Showing posts with label Unlikely Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unlikely Stories. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

THE WINDSHIELD OF A MOVING CAR IS HARD, ESPECIALLY WHEN YOU DROP ON TOP OF IT FROM THIRTY FEET


Okay, so, note: I said I was going to do this thing over a year ago. It was the most outrageously stupid idea for a short story imaginable.......if you knew me back then you'll remember the quote: "I'm going to write a story about a guy who legally changes his name to Howard the Duck. And I'm going to make it good. And I'm going to get it published."
        And I did, too. Here ya go. 





Howard the Duck stumbles through the intersection of North Street and Mission Boulevard. He coughs. The light changes halfway through his crossing, because the light, the confounded crossing sign, is never up long enough for anyone trying to cross the street. He coughs again, almost trips, and cars begin honking. He finally makes it across and the stream of traffic headed up Mission Boulevard continues on its way. A van full of kids in baseball caps is one of the vehicles that rolls past him. As it goes by, the door slides open and one of the kids leans out bodily. The kid yells, “hey, buddy! Fuck you!!!!”
It sounds, probably due to the wind, the general street ambiance and what have you, as though the kid yelled “puck you.” or maybe “buck you,” but Howard the Duck gets the point.
He doubles over and lets loose a loud, hacking cough and then he tries to flip the kid the bird. The door has closed back up and the van is now safely in the distance, well past his revenge.
Most of the suffering in the world is created by kids wearing baseball caps, Howard the Duck thinks. He looks down at the base of his hand and notices a wad of blood. Goddammit, He thinks, and tries to wipe it off on his jacket. He keeps walking.
Howard the Duck has problems. First and foremost, he has Tuberculosis. He is dying. He's also a pedestrian, which only belabors the point.
There are other problems, though, that only create greater impact in his life.
A. Howard the Duck has a price on his head. He is almost sure of it.
B. He is a walking copyright infringement. And he must allow that this is not an accident of birth but a choice he made, a moral stand that has had ramifications in his life.
      1. Nobody understands him----not his girlfriend, or the guys at work....not even his best friend.
All of which brings him back to his primary goal. He's walking to McDonald's. He's going to meet his friend Spider-Man, to tell him he disapproves of his lifestyle choices.
Howard the Duck shakes his head. Skippy, he corrects himself, not Spider-Man. I refuse to call
him Spider-Man.
Skippy does not understand the weight and the stress of being a walking copyright infringement. Skippy is young, of course, and only sees the glitz and glamour of naming yourself after your favorite character. Howard the Duck realizes all of this and hopes to make Skippy aware of some of the pitfalls he has to live with.
He hears a shout back toward the intersection. He half-turns. He's always looking over his shoulder these days, because he knows Marvel Comics are following him and he is sure that they mean to kill him.
Nothing. This time.
Besides, he thinks, changing your name legally to “Spider-Man” is stupid. Spider-Man is a popular character consumed by the masses for no good reason and to no good end. There is nothing special, risky or meaningful about such a move.
Changing one's name legally to “Howard the Duck” is a bold and deeply personal move that invites hardship and misunderstanding.
A. Few if any people hear “Howard the Duck” and think of Steve Gerber's brilliant, existential satirical comic. They usually think of the horrid '80s movie if they think of anything.
B. There is nothing fun or glamorous about filling out paperwork and signing it as “Howard the Duck”. Try renting an apartment that way. Buying a car. Shit, try VOTING.
      1. And again, the afformentioned understanding that you are a marked man, your days are numbered and Marvel Comics are trying to kill you. And in the case of Howard the Duck, it's just an arrogant grab for intellectual property. There's not even a goddamned profit motive.
He will set Skippy straight on this and more, if it's the last thing he does. And it might be.
His real last given name is “Vlierboom”. He hates it. The guys at the factory simply call him “Boom”, which he's fine with. They can't pronounce “Vlierboom”. Past the bosses who hand him his paycheck and the personnel department who he had to clear the change with he has no desire to share this with his co-workers for all the obvious reasons. He doesn't need any of the wise guys pointing out that he is not actually a duck. He knows that.
It's a point that Jessie, his girlfriend, makes frequently. “I'd be happy to meet you in the middle and call you 'Howard the Man',” she tells him. “I mean, you are a man, you know.”
“That's not the point,” he retorts, “I'm trapped in a world I never made. I literally am that character.”
“You're making a world you never made by calling yourself a duck,” she says. She always falls back on that one and he thinks it's all beside the point but then they smoke up another big fatty, he hacks up a lung and she starts talking to him about how he needs to see a doctor. So nothing is really ever solved in this circular exchange.
It might be a problem of the therapist in question. Jessie says she's a playwrite, although she's never written a play in the whole time he's known her.
Howard the Duck busts his hump for a couple of miles before finally reaching the big intersection and heading to McDonald's on the other side of the street. He winds himself getting across the intersection but makes it in good time. He crumples up by the light post. “Uh-hriiiii-hriiiii-hriiiiii-hriiii,” he coughs.
To get to McDonald's from the corner he has to hike up a steep hill and cross a couple of different parking lots. He thinks that motorists don't know the painstaking difficulty required in going everywhere on foot----needing to walk miles for a futile meeting at McDonalds because your best friend has made a stupid life decision. Of course, the whole process only exacerbates the coughing. He
tries to apply some thought to this. Spider-Man. Why Spider-Man? And for the love of God, how the hell did Skippy slip that one past Judge Dunn?
Judge Dunn hates legal name changes. Jessie had actually told him this back when he first decided to change his name to Howard the Duck. She had a friend, she said, named April Morgan, who decided, for religious reasons, that she wanted to change her name to Purple Vanguard Trixie Diatribe 6. Yes, the number six, that was her last name. Judge Dunn grudgingly gave it to her but not before forcing her to give a long, detailed explanation as to why she wanted the name change and what it meant.
“Later on, like a year later,” Jessie told him, “she thought maybe her choice went a little far and she was having trouble getting jobs...she went back and got it shortened to just 'Trixie Diatribe', and the Judge yelled at her about how much of a burden she was putting on taxpayers. She gave her the name change but told her she didn't ever want to see her in her court again.”
Howard the Duck encountered similar wrath. He explained to the judge that he wanted the name change because he was trapped in a world he'd never made. She told him that such frivolous petitions like his were putting state taxpayers into a world they'd never made, but she grudgingly granted him the name change.
He does not know Trixie Diatribe.
After a herculean hike (and another good, hard cough), Howard the Duck finally makes McDonald's. Skippy is sitting in the booth closest to the exit. He's sipping on a shake. “Took ya long enough,” says Skippy.
“You know how far I had to walk,” rasps Howard the Duck, and this causes him to lurch into another coughing fit.
“You oughtta take a Riccola,” Skippy adds. Howard the Duck stops and regards Skippy's hairy moonface, peering at him guilelessly from underneath a mop of greasy, brown hair. He stops short of ripping him a new one.
“You eating, smart guy?”
Skippy looks down at his shake and then looks back up. “Nah, I'm good. Been waiting for you. For a while.” He holds up his wristwatch for emphasis.
“Alright, well, I've had a long walk, so I'm getting something.” Skippy nods agreeably and Howard the Duck gets in line.
His McDonald's order looks like this:
A. Quarter Pounder, no cheese.
B. 10-piece McNuggets.
        1. Sweet-and-Sour Sauce.
          D. Hot Mustard Sauce
          E. Large Fries.
          F. Medium Diet Coke.
Howard the Duck does not drink Diet Coke because he believes it will make him thin. He drinks Diet Coke because regular coke drinks are too sugary for him.
Upon receiving his order he sits down with Skippy at the booth by the exit.
“Skippy,” he says, and then, seeing Skippy frown, he corrects himself. “Sorry....'Spider-Man'.” Skippy's face softens slightly---apology expected.
“Been missing you at Munchkin, dude,” Skippy says, glazing over the faux pas. “Where ya been?”
“Sick,” says Howard the Duck, coughing again.
“Yeah, no shit,” remarks Skippy. “You oughtta take something for that.”
“I have TB,” Howard the Duck grunts.
Skippy takes another sip off his shake. “Sucks,” he says.
“Yeah,” Howard the Duck says. He tears into the burger and begins coughing again. This time it seems like the ketchup is setting it off, but everything sets it off. The cold air. The car exhaust. The food. You name it.
“Damn, dude,” Skippy says again.
“I'm dying,” says Howard the Duck.
“I guess,” Skippy muses.
“You're a goddamned idiot,” says Howard the Duck.
“What do you mean?”
“First and foremost, you don't listen to anything anyone tells you. That's just for starters.”
“Huh?! Dude, I have absolutely no idea what you mean!”
“I bet you don't, but that's just for starters!”
“What the hell, pal???? We haven't seen you for weeks at Munchkin.....months, maybe----and then you're all yellin' and attackin' and callin' names?”
Howard the Duck regards Skippy with a hard look and several vignettes go through his head:
A. Impalement
B. Castration
      1. Waterboarding, however hot, hip and trendy that may come off.
All of the above scenarios are accompanied by happy whistling music. There are a multitude of grievances at work in his head right now, but he puts them all aside in favor of one, which in his mind represents everything.
“Spider-Man,” he sighs.
Skippy smiles. “That's my name, don't wear it out!”
“Are you on crack, you fuckin' moron?! Seriously, are you sure your parents weren't related? Answer that for me, will ya?”
“Dude!”
“Don't 'Dude' me again, okay, ya mongoloid? Just what the fuck is wrong with you???”
“What do you mean??? Dude, what's up your ass????”
“Okay, so first off, I have to know, how hard did Judge Dunn jump down your throat when you told her you wanted to change your name to Spider-Man?!”
“Not at all! Man, she was a stand-up Judge!”
“Yeah, I'll bet she was.”
“Listen, just because she was a cooze to you doesn't mean she didn't learn something and lighten the hell up, man.....”
“Yeah? Yeah? What, exactly, do you figure she learned, huh?”
Skippy stammers for a few seconds and licks his lips. “Ah, maybe she got more tolerant of other peoples' individuality? And maybe you could re-learn some of that?”
“Oh, really? And whose individuality did she get more tolerant of? Explain that to me, will ya?”
“People like US, dude!!!! People who have their own ideas! People who don't march to everyone else's drummer, you know?”
“People like us,” crabs Howard the Duck, half under his breath. “Explain to me, exactly, how calling yourself 'Spider Man' helps you assert your individuality.”
“Well,” says Spider-Man, look a little nonplussed, “you know!” He gestures frantically to Howard, as if that should speak for itself.
“No,” Howard the Duck smiles. “I don't. How about you explain it to me?”
Spider-Man now has a look of concern and frustration on his moonface. It reads a mix of “you should understand this already, dude,” coupled with a dash of “I thought you were my friend”.
“You know....being the Hero. Being your OWN hero! What you always tried to tell me!”
Howard the Duck is not placated. “I don't remember ever telling you that.”
“Well, not in so many words....”
“It's my moral obligation to call you on your shit, genius,” Howard the Duck sneers. “I'm dying, do you understand that? I'm DYING. And on top of that my life is shit. Marvel Comics are coming to kill me. And if they're coming to kill me, you'd better believe they're coming to kill you! Do you have any clue as to the can of worms you've popped upon yourself?”
Skippy cocks his head, not unlike one of those pug dogs who doesn't understand what it's being told by its owners. “No one's going to kill you, my friend! How could you think something like that?!”
“Fuck you!” Howard the Duck says though gritted teeth. The dumpy employee cleaning tables across the way stares their way and it's over. Howard the Duck knows he's been made. “Calling yourself 'Spider-Man'-----what kinds of sacrifices does that really require you to make? How much harder has it made your life? Do you have any idea of the cliff you're headed for???”
Again, the quizzical expression. “What are you talking about? You're starting to worry me, bro!”
“Why 'Spider-Man'?!” Howard the Duck is trying his damndest not to scream in Skippy's face right there in the restaurant now. “Justify that to me, will you please? Why the hell was it such a big deal for you to call yourself 'Spider-Man'? What made you think that was such a good idea?”
Skippy stammers, “it's just my own personal choice!” He waits expectantly, as if that should be a satisfactory response.
“I get that part. What the hell is so great about Spider-Man to where you're going to change your name to that?”
Skippy looks agog as if to say, how can you even ask that? “Dude! What's so great about Spider-Man? What's so great about Howard the Duck? So, see how easy that is?”
“You're avoiding the question! What the fuck does goddamn Spider-Man say about you?”
Skippy looks contemplative for the first time ever and he chews into his answer with some level of deliberation. “Well,” he says, as if thinking about it for the first time ever, “Spider-Man is cool.”
Howard the Duck fights back a scream. “Please continue.”
Skippy searches for the words. “Spider-Man is a badass. And by taking the name I become a badass!” He smiles hopefully.
“Kill me,” groans Howard the Duck. He lets loose a frail, spluttering cough.
Now Skippy goes on the offensive. “Listen, where do you get off? I made a personal choice that's very important to me. Spider-Man is cool, everyone knows that! What the hell's so great about calling yourself Howard the Duck?! I saw that movie when I was a kid----it sucked ass!”
Howard the Duck affixes a dead stare on Skippy.
“Yeah, you heard me,” Skippy says, more emboldened. “I saw that movie. Howard the Duck sucks ass. So don't go trying to judge me!”
Howard the Duck gets up out of his seat. He suffers an explosive coughing fit.
“That's right, buddy,” grins Skippy. “So how do you like it?” Howard the Duck hobbles out the door, hacking uncontrollably.
With great difficulty, he makes it across the parking lot and into the woods out in back of the shopping plaza. He finds a treestump in a clearing and rolls himself a cigarette. He smokes and coughs and smokes and coughs and then he just sits there for several hours, thinking and yet trying not to think because thinking hurts too much.
It's getting dark. He's wasted his entire day on this worthless errand. He hobbles at least a mile to the Gas Mart. There's at least one good reason to stop there---they've got one of the few still-functioning payphones----hell, maybe the very last----in town.
He sees that it's fifty cents per call and he wistfully remembers back when a dime was required.
He stops for a second and remembers when there were payphones.
Howard the Duck doesn't have a cell phone. He dislikes and distrusts them. He had a little flip phone at one point---he got rid of it because it was problematic and everyone was looking at him as if they thought he was a drug dealer.
He dials up Jessie. “I need to see you,” he wheezes
“That's cool,” she says, her aloof, baked tones coming across the phone line. “Dude, this is amazing---I have to show you!”
“What?” Howard the Duck is irritated. His head's still back in McDonald's with Skippy, who legally changed his name because he thought it would be cool.
Spider-Man, he corrects himself.
Jessie disrupts his personal hell. “I'm back! I'm done! I wrote a musical! A whole musical! It's finished!”
Howard the Duck is not in the headspace for this. “What?”
“I wrote a musical-----big, broadway, all the bells and whistles-----I wrote a musical based on WATERSHIP DOWN!”
It's as if someone hit him in the face with a brick. “WATERSHIP DOWN???”
“Omigod, babe, it's so amazing....I feel like it came out of me through some other force----this is going to change everything!”
“Hold on, back it up a sec. WATERSHIP DOWN, that's a book about rabbits, isn't it?”
“No! It's an allegory----it's an epic and an exodus about people who leave their homeland and fight to make a new existence.....”
“Epic and an exodus, Jessie----are the characters in the story or are they not rabbits?”
“I....they are but they're not,” long silence. “Dude, you're really harshing my buzz, okay? Come over----I'll play you the songs. They'll make you believe, just like the world is going to believe!”
A harsh wheeze turns into another coughing jag. He manages to eke out “I'm dying,” into the phone.
“God, there you go being negative again! Come to my place! I'm going to play you my songs and....”
“I saw Skippy. He changed his name to Spider-Man.”
“Wow. That's crazy.”
“He doesn't even know. He doesn't even know.....”
“Howard, you need to stop, okay? It's a little weird, just like changing your name to 'The Duck' is a little weird, but it's fine! That's his choice!”
“No, but his reasoning, Christ, it's so dumb! “
“Boy, there's the pot calling the kettle black! Dude! Drop all your crazy no-hope and come hear all the songs. And quit worrying!”
“ 'Kay,” he grumbles. “I'll be over soon.”
“ 'Bout time! Love you!” She coos.
“Yeah,” he grumps and hangs up the phone. He ambles past the front window of the Gas Mart and sees that there's a comic rack in there.....understocked and lonely, but goddammit, it's an According-to-Hoyle comic book rack. A twentyish, unkempt, long haired kid is loitering by it, thumbing through a dog-eared Archie comic.
The kid looks up and stares through the window at him, as does the fat clerk with the muttonchop sideburns behind the counter.
Payphones. Comic book racks. There's something not right about this place....these people. Time to leave.
He worries that they might all be agents of Marvel Comics, sent to watch him. Or apprehend.
He walks along the dark road and hits the trailer park where Jessie lives by eight thirty in the evening. Several things happen:
A. Jessie plugs in her Casio synth and plays Howard the Duck all the songs from her WATERSHIP DOWN musical, in sequence. She talks about how she wants all the actors to wear hats with bunny ears and she shows him some of her choreography ideas.
B. Howard the Duck goes out to the tiny kitchenette, grabs a steak knife and stabs Jessie forty times.
    1. He lights a number of glass-encased Catholic saint candles around the house and places them all around the gas stove.
    1. He opens up all the gas valves on the stove and heads out.
E. He begins the arduous hike back to his own place. He never gets there. He's found dead by the side of the road the next morning. The eventual autopsy report mentions exposure and exhaustion. And Tuberculosis.
News of the oddball murder/death makes the rounds on all the local news affiliates, everyone has a good laugh over the whole thing and it is quickly forgotten. He is consistently referred to in the reports as “Howard Vlierboom” instead of his legal name, but everyone takes a moment out to laugh over his given name. No mention is ever made of his obsession with an arcane cult comic book character.
Skippy is overcome with grief because of the death of his friend.
A. He belly flops off the overpass on Exit 76 one Saturday morning.
B. He goes straight through the windshield of a Mini-Cooper, accidentally killing a family of four who were visiting from Oregon.
    1. Several state highway workers are wounded in the wreck.
The entire region is shocked and saddened by Skippy's death. Roadside tributes are erected in his honor. His sister tearfully tells the local media that he had been very despondent over the last several weeks. She describes him as “an old soul” and says that he loved comic book heroes like Spider-Man.
Spider-Man ephemera pops up along with the usual bouquets and crosses along the spot where Skippy ended his life. Years go by but sad and haunting stories are handed down and exchanged for decades to follow, regarding the tragic story of The Spider-Man of Exit 76.




Copyright 2018 C.F. Roberts, published in UNLIKELY STORIES MARK V. Copyright 2019 Molotov Editions


THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST:

ALICE DONUT-Pure Acid Park
WAYNE SHORTER-Juju
SWANS-The Seer
SWANS-To Be Kind
VIC BONDI/ARTICLES OF FAITH-Fortunate Son EP

Friday, February 15, 2019

WRONGDOING WROULETTE


I've been sitting on this one for an inordinate length of time for absolutely NO GOOD REASON other than my own stupid lack of organization and distraction with other (mostly asinine) things. But I've been wanting to do it and there's no time like the (while I've got a brief, sane window) ever-fragile present.......Uncle Chuck has been on an INCREDIBLE ROLL these past few months as far as placing short stories and other sundries....some publishers out there have been VERY KIND to your strooly and I think it's crucially important to help promote these good people and their efforts.
While I'm running hot and cold on a lot of my bigger, more ambitious projects, the art of the short story is one that I've always had a particular liking for, and lately I've glommed on to it, HARD. I like playing with these compact narratives and I feel like I'm producing a lot of good ones. So I'm emphasizing that, but I've got other goodies in store. Anyway, here comes a laundry list of publications, webzines and publishers that kick ass and they deserve both your attention and your support, so pull out yer spiral notebooks and take note......
     We're gonna go back to October 2018 for the first couple. I teased my contributions to UNLIKELY STORIES MARK V a few months back, and they're HERE. I mean, THESE ARE THE LINKS TO THE STORIES.
http://www.unlikelystories.org/content/jesus-superman-and-rice-patties?fbclid=IwAR0up52UbYy4hQNgD80VII3UNReo1zfk5K2wCHCu6r3dw4VlGcZ5c3eupDg

http://www.unlikelystories.org/content/the-windshield-of-a-moving-car-is-hard-especially-when-you-drop-on-top-of-it-from-thirty?fbclid=IwAR0ogh1j0BKouCLK3Nek4h6zBE0gsAt9AEEWBtKv5MBeMAf-HwF4ZyzUg8Y

"Jesus, Superman and Rice Patties" is an OLD story, very early, recently rewritten. "The Windshield of a Moving Car is Hard, especially when you drop on top of it from thirty feet" is FAIRLY NEW. Some friends might remember me threatening to write a story about a guy legally changing his name to "Howard the Duck" YEAH, WELL, I WENT THOUGH WITH IT. You can read it RIGHT THERE.
     In general you need to check out UNLIKELY STORIES MARK V when you get a chance.....Jonathan Penton has put together a fine rolling periodical with piss, verve and color.

      Another person deserving of your interest and support is Sreemanti Sengupta at Odd Books and the ODD MAGAZINE. She puts together a unique pastiche of webzine and tiny-but-mighty publications. Fourteen bucks gets you a year's package, and you really need to experience the joy yourself (as I did) of getting this beautiful stack in the mail...
Not that I'm not part of the cavalcade or anything....
       "The Day the Sun got an Eye Gouge" is a weird one, and you need to consider that in light of the last one I linked to. If you like stories about all-day eclipses, animals wearing sun visors, kids with Asperger's Syndrome and flying, talking pot roasts, then fire up a big spliff and check it out!!!!!! (Not that I advocate that kind of thing or anything). While you're at it, though, check the Odds and their entire catalogue out at length.

https://www.theoddmagazine.com/

      Okay----next up: FEARLESS!!!! Goddamnit, what can I say about FEARLESS???
Kevin Hibshman and I go back, WAY back to the Mesozoic Era, when we both crawled out of the primordial ooze and started lobbing xerographic molotov cocktails around. Somewhere amid that ferocious melee we peered around the swamp at each other and said, "hey, buddy!"
FEARLESS (originally DISTURBING DREAMS AND DRIED BLOOD) is an underground lit INSTITUTION and it's been around forever. Anytime FEARLESS appears in any incarnation it's an event. This time out it's pretty extraordinary, like a little poetic thoughtbomb, and it gives me all the nostalgic feels for the days when we were running out to places like Kinko's or Staples to print up en masse and drop all our sodden product on an unsuspecting public. Despite our current digital mileu Kevin replicates our old DIY, cut-and-paste ethic to PERFECTION.


        https://archive.org/details/Fearless66

THAT'S IT, RIGHT THERE. THAT'S THE LINK TO THE MAG ITSELF. Click that and you can read it and you can download it for your very own. Don't say I never gave you nothin'.
        I've got a few poems in here, although the biggest point of excitement (for me) is the first appearance in publication of the Fugues....little dream logic prose pieces I started doing recently (Actually, the first Fugue seen publicly was Fugue Seven, which I ran back in September and which was written explicitly for this blog). I think my original thought was that the Fugues were going to largely be erotica, but...y'know...I just can't do anything straight down the middle....but I've got more of these things to throw around, so....don't forget your helmets!
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1794097392?fbclid=IwAR2tFbjvm4aw6Z-R94dm1hPclj7gHrHK8C4GFg4gphCjL23ZEsjYOy3reog

        Last but hardly least I need to give a shoutout to the fine folks at ALIEN BUDDHA PRESS who are running a monster of an operation and are more productive than any small press I think I've ever seen. Red Focks and Co. have their game DOWN. I'm appearing in three of Alien Buddha's jams, right now, all of which look great and all of which have emerged at a startlingly fast rate. OH---YEAH---and as you can see from the link above, they're all available through Amazon.

       I was pretty excited when the call went up for a drug-centered anthology as I'd been thinking for a while about a new strain of literature that I referred to as "Pharma-Punk" (and I'm sure there are plenty of folks who've been writing along those lines forever)----in writing this kind of open-ended speculative fiction revolving around substance abuse I'm following the lead of writers like Hank Kirton and Shannon X. Caine, both of whom are exceptional with the pseudo-genre. My entry with Alien Buddha is "Wet", set in a bleak, dystopian future (what a dull, stagnant term) where we follow several sketchy characters in search of their drug of choice. I'm real proud of this one.
         ALIEN BUDDHA ZINE #3  and TALES FROM ALIEN BUDDHA 4 feature my short stories, "The Jennifer Tree" and "Faith",  although I'm actually a little fuzzy on which story appears in which publication. You know what, though? You should pick 'em all up. Chase 'em down on Amazon.
       Anyway, that's the roundup and that's what I've been up to these past few months. So curl up with something good to read and give some of these outfits some much deserved attention.

THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST:
1. IDLES-Brutalism
2. BRIAN JONESTOWN MASSACRE- Strung Out in Heaven
3. BRIAN JONESTOWN MASSACRE-Thank God for Mental Illness
4. SKINNY PUPPY-Rabies
     


Saturday, September 29, 2018

FUGUE SEVEN PLUS GENERALIZED WRONGDOINGS



FUGUE SEVEN: SICKNESS AND MOURNING
(Slight Return)

by C.F. Roberts

I'm sick....if you have the misfortune of seeing me I look like some sad cartoon bug or something. I haven't bathed in the better part of a week, I'm in constant pain, I can't eat and I really am truly the sickest I've been in decades.
The little black cat is curled up in a ball by my side----she won't leave. She rests half on my body, half off, because it hurts so much when she's on top of me that I won't stop moaning and groaning.
What's she thinking? Is she afraid I'm going to die? I'm loathe to say what my cat is thinking, but I guess I appreciate the good thoughts.
Two years later I've recovered from my illness. There have been fluctuating ups and downs in life.
On this day that same little cat that would not leave my side is dying on the living room floor in front of me. I spent the last several days watching her deteriorate to the point where she has been lying limp on the arm of the couch, choosing to sleep most of the day.
Now she has abandoned all places of comfort, choosing instead to lie flat on her side. My wife strokes her softly and she shudders, letting out a weak, noiseless cry.
We tell her we love her and we're here----right here with her and we're not going away. We hang back and talk as she lies still.
After a while we realize she's gone.
Some close friends go behind our backs and do us the kindness of paying to have her cremated. She is returned to us a week or so later, her ashes in a tiny, wooden container with her name emblazoned across the top. It looks like a tiny casket and it's hard to believe a little box like that contains what used to be a cat.
I show it to our male. He rubs up on it with a great deal of affection. I don't know if any part of him understands that what we're showing him is his sister, but he seems to like it a lot, regardless.
We place it on our mantlepiece with some of our favorite things---Exotica records, Halloween decorations, anything Hawkwind ever did. We burn some incense and place a little cheezit cracker on the tiny casket. She loved them. She would steal snacks like that right out of our hands.
She was cantankerous, unruly, unrelenting, loyal and beautiful. I'll spend the rest of my life wondering if I was worthy of her company.


Copyright 2018 Molotov Editions


While I'm kicking around like a lout and trying to preserve my 900th skin graft I figure I haven't done any kind of a status update in a while...lot of exciting news on the writerly front.
I guess that the latest is that in early October ( Projected as sometime in the week of Oct. 7-13) UNLIKELY STORIES MARK V will be running my short stories, "Jesus, Superman and Rice Patties" and "The Windshield of a Moving Car is Hard, Especially when you Drop on Top of it from Thirty Feet" over two consecutive days. Keep an eye peeled. This publication rocks, they've been kicking it for a very long time and you can check them out HERE:

http://www.unlikelystories.org/

In addition, THE ODD MAGAZINE and Odd Books are going to be doing my short story, "The Day the Sun got an Eye Gouge" as a mini-chap at some point in the future....I latched onto the Odds earlier this year and fiercely recommend them----they've got something fresh ad unlike anything else going on! Look them up HERE:

https://www.theoddmagazine.com/

One of these stories is actually one of my oldest ever, which up to this point I've never been able to place---the other two are significantly newer. Keep an eye peeled for this stuff....they're three of my favorite stories and I can't wait for people to read 'em.



       Let's see---what else? OH!!!! YEAH!!!!! MY BAND PUT OUT A GODDAMN ALBUM!!!!!! As I've been slinging the hash of hype for a while, it's probably important that I finally get to actually pimp this thing! We even have our first video out!!!!! And if you haven't seen it, here it is:


Sorry if you've gotta sign in----the sticky wicket of having to farm a music video with a few naughty words through the local Access Station/Media Center---but they're a great help to me----have been for many years, god bless 'em!
Anyway, yeah, that's me----I produced and edited the video, those are my paintings and my grotty vocals you're hearing-----sublime music  by the great Mike McAdam and percussive contributions by Brad Rondeau! Enjoy.
        We're talking about putting the album out on CD Baby in the future----until that happens, if you want a copy of the CD, well....if you're in NWA you can find it at our favorite musical haunt,
https://www.facebook.com/blockstreetrecords/
If you can't get it there, contact me. I'll see if I can't set ya up.

THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST:
BAUHAUS-Burning from the Inside
BAUHAUS-The Sky's Gone Out
KISS-Rock'N'Roll Over
THE GUN CLUB-Louder than Live