that kind doesn’t interest him.

 

Carolyn’s tired by about 3. It’s the chemical smell from the buns when heated that makes her head droopy. She stands by the burger stand so she can look down. It’s after school so it’s mainly kiddy snacks.

Milos sometimes arrives early, and often sees her standing like this. From behind, her hair tied back and the hanging slant of her head, slightly to the left. For a long time now his reaction has been:

‘Mmm. That’s nice.’

But these last two weeks it’s developed to ‘Mmmm, really nice’, and it’s the strain of her neck he now looks to.

She turns and places both arms on the top frame of the burger stand.

‘Charlie, how are the junior burgers coming?’

She sees he’s struggling and if she had the energy herself, she’d perhaps go around to help him, but today she can’t.

The only thing moving is the certainty she’s not coping. The Drive thru’s stalled, and a 4 wheel drive is still waiting on their fries.

‘How long for the fries Justin?’

He picks at his teeth and looks up at the clock.

‘I’d say about 3 and a half minutes.’

‘That’s too long.’ She’s panicky.

‘Yeah probably.’

She presses her clenched fist up against her lips: Should I? Shouldn’t I? Something’s got to be done.

‘Nuke the cold fries for the 4 wheel drive order. 10 seconds only, that’ll make them warm but not soggy.’

‘Serious?’ The finger’s dropped from Justin’s mouth. ‘We’re going to microwave cold fries? He appears excited by the prospect. It’s the fastest she’s seen him move.

Then of course he wants to do the rest of them. For the first time, she sees him elated, animated. ‘We’ll get it done quicker.’ That’s true. She sighs to consider, then is suddenly aware of Milos watching.

Oh shit! And her cheeks immediately burn. She smiles cutely, totally out of character, trying to compensate: it’s wrong I know, but no one’s really hurt. Only Milos looks serious (the way all men in her family look when they’re displeased). She turns back and sees Justin serving out fresh fries.

Milos’ voice:

‘You need some help there.’ Is barricaded by

‘No, everything’s fine.’

She smiles to mask her fear. He’s dressed in black with a navy backpack over his right shoulder — he is very handsome. But when he edges closer the inside of her head thumps.

‘Where are the others Carolyn?’

‘They’re on their break. They’ll be back in a minute.’

The thumping gets worse, and then she knows why, she hasn’t been properly breathing. It’s when she’s stressed. When she used to be shouted at or given angry looks, she’d hold her breath, taking air gulps when needed.

But she’s been through all this — she knows they’re feelings only, not real. No one is trying to hurt her. But she resents that patronising tone used by her psychologist. Concentrate on breathing — tummy in, tummy out — and looks at Milos.

‘You sick Carolyn?’.She focuses on his face and continues breathing.

‘I’m fine. Just tired.’

He doesn’t know what’s happening so he’ll turn away in a sec. Not that it matters now, your job is to breathe: in, out, in, out; try also to relax. She closes her eyes. Relax.

‘Carolyn?’

Her eyes open. He’s still here? She focuses in on his face again, doing her breathing still, and then she’s struck by the changing ripple — his brow has creased and the mouth softened. He’s concerned, she’s dumbfounded. Wouldn’t expect that from him. She isn’t conscious of it but her breathing’s now normal.

 

She was in shock ages after being told. It was classified as a restructure, but the only only person it affected was herself — demoted in favour of a younger female manager. Carolyn knew her, trained her years ago. She’d be 21, 22 now and probably fatter, always had a mouth on her — could never shut her up. I am not working with that girl was her only demand. Ok they said. Ok she replied. That’s good.

Takes a while to sink in. Arseholes. Carolyn kept repeating it. Arseholes. You say it so calmy observed the teenage girls she was working evening shift with now. Yes well, easy come easy go. This feeling of detatchment gave her a surreal kind of pleasure. I am above this.

A little later she saw Justin sitting in the plaza food court, around the time he should have been at work. So they’ve sacked him, as of course they would. Oh well, but still, poor kid. Then she felt it — an awful stabbing anguish in the middle just below her breasts.

There’s a tremendous discipline in maintaining positive thinking! Similar to following a diet where you can’t have bread, can’t have dairy — only thought filtering is considerably more difficult. Exhausting. But she was sick of being defeated (correction) self-defeated. The first week was a real struggle but she established a rhythm into the second week whereby on Saturday, a couple of incidents which normally would have tripped her — didn’t.

I am stronger for this! Absurd how confident she was feeling. But Milos seemed annoyed. They were on their break, standing amongst the topiary weeds. She asked if there’s anything the matter? He looked into her face and told her he didn’t understand. Smoke rushed from his nostrils after the initial drag of a new cigarette.

‘You’ve been screwed and you don’t do anything about it.’

It fitted perfectly as the undertone. She wasn’t able to answer him. Only questions. What could I do? What option did I have? What were the alternatives?

‘I couldn’t do anything!’ She thought her tone had a level neutrality to it, except for the last bit when she got a little emotional.

Milos directed the smoke plumes upward, better shut up. Only the silence was like a sound tunnel, everything echoed back at her.

I feel crap. I feel crap. I feel crap. She knew it was her own internal hysteria. But fuck she felt awful. Carolyn tried controlling herself, which is why she stayed clear of Milos, only later to have him shout down at her from the opposite end of the counter.

‘We’re running out of white blub here!’

He’s talking about the stuff they use for ice cream. Carolyn arches her left eyebrow. Milos isn’t deterred.

‘I said we’re running out! You going to get some?’

He’s angry. The internal spin of her head accelerates. Get it yourself she wants to tell him, but goes looking for white sludge anyway. Carolyn scans the fridges for it — takes her ten minutes — then realises there’s none left.

‘So no one’s ordered it!’

‘Doesn’t look like it!’ Her hands flounce around her hips and she tries gritting a smile. This is so awful.

She’s feels sick in the tummy, too many cigarettes and orange juice. Should try and eat something. Reluctantly it’s a baby cheeseburger, and she chews and chews at it — trying to get it passed that swollen lump at the back of her throat. Hopeless. The perverse imagined: the lump will grow bigger, liquified protein and vegetables her only source nourishment, then finally coaxed into going for tests, x-rays…

It got so bad she thought she’d have to go home, but serving out front has helped calm her. This guy she’s taking an order from looks beyond her, up at the menu.

‘I’ll have 3 Big Macs, … 2 regular fries, …no wait. Change that to a large fries. Also a medium coffee and also a strawberry sundae.’

‘We don’t have sundaes, the machine’s stopped working.’

‘Oh?’ He’s disappointed. ‘What else do you have?’

‘You can have an apple pie.’

‘Does ice cream come with that?’

‘No sir, the machine has stopped working.’

‘What? Another one’s not working?’

‘No, it’s the same machine that makes the ice cream.’

He still seems a little confused, but he accepts what she tells him. Again Carolyn asks if he wants to order the apple pie. No he won’t. She then asks if he wants milk and sugar with his coffee. No, only black. She then asks if there’s anything else he’d like to order? Shakes his head, ‘Nope. Nothing else.’

Carolyn then confirms his entire order by repeating it back to him.

‘Yep, that’s right.’

She asks if he wants to eat in or take away.’

‘Have here.’

Telling him it comes to $11.45, she’s about to go and collect his order when he asks.

‘Do you want to take my money for it?

As procedure, it’s only when the order’s ready, on the tray or in the bag, when money can be transacted. But that’s really a stupid rule.

‘Sure. You can pay for it now if you like.’

Smiling slightly she takes his money from him, then when returning his change she smiles again.

‘You have a lovely smile.’

Here we go, she’s had this before.

‘But you do look very sad.’

Her foreheads going.

‘Do I?’

‘You do.’ And places the change in his wallet.

She shrugs her shoulders.

‘Maybe.’

‘Can I ask how old you are?’

Wondering if she’d better not continue this, she says 26.

’26! That’s a great age, I wish I was that old again. You’re a beautiful young woman, you need to be out travelling, having a good time.’

‘Yes. I know.’

Fighting against her crumpled forehead, she just wants to run.

 

Milos hopes she’s alright. She hasn’t been her at work for nearly two weeks now and his calculation is, she’s not coming back. Could call her, but she doesn’t have a mobile. There’d a home number written down. He looks through the scrappy exercise book (where all staff details are kept) and immediately spots it, Carolyn’s arched, thin script. He examines it for sometime then closes the cover. What’s the use.

 

The look Milos gives Carolyn when she walks in the door, poor guy. She comes up and says hello.

He gives her a half nod, is unsure of how to react. He’s parked behind the counter with the added protection oft the register console. Must have really scared him.. He waits for her to say something, but she doesn’t know how to start. She wants to avoid small talk. But he moves away, down the opposite end of the counter where he points to the floor while shouting to one of the cocky arsed boys.

‘Clean that now!’

Carolyn reaches into her coat pocket for her car keys, but Milos returns and resumes his place behind the console. She loops the keys full circle around her forefinger.

‘I’m sorry I didn’t say anything when I walked out that day.’

She sees his neck and shoulders automatically stiffen.

‘You were upset.’

‘Yes I was. Still that’s no excuse.’

She sees him hesitate before asking.

‘So. You feeling any better?’

‘Yes. Much better than I was.’

‘That’s good…you look better.’

It’s the same look he’d been attracted to.

She sits with him as he has his break. The coat she’s wearing with its square collar makes her look soft and extremely feminine. Milos looks down at his triple stacked burger, he’ll finish this in three bights.

Carolyn asks him about uni and he tells her about his honours thesis. She looks impressed and offers a few suggestions.

As Milos eats his second burger, she absently stares out the window. The strip of late afternoon sun barely has any warmth and she crosses her arms up against her chest. Air conditioner still isn’t fixed.

He asks if she wants another coffee. She says no. Then as a kind of second try he nudges a box of fries over to her side of the table.

‘No thanks.’ She says. ‘Stopped eating that crap ages ago — a year and a half to be exact.’

‘What’d you eat then?’ He reaches over to take back the fries.

‘Brought my own stuff. Though that should have been the time I left. Not now.’

‘Oh well.’ He follows her gaze out past the window. ‘That’s alright.’ Then throws his head back to inhale the rest of the fries.

Libby Dent

Overload #30

The Essence of a Moment

El Museo de jamon
Backwards on the way to Santiago

Your ‘bacan’ (cool) tourist guide gave us the hip version of Madrid. Catchy scripts that were funny enough I forget the words, just have the laughter. I do remember you’d torn the Madrid section from a complete edition, in some backpackers in Copenhagen. That, and conforming to the city way, lips locked carelessly, to stop and look where we were.

Stunned, this time not by your kiss.

‘Now I’ve seen everything! They have a museum of ham.’

Salted meats soaking air, years later, soaking air. A day in Madrid, accident of my own disarray, booking a ticket too late, forced to travel 57 air hours backwards round the world, to chance upon you here, pickled in my own jetlag.

few words
quiver the air

in a courtyard,
words make a breeze:
floats beside cracked ice

(we ask japanese tourists to snap us)

Whisper
on a street corner

shakes the air
oscillatory tempo,

awakening,
butterflies alight
on the roof of my mouth,
fluttering fragile
leaves quiver

had to take a photo (of my red haired rag travel companion doll) on a pylon in front of all that meat, deliciously waiting, naïve to centuries old knowledge, I can’t work out how it doesn’t rot? Turning around to find you reappearing,

‘did I embarrass you my dear?’

‘no I just desperately needed to check out those boots in the window behind there’

The sky shattered apart in a mess of colour changing by moment enlivening my navel to a thrill that
creeps upward indelible warmth bursts out my mouth with a sigh.

S.M. Chianti

Overload #30

Memories of a Philosopher

Sid often savoured life retrospectively.

‘Without memories’ he would say when he was old enough to philosophise, ‘life wouldn’t make much sense.’

He was born during wartime but didn’t realise until he became a philosopher that starting life during a war can alter things. The earliest, fragmented memories were important – incidents before he started school – but not his birth. Because he couldn’t remember his birth he reasoned that this was really part of his parents’ lives.

One of Sid’s earliest memories was the taste of sherbet when his dad shouted him at the corner shop, a haven of spicy smells, rows of tins and huge jars, and the scales. He always wanted to play with the scales’ round weights.

Although he had eagerly anticipated school, and despite the attention of his big sisters, Sid was scared on his first day. The teacher and her large table at the front of the class. He remembered that. She was kind, but they had a man later. Men were stricter. Back then the world didn’t exist beyond the area between home and school.

The buzz or flutter of insects had lured his attention from the blackboard on warm days, and the distant echoes of the bottle-oh and his horse had stirred a yearning to be off somewhere, anywhere. The teacher’s torpid drone couldn’t compete with the bottle-oh’s cry, and Sid hadn’t understood then how grown-ups can feel trapped, too, hadn’t understood that perhaps both he and the chalky-fingered man with brilliantined hair heard the same sirens calling from faraway places.

Sid knew the black snake’s sting. When he was strapped he enjoyed the warmth of peer approval, but not the searing numbness across his palms. He would grin through the camaraderie, swaggering back to his seat hoping Daphne Jones admired his boldness. The iron desk supports offered cold relief.

Sid recalled lunchtimes of cheese and jam sandwiches wrapped in newspaper which he read sprawling in the long grass bordering the asphalt playground, not realising that this newsprint would enable him to laughingly disdain the softies of the future. The boys’ jokes and rough language made the girls squeal with disgust, both affected and real. Sid always laughed loudly back in the girls’ direction from the comforting knot of mateship.

Football was another early memory.

‘D’you remember when Dad took you to watch the Magpies that first time when you were little?’ his mum would repeat like a mantra when she was getting old. Sid always claimed to remember but was uncertain whether he fully remembered or had constructed the missing bits from what he had heard and come to know.

Looking up at men yelling in the rain was an uncertain image, and the excitement on his father’s face. His dad had hoisted him onto his shoulders when Sid complained of aching legs. The boy was overseer of a forest of stetsons. After he became too heavy – his dad wasn’t strong – Sid had fossicked among the rubbish on the damp, trampled terraces where crushed grass combined with the aroma of beer and tobacco wafting on the wind. His dad didn’t notice until the match was over and he made Sid throw his collection away.

When he was old enough Victoria Park became his favourite place in winter. The Coventrys were his heroes. One balding, and one with thick hair, yet brothers. One giant in the ruck winning the Brownlow, and the other kicking the goals. All the Magpies were like brothers in those days, and their supporters taunted intruders from the wrong side of the world, Richmond and South Melbourne, and closer to home, Fitzroy. Those Fitzroy supporters were the real enemy. Newer teams like Footscray, Hawthorn, and North were barely worthy of scorn.

Holidays were weeks of carefree fun with little money to spend, weeks that seemed to last forever. When the light began to dim, his mum would call for the kindling to be split. He built a billycart but couldn’t find a decent hill in that flat, working-class area of cheap land. Billycart wheels were valuable currency among his mates. If only they had had a hill. Sid remembered pinching fruit from Old Kelleher’s orchard before escaping through a gap in his fence. Then Kelleher got a dog. Sid would smile to himself later in life, and mutter: ‘Kelleher’s flamin’ dog.’

He remembered early accidents but not the actual pain, just the certainty of it. He had borrowed another kid’s bike. The rubber on the pedals had worn away, and when Sid had stood on the steel cylinders for more speed he had slipped. He would mimic the agony between his legs from coming down on the crossbar by sucking in his cheeks a generation later when he told his own laughing children. He had careered into a parked car, an Essex.

Sid and his mates discussed the mystery of girls, and fought the boys from the Catholic school. The toughest of them was to be his best man. He died at Changi and was revered for the rest of Sid’s life.

Sid shared a sleepout with his brothers. They tried to ban their sisters but weren’t allowed to. ‘Undemocratic,’ said Mum who would leave Dad to mind the roast while she went to church. Sid’s dad wouldn’t go near ‘Them God wallahs,’ but would muck around in the garden while Sid’s sisters shelled peas over the colander. Pinching peas was a ritual; fresh-tasting, but sometimes a dried one to spit out at each other.

Sid could always picture his mum at the wood stove in her floral, wraparound pinny. ‘Come on, you lot’ was her favourite saying but she had dozens of others. Sid used these sayings unconsciously when talking to his own children later.

Different dogs chased family cats through the narrow streets of his reminiscences. He remembered most of their names. Sweetie was the pup the ice-cart squashed. His sister was sick but the iceman never said much. There were rabbits and chooks and white mice, all with names.

Sid sold Heralds. A tram stop was his regular position. He could leap on, sell three or four papers, and jump off by the time a tram had jerked across the intersection. Pennies made a comforting, weighty feeling in his pocket. Sid would lightly lift his pocketful of pennies and then allow them to chunk back against his thigh.

Posh people off for a night out in the city stirred his envy, but his dad would say: ‘Don’t wish your life away, son.’ Sid bought a new coat and flat cap after saving for months. This is living, he thought, adjusting the cap’s angle in the hall mirror.

Sid would remark later that it was a funny thing but he couldn’t actually remember people calling The Depression by that name at the time. Longing to be a man so he could get on with the business of living meant that leaving school was an event worth celebrating. His first job was in a boot factory but he was shocked when he lost it. ‘From making boots to getting the boot,’ was his description. There were few other jobs during those meagre times but he was at that age when hardship can be shrugged off.

Sid could never forget his first girlfriend, and his anxiety when he attempted to talk to her. If a bridge had been erected over the Yarra as high as the new one all Sydney was forever skiting about he would have dived from that with less anxiety. She was the only person with the power to make him swallow, dry-mouthed, whenever he saw her coming.

Her eyes. When she looked his way it was like the time the goal-scoring Coventry had to kick truly after the bell to win the game. Exciting and painful at the same time. He couldn’t watch and yet wouldn’t have missed it for a free banquet of king prawns. So Sid made a pact with himself, a pact that was life’s biggest challenge until then. He set himself to ask her to the pictures.

She said: ‘Yes.’

Yes!

He had been foolish with success.

Sid remembered none of the film but she could years later.

Their wedding was organized in a hurry even though they had known each other for a long time. There was nothing improper about it. Sid was off to war.

‘What! The flamin’ jungle!’ his dad said when he learned where Sid was. The war had catapulted his boys in all directions, and he had started his coughing which always made everybody hold their breath until he stopped. They said his health was only slightly impaired by the small amount of gas he ingested in France but the cough had grown worse.

His dad’s death emptied Sid. He was still in the jungle and had no chance to attend the funeral. His private weeping behind the canteen contrasted with the dry-eyed pain and cursing when he had come off his bike and dented the Essex not so many years earlier. He blew his nose hard on his shirt tail and thought about the days when his old man had been crook. ‘All that bloody coughing,’ he would say over a beer years after.

For a while Sid thought he hated the Japs but he left the war mostly behind him when it was over, like a snake shedding its old skin. Soon the images faded to a haze of mud, fuzzy-wuzzy angels, leeches, good mates, and malaria.

He developed a knack of recalling the old man and their shared good times whenever he needed to. The days when they had teased Mum. They once planted her copper stick in the fowl run and topped it with her church hat. She was wild, but laughed later. During the post-war years when Sid was working for the council he might catch himself smiling alone, then he would plan something happy with his children. Laughter was important, comparable with respect, or loyalty, or the Magpies never disgracing themselves at home.

***

Sid loved his wife but they fought. There seemed to be a fundamental difference in their personalities. He sometimes wondered if this was caused by the war years, or perhaps simply because he was a man and she was a woman.

Their children’s existence always reminded them that the squabbling wasn’t worth it. She would brew him a strong cup of tea and he would allow it to cool with his temper while he found some little job that needed attending to. He had difficulty saying sorry. Once he felt so bad after an argument that he had bought her a new sewing machine. She was grateful, and they had all gorged on her baking spree that weekend, but Sid never knew the machine wasn’t the model she had wanted.

They lost a son. It was after the Queen’s visit when they had stood in the crowd near the airport. ‘Whizzed past in a bloody Land Rover so fast we only caught a glimpse of His Lordship waving and grinning,’ he told his mates at work. The kids had complained.

Their son had been healthy but his illness perforated their lives utterly. The boy’s life was over with bewildering swiftness. Friends cued them with cliches about their other two children. Then Sid’s brother-in-law was killed in an accident. Someone told them bad luck always comes in threes, and when Sid’s suffering wife began to dread the family’s future he angrily pointed out that fools have a saying for every occasion. Their luck changed when another son was born late in the marriage.

Sid’s mum didn’t die until she was nearing Biblical age. The eldest children were growing up by then. Nan had shared their cramped house and wrote unvarying letters to her daughters who had long since married and moved interstate.

‘But we’re poverty-stricken,’ Sid’s son had complained when it was suggested that his grandmother come to live with them. Sid said that poverty was a discomfort the boy’s generation would never suffer from, nor be able to understand.

‘No mother of mine’s going to rot in a bloody home,’ he had said.

‘Moses himself couldn’t have laid the law down more impressively,’ his wife commented, and told Sid not to swear in front of the children, as she had quietly arranged for his mother to move in.

Sometimes Sid had taken his sons to see the Magpies play but they were more interested in other things. He had bought their little striped jumpers as soon as they were old enough but somehow it wasn’t the same as when he had been a boy.

***

Sid thought his son-in-law was gormless, but he made excuses for his youth. His children were now adults. Then his elder boy won a free trip to Viet Nam. They worried.

‘Cooks don’t have much more than pastry to dodge,’ the conscript reassured them. His confidence reminded Sid of the day when he had marched off to war himself. Same behaviour.

When the man returned the only wound he seemed to have received was from a bar girl in Saigon. Sid told him never to let his mother know, and felt slightly guilty for being so proud. His son recovered. He had also changed. No more wet remarks like ‘poverty-stricken’.

Sid still enjoyed a few drinks with his old mates – those who had survived – during what he considered his middle years. His hair was the colour of their old dog’s whiskers, and he sometimes suffered from a fever. He praised the staff of the Repatriation Hospital but the shakes were gradually eroding his energy.

He and his wife rarely went out together any more but shared a delight in their grandchildren. Sid conceded that their daughter and the gormless one – who didn’t seem so bad now – were certainly fertile. Sid’s younger son, the Viet Nam veteran, still lived at home, preferring his own silent company. Sid and his wife worried about him when he teamed up with his former army pals and binged for days, but there was nothing they could do about his remote moods.

Sid clashed with his younger son and became even more annoyed with himself afterwards. The boy accused him of being old.

‘There’s not much I can do about it, is there?’ Sid retorted. ‘You don’t have much bloody choice, you know.’ It was a long time since the Magpies had earned the big prize.

His wife had what Sid referred to as ‘women’s operations’, and she became distant, wounding him by harping about wasted opportunities. His love for her found new nourishment. Seeing her so withdrawn made him think about all their days together. He also thought how quickly the world was changing, and he was lonely without her closeness. After this bad period their union rallied like a sick plant responding to special care.

On their fortieth anniversary they made love again. Sid felt the way he had felt before sailing north, or even earlier, when he had leapt onto trams crying: ‘Herald?’ The anniversary party wasn’t held on the exact date. It was on the nearest Saturday night, and their children gave extravagant gifts. The elder son looked well. He had brought a new girlfriend, and his mother crossed her fingers when she helped Sid blow out candles, snatching glances at the quiet young woman. Even the grandchildren had wrapped special presents they had made themselves. Sid frowned, gulping his beer and joking while his wife dabbed with her hanky. The quiet young woman looked at Sid, seemed to look beyond his attempted mask.

He had stopped driving because of his health. They hadn’t owned a car until Sid was well into his thirties, and his wife had never learned. He walked slowly to the TAB and tried the quadrella, dreaming about presenting the winnings to his children who didn’t need it, and hoping to spot somebody he knew. Then he would linger to show off about their granddaughter’s school report, or their son’s new young lady.

***

When his wife fell dead Sid felt old. At the cemetery he would touch the cold stone, reading and rereading the words. Daphne Mildred, dearly beloved wife… Sid began putting gilt frames around his memories.

His daughter called around regularly when the younger boy moved out. Sid’s son-in-law was kind, too, causing Sid regret for even the good-natured jibes he had made years earlier.

The Magpies nearly made it. They went close but weren’t quite good enough. An improved year had seen Sid attempt to repel the despair which had been wearing him down, and he had remembered faces from long ago when he stood on the terraces once more at the old football ground.

***

His daughter and her sensible sister-in-law found Sid dead in bed. He looked peaceful. They told everyone this until they grew tired of hearing their own words.

He would have said, philosophically, that his death had no meaning to him. It was really part of his children’s lives, and those whose lives would follow. They would remember his death. It would join their other memories, just another of all the remembered loves and hurts and smiles and tears, without which, life wouldn’t make any sense.

Helen Castles

Overload #30

Cinderella Was A Serial Killer & Other Home Truths

Story One: Snow White

Once upon a time in a cold and rainy place called Seattle there lived a beautiful lady with a good heart. She and her husband were extremely well off and had an extraordinarily happy marriage. Yes, even though they lived in this cold and rainy place called Seattle, they couldn’t have been happier. To add to their already perfect existence, the lady discovered that she was expecting their first child.

One spring morning she sat out in the sun to do some darning when all of a sudden it started to snow (Seattle weather — go figure!). The lady was so surprised by this sudden change in the weather (she grew up in Florida), that she took her eyes off her sewing for only a moment and accidentally pricked her finger. As a few drops of her scarlet red blood fell onto the white snow below her feet she thought to herself how much she would love to have a daughter with skin as pale as the snow, lips as red as her blood and hair as black as liquorice. Not long after her daughter was born, the lady was sent mad by the ever-changing Seattle weather and threw herself into Puget Sound. Her husband was fraught with despair and soon began attending parents without partners meetings. There he met, fell in love with and married a real stunner. Once again, his life seemed perfect.

However, while this woman was as beautiful as his first wife was, her heart was nowhere near as good. In fact, she was a real witch (no honestly — she was really a witch!). Being a horribly vain creature, she possessed a magic mirror that she looked into every morning before asking:

Mirror, mirror in the hall
Besides Cindy Crawford
Who is the most beautiful of all?

To which the mirror always replied:

You are.

The witch knew that the mirror never lied so after that she would happily go about her day, knowing that not one woman in the whole world (besides Cindy Crawford), could challenge her beauty.

But as Snow White grew older she became more and more beautiful. When she was seventeen a talent scout offered her a lucrative modelling contract that made her stepmother furious with jealousy. She ran to her mirror and asked:

Mirror, mirror in the hall
Besides Cindy Crawford
Who is the most beautiful of all?

To which the mirror replied:

Yeah, you’re pretty, I suppose it’s true
But that babe Snow White beats the crap outta you!

From that moment on the evil witch knew that she had to get rid of Snow White. She came up with a wicked plan that involved hiring a hit man to drive her beautiful stepdaughter into the mountains and let the wild animals that lived there do the rest.

Little did she know that the hit man was really a spineless wimp who only worked for the family business until he got his dream job — to act in Will & Grace. Being a nice guy and all, he took Snow White to the mountains and left her there whilst making her promise that she would never show her face in Seattle again.

That night Snow White walked and walked trying to find her way out of the mountains but instead she just seemed to get herself deeper and deeper into the woods. After a couple of hours, she stumbled upon a little cottage. She was so hungry and so tired that she let herself in, had a meal and a shower, watched some cable, set the video to tape Will & Grace, and then went to bed. Funnily enough, not once did she try calling the police for help (well, after all, she was a model).

When the owners of the house returned, they found the front door ajar. They were seven little men who worked as musical theatre directors, had never married and enjoyed watching Barbra Streisand movies together.

‘Who left the front door open?’ the first one asked.

‘And who trod red mud right into my clean beige carpet?’ the second one asked.

‘And who drank all the bottled water?’ the third one asked.

‘And who ate all the sushi?’ the fourth one asked.

‘And who taped over my Hello Dolly video?’ the fifth one asked.

‘And who left the towels on the bathroom floor?’ the sixth one asked.

‘And who’s that sleeping in our bed?’ the seventh one asked, as the other six turned to see Snow White, fast asleep.

‘My God, I would kill for those cheek bones!’ the first one cried.

They immediately fell in love with Snow White’s beauty and so all agreed to let her sleep.

The next morning Snow White awoke to see the seven little men all gathered around her bed. She was so frightened that she pulled the covers up high and shrieked, ‘Back off fellas. I’ve got capsicum spray and…I’m pretty sure I know how to use it!’

‘Calm down my dear, we won’t hurt you,’ the fourth one said.

They were all so kind and friendly that Snow White felt very much at ease with them. When they asked her who she was, she told them all about her wicked stepmother and her plan to rub Snow White out.

‘So you see, I can’t go back to Seattle, not ever,’ she cried.

‘Don’t worry,’ they assured her, ‘you can stay here and live with us for as long as you want. Maybe tell us how you get your hair so shiny and your skin so clear?’

‘Gee thanks,’ Snow White sighed. ‘I’ll earn my keep though, I promise.’

And so Snow White lived happily with the seven little men. Every day they would go off to work and she would stay home and clean the house, do her nails and watch soap operas.

‘But you must be careful Snow White. It’s only a matter of time before your stepmother realises that you are alive and will come looking for you. Whatever you do, don’t let anyone in the house while we’re gone,’ the men warned.

Now that she thought Snow White was dead, the wicked witch didn’t bother to ask the mirror about her beauty. However one day whilst feeling particularly low and needing an ego boost, she turned to her mirror and asked:

Mirror, mirror in the hall
Besides Cindy Crawford
Who is the most beautiful of all?

To which the mirror replied:

You’re a babe, this is true
But Snow White who lives with the seven little men
Is still more of a hotty than you!

The witch almost doubled over with horror. She would not rest while ever Snow White breathed breath so she decided to take care of her stepdaughter herself. The very next day, she don a brilliant disguise as an overweight Avon lady and went in search of the house with the seven little men.

Snow White, having finished her housework for the day and with a quiche in the oven for the little men’s dinner, was watching The Young and the Restless when the doorbell rang.

‘Who’s there?’ she asked in her sweet little voice.

‘Avon calling dear,’ the witch replied.

‘Oh goody, make-up!’ Snow White cried as she opened the door.

‘Hello dear. Can I interest you in a little something to pretty you up?’

‘Oh, I’m a model,’ Snow White giggled, ‘so I don’t need prettying up but I would like some perfume if you have it.’

‘I have just the scent for you, my darling girl,’ said the witch, pulling out a bottle of fine perfume that smelt divine yet contained a poison that, if left on Snow White’s pure skin for too long, would seep through into her bloodstream and kill her.

‘But I don’t have any money,’ Snow White despaired.

‘That’s all right dear, it’s on the house,’ the witch laughed as she left.

‘No it’s not,’ Snow White frowned. ‘it’s right here in my hand. What a silly thing for her to say,’ she shrugged.

That night, the seven little men returned home to find Snow White passed out and lying on the floor. The perfume had left an awful green mark on her pure white skin so the men scrubbed and scrubbed until it was gone and Snow White awoke. Luckily for her, the little men washed the poison off before it could take full affect.

‘Snow White!’ they scolded. ‘We told you not to let anyone in. What were you thinking?’

‘But it was make-up,’ she innocently replied in her sweet little voice.

As soon as the wicked witch returned home, she went straight to her mirror:

Mirror, mirror in the hall
Besides Cindy Crawford
Who is the most beautiful of all?

And the mirror replied:

Cindy’s a real stunner, this is true
But compared to Snow White
You look like poo!

‘No!’ the witch shrieked. ‘That’s it. No more Miss Nice Witch — that kid is dead!’

The next day the witch disguised herself once again and set off to the woods. She knocked on Snow White’s door.

‘Who is it?’ Snow White called.

‘I’m selling pretty hair clips dear. Can I interest you?’ the witch asked.

‘I’m not supposed to let anyone in, but…pretty hair clips, how can I resist?’ and with that she threw open the door.

As Snow White looked through the range, the witch pulled out a clip that had a poisonous comb.

‘Here,’ the witch handed Snow White the clip, ‘free of charge,’ she smiled as she waved goodbye.

Snow White couldn’t wait to try her new clip but as soon as she pressed it into her hair the sharp teeth of the comb pierced her skin and as the poison flowed into her body, she fell down dead.

Once home, the witch ran to her mirror:

Mirror, mirror in the hall
Besides Cindy Crawford
Who is the most beautiful of all?

To which the mirror replied:

You need a good slap for what you did
Sure, you’re the prettiest
But only because dead is the kid!

The witch was at last satisfied, as Snow White was dead and no longer a rival to her beauty.

When the seven little men arrived home that evening, they found Snow White lifeless. Attempts to revive her failed and the little men were so stricken with grief that they all took two weeks stress leave as they couldn’t bear to leave the beautiful girl’s side.

‘Oh, I can’t bear to leave the beautiful girl’s side.’ (Told you) ‘She is far too precious to place in the ground,’ the first little man cried.

‘Yeah, but she’s gonna…you know…stink up the joint,’ another mentioned.

‘We shall place her in a glass coffin so that we can always admire her beauty,’ the seventh little man said.

‘Sick,’ the fifth one declared.

It so it was — Snow White lay in her glass coffin at the top of the mountain and every day the seven little men would visit and place flowers by her side.

One day, a handsome young television executive was out visiting the woods, looking for a location to film his next hit show. When he spotted Snow White he gasped in awe of her beauty. He convinced himself that he must have her and so offered the seven little men more money than they could refuse (see — love does have a price). As he was carrying Snow White down the mountain, he tripped over a rock and jolted her coffin so violently that the poisonous hair clip fell from her head and Snow White opened her eyes.

‘Who are you?’ she asked the young executive.

‘I am yours,’ he replied.

He told Snow White what had happened and how he fell in love with her the moment he laid eyes on her. They planned a huge wedding and the executive gave Snow White a role in Will & Grace as a wedding gift.

When the wicked witch read of Snow White’s marriage in People, she smashed her mirror to smithereens, divorced Snow White’s father and moved to Los Angeles to find herself a good plastic surgeon.

The End

Story Two: Hansel & Gretel

Once upon a time in Brooklyn there lived a woodcutter, or tree surgeon, as he preferred to be known and his second wife, Chantelle. The tree surgeon had two children from a previous marriage called Hansel and Gretel or Hank and Greta, as they preferred to be known. Hank was a bit of a sissy boy but Greta was a real take-charge gal who didn’t take any crap from anyone and so often found herself standing up for her brother, who took crap from just about everyone.

Times were tough as there wasn’t much call for tree surgeons in Brooklyn, so one night after the children had gone to bed, their stepmother told their father of a wicked plan she had devised.

‘We will take the children into the city tomorrow and lose them. Then we’ll take the money from their college funds, change our names by deed poll and move to Vegas!’ she announced with a disturbingly psychotic look in her eye.

Now this distressed the woodcutter (sorry — tree surgeon), no end. He begged and pleaded (it was really pathetic!), with his cruel wife but she wore the pants in their relationship because she had taken self-assertiveness training. Reluctantly, he agreed with her evil plan whilst secretly promising himself that when they hit the big time in Vegas, he would go straight back to New York and share the fortune with his children.

Fortunately, Hank and Greta were still awake in the next room and heard of their devilish stepmother’s plan. Hank began to cry and encouraged Greta to do the same since he thought it important for people to express their feelings and also because he didn’t like to cry alone, especially in the company of the opposite sex. However Greta was more interested in devising a plan of her own, promising Hank that she would cry later and in full view where he and any other insecure male who wished to view it, could.

She quietly climbed out of bed and reached for her coat, filling the pockets with glow-in-the-dark figurines.

‘It’s all right Hank,’ she assured her big brother. ‘I’ll take care of you.’

‘Gee, thanks Gret,’ Hank replied between sobs.

Early the next morning Hank and Greta climbed into the back of their dad’s pick-up truck. As they journeyed toward the Big Apple, Greta threw her figurines out into the gutter along the way. During the day the tiny figurines were undetectable but at night they would glow and surely lead Hank and Greta back to their home in the suburbs.

When they had reached New York City, their wicked stepmother hastened them out of the back of the truck.

‘Your father and I have some business to take care of so you two may go up to 42nd street and have a wander through Toys-R-Us but be sure to be back here in one hours time,’ she said with the fakest of fake grins. Greta wished that she could slap the grin right off of her face but, being a pacifist, she just bit her lip and counted to ten instead.

When night fell Hank and Greta went back to Madison Avenue where they had been dumped. The figurines shone like the sun in the darkness and after an exhausting trek, two mugging’s, an autograph from Eric Clapton and a tattoo each, they were home. In fact the traffic had been so bad on the Brooklyn Bridge, they even beat their dad and stepmother home!

‘Children,’ their stepmother shrieked. ‘You had us both worried sick. Where on earth have you two been?’

And the Oscar goes to…

‘Sorry stepmother,’ Hank replied, choking back tears. ‘I guess we got lost.’

‘Well get into the house this instant. There will be no supper for you two tonight and no Letterman as punishment for being so disobedient!’

‘But wife,’ the tree surgeon cried, ‘no Letterman? Isn’t that a bit harsh?’

‘You must have me mistaken for a wicked stepmother who gives a damn. Now,’ she turned to the children, ‘OFF TO BED!’

That night Hank and Greta overheard their stepmother bullying their wimp of a father into going to the city and dumping them all over again.

‘What are the chances of them finding their way back twice? Woody and Mia have a better chance of reuniting,’ she laughed.

Hank and Greta weren’t laughing though. They both firmly believed in traditional family values and hoped that one day Woody and Mia would sort out their differences and reunite. Besides that, they were also worried about how they would again foil their stepmother’s attempts to get rid of them.

‘What will we do Gret?’ Hank asked. ‘We haven’t any glowing figurines left.’

‘I know. We need something else, something that glows or shines.’

Hank thought long and hard. ‘I’ve got it! What about my DVD’s?’ he suggested.

‘But Hank, you won those on Wheel of Fortune. They’re your prized possessions.’

‘That’s true but I don’t care. Besides, we don’t have a DVD player.’

First thing the next morning the family set off once again to the city. Their stepmother told Hank and Greta that she felt badly about sending them to bed with no Letterman and, as a treat, they were all going to see Disney On Ice.

When they arrived in the city and all the DVD’s had been dropped along the way, the children were left at the Rockefellar Centre.

‘Stay here children while your father and I get the tickets,’ their stepmother told them.

Once again Hank and Greta waited until dark and had walked no more than three blocks before they came to the realisation that some punk had stolen all the DVD’s and that they had no way back home.

‘Some punk has stolen all our DVD’s and now we have no way back home,’ Greta cried.

‘What will we do?’ Hank asked, on the verge of tears.

‘Don’t cry. We’ll just find a police station.’

Hank and Greta walked for miles and miles and could not find one single police station. (Can you believe that? In New York City? No? Too bad because it’s part of the story, okay?)

‘We’ll rest here a while,’ Greta told Hank as they sat on the steps of a tall building. ‘We’ll be okay Hank. Here,’ she said as she put a protective arm around her wimpy older brother. ‘Why don’t you sing? You know it always makes you feel better.’

As Hank began to sing, an audience gathered and pretty soon people clapping and dancing to his techno-funk style had surrounded them.

‘Hold it. Scatter. GET OUT OF MY WAY, PEASANTS!’ an important looking woman in a power suit shrieked as she strode out of the building. Her muscle-bound minders quickly dispersed the crowd, leaving Hank and Greta all alone and staring into her cold, steel blue cosmetic contact lenses.

‘Darling,’ she helped Hank to his feet. ‘I’m a music producer and you are a natural, darling.’

‘And you’ll be slapped with a sexual harassment suit if you don’t get your hand off his butt, lady. And,’ Greta added as she helped herself to her feet, ‘I use that term loosely.’

‘Well, who is this little ray of sunshine?’ the woman asked as a snide look crossed her cosmetically enhanced, botox-filled face.

‘This is my little sister Greta and we are lost,’ Hank admitted.

‘Lost? Well you must come with Aunt Lois. You can both stay with me at my penthouse,’ she said as she ushered the children into her waiting limo.

When they reached the penthouse, Hank and Greta gasped in awe.

‘I’ve never seen such a disgusting display of wealth in all my young life,’ Greta spat. ‘Let’s party!’

All night the children played and danced and sang and laughed and ate. When morning came they both fell exhausted onto an enormous bed.

When they awoke at noon, Lois had prepared a lunch fit for a king. Well actually Salma, the illegal immigrant cook from Cuba, had prepared it. See, Lois was a poor little rich girl who grew up in Manhattan and had never prepared food for herself or anyone else in her life but took the credit from the poverty-stricken Cuban as so often happens when you live in an unjust society like ours. After lunch Lois took the children to a recording studio.

‘Greta can sing too,’ Hank offered as Lois sat him in front of a microphone.

‘Here,’ Lois said, handing Greta a pair of headphones. ‘You join him and we’ll see what happens.’

Hank and Greta sang for all they were worth and Lois was so impressed that she immediately signed them to her label with her lawyer, Rob Burr, present. They were offered million dollar contracts and that night Rob took them all out to celebrate.

‘When do we get to make the music video?’ Hank asked.

‘And who are these kids in your wallet?’ Greta asked.

‘And when do we get to go on Letterman?’

‘And…and…what’s the meaning of life?’

‘Kids, kids,’ Rob interrupted. ‘Enough with the questions already.’

‘We’ll make the music video soon enough my darlings, those children are my niece and nephew, Letterman is over-rated and…and…how the hell should I know?’

The next morning Hank and Greta awoke from a restful slumber but when they went to open their bedroom door they found it locked.

‘Greta, I find it locked,’ Hank said.

‘What’s going on?’ Greta asked.

‘Maybe Lois locked us in for our own protection now that we’re superstars.’

‘Yeah,’ Greta agreed. ‘She must still be at the recording studio putting the finishing touches on our new single. I guess we’ll just have to wait until she gets back. Maybe watch some TV, huh?’ Greta suggested as she flicked the switch on the remote.

‘Look!’ Hank cried. ‘They’re playing our song, only…that’s not us,’ he pointed to another boy and girl who were singing and dancing to their song. Greta recognised them as the children from Lois’ wallet.

‘My God Hank, do you know what this means?’

‘Yes. There had to be a wicked witch somewhere in this story and Lois is it!’

‘And?’

‘And she’s duped us.’

‘And?’

‘And those kids are miming our voices.’

‘And?’

‘And they’re really bad at it.’

‘AND?’

‘And what? That’s it.’

And, worst of all,’ Greta began to cry (much to Hank’s approval), ‘we’ve unwittingly helped create another Milli Vanilli!’

When Lois returned Hank and Greta banged and banged on the bedroom door.

‘Let us out,’ Greta cried. ‘You’ve got one major law suit on your hands, sister!’

‘Quiet Gret, she’s arguing with someone.’

Hank and Greta listened as Lois and Rob were having a lovers quarrel. Hank, having read many of his stepmother’s Danielle Steel novels, had always suspected that there was much more to their relationship than just business.

‘If you’re lying to me Lois so help me, I’ll have you arrested for fraud and embezzlement.’

‘But darling, you’re the only one, honestly,’ she purred.

Greta shook her head in disgust. ‘Didn’t you hear her coming on to the doorman last night, Hank?’

‘Yes. It was pathetic, practically throwing herself at him. No pride whatsoever.’

‘Maybe we can use this against her.’

Hank and Greta got their chance later that evening. While Lois was ‘entertaining’ Fabio, the doorman, Greta used her cell phone to lure Rob to the penthouse. Upon springing Lois and Fabio on top of the kitchen counter, Rob immediately took Hank and Greta and began filing a suit against Lois for fraud and embezzlement. She was tried and convicted and sentenced to twenty-three life sentences with a non-parole period of two days (the justice system really sucks these days).

Hank and Greta were rightfully recognised as the recording artists that they were and became very rich and very famous. David Letterman appeared in their music video.

They returned to their father in Brooklyn to find him alone. Chantelle, their wicked stepmother, had run off with a TV evangelist.

Hank and Greta and their tree surgeon father (now retired) all moved to Monaco to avoid paying their taxes and are currently being investigated by the IRS.

The End

Story Three: Cinderella

Once upon a time in the state of Texas, there lived a man who had a daughter called Ella. After his wife ran off with a guy she found in an Internet chat room, he remarried a woman who had two daughters of her own called Anastasia and Kim. Anastasia and Kim were awful girls who took after their equally awful mother, as they were extremely cruel and vain. These girls didn’t even have nice personalities to make up for the fact that they must have each been severely beaten with an ugly stick. Ella however possessed great beauty that really pissed off her two ugly stepsisters. Besides her beauty, Ella also had a lovely disposition marred only by one or two psychotic episodes as a child.

Her wicked stepmother hated Ella with a passion for, in the presence of Ella, her own two daughters looked even more hideous than they already were, so their mother was fearful of the prospect of them never finding themselves husbands. She worked Ella like a dog, finding all the dirty, degrading and menial housework she could for her to do while her own daughters sat and watched talk shows for most of the day. In fact that is how Ella came to get her nickname of Cinderella — by cleaning out all the cinders from the fireplace each morning. From then on, her stepmother and stepsister’s refused to call her anything else and so it caught on and Ella was no longer known by any name other than Cinderella. Cinderella tried to tell her father of her plight, but he was a most hen-pecked man who spent his days at the local bar, drowning his sorrows.

One day it was announced that the son of one of the most influential men in the country was getting married and (as everyone knows) weddings are a great place to pick up! When the invitations arrived, Anastasia and Kim were overwhelmed by the possibility of at last finding their dream men and could speak of nothing else.

‘Where could my invitation be?’ Cinderella pondered.

‘It probably got lost in the mail,’ her stepmother said as she and her daughters laughed riotously.

Kill them! voices inside of Cinderella’s head ordered. Kill them all!

Unfortunately because of the badgering she took from her stepmother and stepsister’s, Cinderella’s self-esteem was shot to hell so she just did whatever she was told even if she didn’t agree with it. So even though she knew that it was wrong to brutally murder people, she just said, ‘Oh, okay,’ and gave in to the satanic voices in her head.

That night when the house was deathly quiet and everyone else was asleep, Cinderella went into her closet and pulled out her tallest, sharpest stiletto shoe.

Go on, let the big girl have it! the voices urged as Cinderella stood over Anastasia’s bed. Cinderella covered her eyes and before she knew what was what, she had rammed the heel down hard into Anastasia’s skull. The next morning the coroner came and ruled the girl’s death looked just a tad suspicious and that a full investigation would start immediately. Cinderella felt bad for viciously murdering her stepsister, but the voices in her head told her that it was okay so then she felt a little better.

‘Oh mother,’ Kim cried, ‘dear, dear Anastasia is gone. How will I ever go on without my sweet, sweet sister? I don’t want to live any more!’ she threw herself down onto her bed and sobbed hysterically.

‘There, there princess, don’t cry. You can wear Anastasia’s new gold and diamond tiara to the wedding next week if it will make you feel better,’ her mother soothed.

Suddenly Kim arose from her depression with a huge grin. ‘Really?’ she beamed.

Cinderella couldn’t believe Kim’s insensitivity. ‘How can she be so heartless?’ Cinderella asked out loud.

What are you talking about? You’re the one that killed her! the voices in her head bluntly reminded her.

‘Oh, yeah.’

The next day Cinderella’s stepmother called her into the parlour.

‘Well Cinderella,’ she announced, ‘now that Anastasia is worm food, you may as well go to the wedding in her place,’ and she handed Cinderella the invitation.

‘Really stepmother? Really and truly?’ Cinderella cried.

Nooo, I talk to hear myself speak,’ her stepmother spat sarcastically. ‘Now get out!’

Don’t let her speak to you like that. You know what you must do Cinderella — kill her!

That night Cinderella again grabbed her stiletto shoe and while her stepmother slept, she hit her in the head with the heel, embedding it into her skull.

The next day a young, good-looking detective came around to ask Cinderella some questions about her stepmother’s death but she just gave him a back rub and buttered him up with donuts and he left, none the wiser.

That afternoon Kim flaunted the beautiful diamond and gold tiara in Cinderella’s face.

‘Look what I am wearing to the wedding. I’m gonna get me the hunkiest guy there,’ she laughed.

You must have that tiara Cinderella — kill her!

So that night Cinderella once again took out her trusty stiletto and rammed it through Kin’s skull. The next day when the young, good-looking detective came around again, Cinderella just batted her eyelashes at him and asked him to be her date for the wedding. The detective was so mesmerised by Cinderella’s beauty that he immediately forgot about the murder investigation and said yes to her offer of a date.

The night of the wedding soon arrived and by the time the detective had come to pick Cinderella up, she had transformed her already beautiful self into an absolute stunner.

‘Gee Cinderella — you’re an absolute stunner!’ the detective exclaimed.

What does he mean by that? the voices asked. Is that a threat? You know what you must do Cinderella — kill him!

‘But he’s so cute,’ Cinderella whispered.

Oh, we know — those dimples, that beautiful smile, those gorgeous blue…JUST KILL HIM! the voices demanded.

All night Cinderella and the detective danced. The handsome cop not once taking his eyes off his beautiful date.

‘Oh Cinderella,’ he whispered into her ear. ‘I think I’m falling for you.’

He doesn’t mean that.

‘You don’t mean that.’

‘Yes, I do.’

No, he doesn’t Cinderella. He’s just like all the others. He’ll use you up and then throw you away.

‘No, you don’t. You’re just like all the others. You’ll use me up and…and…’

Throw you away!

‘Throw me away!’

‘No Cinderella, I promise. I’ll love you forever,’ he said as their lips met in a passionate lock.

Wow — good kisser!

For the rest of the evening, Cinderella and her detective danced and kissed and she too knew that she was falling for him. If only the voices in her head weren’t so damn disagreeable!

At the stroke of midnight Cinderella — bump him off! the voices instructed.

‘But I love him,’ Cinderella protested.

Bump him off Cinderella or we’ll start singing Barry Manilow songs until you go insane!

‘All right, all right, I’ll kill him. Just…no Barry Manilow!’

Two minutes before midnight the detective asked Cinderella to go with him out into the dark, empty and very isolated car park. She didn’t want to kill him but she really hated Barry Manilow and so decided that her hot-looking date must die.

‘Oh Cinderella,’ the detective cried, ‘I’ve never met anyone like you before. I spend my days with thieves, drug dealers and serial killers — you wouldn’t believe some of the sicko’s out there. But you, you’re like a breath of fresh air.’

‘Oh, you’re just saying that,’ she giggled.

‘No, I mean it. I love you Cinderella and I can’t believe that I’m about to ask you this but…will you marry me?’

And with that Cinderella took off her stiletto and rammed it into the detective’s head.

‘I’ll take that as a no, shall I?’ he mumbled before falling down, dead.

‘Who’s there?’ a voice called from the darkness. ‘Is everything all right?’

Cinderella swung around to see a valet walking toward her. She got so frightened and confused that she fled, forgetting to take the stiletto with her.

The next day as Cinderella sat watching Natural Born Killers on the TV, a newsflash telecast the murder of the young, good-looking detective:

‘A young, good-looking detective has been found murdered at last nights society wedding of the year — also known as a great place to pick up. Police believe that a person they are dubbing the ‘Stiletto Slayer’ may be responsible. The slayer, apparently not too bright, left the murder weapon at the scene — a size six and a half shoe that police are now using to find the killer. A police spokesperson said that they are so sick and tired of this case that the first woman that the shoe fits comfortably will be charged.’

‘Oh, what will I do?’ Cinderella gasped. ‘And where are those voices when you need them?’

She packed her things into her car and headed for the border. ‘If only that young, good-looking detective were alive,’ she cried. ‘I just know that he could help me.’

If that young, good-looking detective were alive, you wouldn’t be in this mess — dummy!

‘Oh, so you’re back are you? You got me into this mess, now get me out of it!’

No way! You’re on your own now sister! There’s a young and impressionable girl in Washington DC with my name on her psychosis. There’s no telling what we could get up to in that city. See ya!

Cinderella drove and drove until she was almost at the state line. As she looked ahead into the distance, to her horror she could see a police roadblock.

‘Just pull yourself together now Cinderella,’ she calmly told herself. ‘You’re beautiful and you’ve gotten yourself out of plenty of speeding tickets — how hard can four murder charges be? Just unbutton your blouse a little, act dumb and you’ll be fine.’

‘Afternoon ma’am,’ a young police officer said. ‘Would you mind stepping out of the vehicle and trying on this shoe?’ he asked.

‘Of course not officer,’ she giggled. ‘But what’s a nice, handsome, strapping young police officer like yourself doing all the way out here in this hot, hot desert?’ she pursed her lips and batted her eyelids.

‘Just doin’ my job ma’am,’ he replied.

Cinderella could not understand the police officer’s obvious disinterest in her.

‘Ooops, silly me,’ she cried as she threw her keys onto the ground right in front of the officer before bending over in her ever-so-short skirt to pick them up.

‘Look, you’re wasting your time missy — I’m gay. Just try on the shoe and then you can go.’

‘Great! Just my luck. Give me the damn shoe,’ Cinderella snarled as she snatched it from the cop’s grasp.

She slipped her foot into the stiletto and of course, it was a perfect fit.

‘Bingo! Looks like we have a winner,’ the cop said as he raised Cinderella’s arm like a victorious prizefighter.

Cinderella was tried and convicted and sentenced to death.

As she sat in the electric chair the governor asked, ‘Do you have any last requests Cinderella?’

To which she replied, ‘Yes. Please let me go?’ she smiled and batted her eyelids.

The governor was so impressed by her beauty and her dumbness that he agreed to let her go on the condition that she not murder anyone else ever again. Seems you can get away with murder — you just have to be pretty enough (or an American football hero).

Cinderella agreed, became a law-abiding citizen and went on to become a best-selling author with her self-help book titled, Just Act Dumb and You’ll Be Fine.

The End

Bonny Cassidy

Overload #30

2 Poems for March

(UNTITLED)

Even as her brother dies,
the buttons of her school blazer stay in their loops,
the pleats of her tunic keep their creases and swing
with chic around her knees.
Her gesture’s from a supermarket aisle conversation,
her brows caught in an arch of
what by any other name is arrogance.

There was a Coke in my hand,
the day I thought I’d killed a man –
standing in the road
with my car like groceries scattered from a split bag,
thinking, here’s where the story ends.

POSTURES

He says he’s roughed her up a bit, and she touches her cheek vaguely;
he wishes to hell she’d put something on;
the moment is well and truly dead and he’s been fully clothed for hours, it seems,
pacing about behind her and shuffling papers on a table or picking up the telephone
and putting it down again; asks if she’d like anything, needs anything, money?
Makes a fleeting joke.
She laughs rather too loudly, and goes out onto the balcony.
He follows her out, but the wind strikes them and they trail back in.
She puts on her underwear with the hunch of a good loser, walks to the kitchen;
in the window above the sink she sees her reflection and his –
in the room behind her, looking at the back window.
The elevator rolls up like a diving bell –
they talk about disposable razors and admire the paintings the old women have put up
in the hall: a pulpy little girl, semi-clothed in rags; a portrait of a man in a vest beside a racehorse.
She fingers her cheek, and it flushes under her touch.