Friday, November 25, 2011

Obama doesn't mention Santa Claus in latest speech

Canadian police file picture, arrested for DUI in 2007
In a speech given to adults concerning the importance of family during the holiday months, President Obama forgot to mention Santa Claus.

"As a reminder, with the economy still struggling, it is best to remember how important family is during these troublesome times," Obama said during a recorded speech to families in need.  "Always donate your time and goodwill to not only your family, but to those who may not be as fortunate as you.  Everyone have a happy holiday season!" 

Immediately reporters seized on the lack of mentioning Santa Claus.

"It's reprehensible that President Hussein Obama would forget to mention the holy man himself, Santa Claus," Rush Limbaugh warbled during his own radio show. "If I didn't know better, I'd say that Obama doesn't believe in Santa Claus!  We can't have a black...I mean, a President who doesn't believe in Santa Claus!"

Glenn Beck provided his own theory during his radio show.  "Obama killed Santa Claus," Beck said between bouts of crying.  "He killed Santa Claus when he killed the free market with his health care plan!"

Despite the faux-controversy, most people did not seem worried about the omission in the speech.

"I'm fine with it," Alex Kingston, a 29-year old from Austin, TX told an ABC reporter.  "Santa never got me anything I wanted anyways.  Always damn socks."

Others were not so sure.

"I can't support a President who doesn't believe in Santa," Jerry Hauganuss said during a survey.  "I mean, what's next?  Not believing in a bicameral legislature and a judicial branch of government?"

When contacted for questions concerning the controversy, Santa Claus himself had a short and explicit answer.

"I don't give two flying fucks what President Obama believes," Mr. Claus said, annoyed by the whole issue.  "I've got shit to do, and the last thing I need are some damn stupid people making an issue out of nothing and wasting my time with annoying phone calls.  Now, goodbye!"

Also of note, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul, Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich also failed to mention Santa Claus in speeches given during the holiday season.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Oh Newt.. the gift that keeps on giving

"Hey, poor kid!  Clean your own damn school toilets!"
So I'm sneezing out my sinuses and coughing up my lungs tonight, so for shits and giggles I made my way to CNN. 

I came across this gem: 

Newt calls child labor laws "truly stupid."

If you read the whole article, you'll see that Newt believes poor children under the age of 16 in poor neighborhoods should be helping clean their schools.  Get rid of the janitors (and their unions, of course) and put kids in situations dealing with nasty chemicals and fishing whatever kids flush down the toilet. 

Now, I can't claim to be a genius, but this is pretty stupid. 

A couple reasons:

1.  The janitors working in those poor neighborhood have families to feed, too.  You would put them out of work so a child can learn the great skill of scrubbing toilets?

2.  Rather than improving schools in poor neighborhoods, or helping kids with athletics/educational after-school activities, you would rather show them the importance of never rising above the life of a janitor. 

3.  Child labor laws have existed so that children could not be used by anyone to do labor that would put the children in danger, or work when they should be learning.  

I think I understand it now.  Republicans want to drag down any progressive movement in society and take us back to a Golden Age where capitalism ran amok, and children were hired to be "grease monkeys," who would crawl into tight spaces in big machinery to fix the machines (and sadly, many children died in those machines). 

That's right.  Newt wants us to go back to the Industrial Revolution. 

I am starting to wonder if the Republicans are just trolling the American people.  They have to be.  No one could be this stupid.

Oh, wait.  According to my brother (whose blog is www.brettcottrell.blogspot.com by the way), they are. 

Gus

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

I love the taste of double standards! Tastes like squirrel!

Double standards are fun.  An example:

Someone makes a satirical joke about your religion.  Your automatic response is to be offended at this, because "how dare someone make fun of my beliefs!"

Then to prove your hypocritical standards, you go watch South Park and laugh at the stereotypical Jewish parents of Kyle, or the satirical idea that the Christian God is nothing more than a gigantic Spider Queen.

That is a double standard.  You can be just fine having other religions mocked or made fun of, but the idea that your religion should be free of such satire is hypocritical.

I honestly don't give a rat's ass what people believe, though that doesn't mean I won't point out inherent flaws in their beliefs that deny people basic human rights and equality.  My brother and I both use sarcasm, irony and satire to make the point that religions believe some pretty remarkably wacky things (shameless plug, my brother's blog is www.brettcottrell.blogspot.com).

You can't have it both ways.  If you consider your religion above satire and sardonic wit, you need to do one of two things:

1.  You need to be offended across the board for ALL religions
OR
2.  You can accept the fact that not everyone believes what you believe, and people will use humor to provoke thought, or use sarcasm simply because they can.  Accept the fact that your religion is not perfect, and work towards creating a more fair and just religion for ALL humans. 

Even if you take option 1, that doesn't mean my brother and I are going to stop, nor are the billions who don't believe as you do.

So please, choose option 2.  It will make the world a better place.  Who doesn't want that?

Rant over.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Facts, Fictions, Prophecies!

I've come to accept a couple pretty reliable facts/philosophies in life, along with some prophecies I've stumbled onto.   I've decided to share them with you, the audience, in list form.  Everyone loves lists!

If there is a God, it doesn't give a shit anymore about its creation.

Religion gives you values, morals, and an in some rare cases, a superiority complex.  Also Herpes. 

Speaking of herpes, STD's aren't funny, unless you believe that the planet Mercury is full of the Clap instead of metal.

Music is paramount to human happiness.

George Lucas always sucked ass at writing, and got lucky with the first movies. 

YOU SHALL NOT PASS.

500 channels of television is 500 channels of utter crap.

The Daily Show, Colbert Report, and nature shows are about all that are worth watching.

Risk is still the greatest board game out there.

Dogs, though fun, still have nothing on cats and wombats.

Heh, chinchilla...hehe.

Bacon is tasty.

So are artichokes.

And good coffee.

Sleep is a necessary evil, despite my best efforts to make it not so necessary.

Beauty may be in the eye of the beholder, unless someone stole your eyes and replaced them with coal.  Then everything is horrible.

The world needs people who promote humor.  Humor drives humanity to its finest social moments.

Fight Club is one of the greatest movies for men of my generation.

Just because you wrote a big-ass book centuries ago doesn't mean you are a great writer.

Zombies are funny.  They won't be so funny when become real.  (Note: I fully expect the breakouts to occur at Walmart.  You heard it here first).

Tool will retire after their next album is released. 

This list ends here.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Meet Sergeant Bronson


The sound of a jet engine rumbling to life filled the slight silence.  The lights flickered off, followed by a ear-stabbing engine fly-by.  Fireworks exploded in a fiery rage above and around a gigantic screen on one side of the arena, splaying their sparks in nearly every direction.  The arena crowd went crazy as a song could be heard above the sonic booms of the pyrotechnics, something about being in a danger zone.  The bloated screen played a video with dizzying images of jets, jets taking off, military salutes, a shirtless muscle-bound man posing in various silly poses, and more jets. 
“Ladies and Gentlemen,” an announcer rumbled in a deep baritone voice, “Please welcome to the arena, the reigning CWF Champion and Wrestler of the Year, SERGEANT BROOOOONSON!” 
More fireworks as a man around six feet tall walked out of the pyrotechnical show.  He sported a buzz cut hairdo, a lack of a neck, jet-blue speedos and boots with gigantic tassels.  He soaked in the crowd noise as it rose to a near-deafening level.  He walked down to the ring near where I was sitting, saw me, winked and then hopped into the ring.  He rose up on one of the corner posts and did some strange symbol, which seemed to spur on the crowd even more. 
The music changed to a jarring, head-hurting death metal as images of a crocodile appeared on the screen.  It appeared that the crocodile was also posing in the same manner as Sergeant Bronson. The crowd started booing as the announcer raised his lips to the microphone for a second time. 
“Ladies and Gentlemen, please welcome the challenger for tonight’s match: KING KRUUUUUSH!” 
From under the gigantic monitor came a 10-11 foot crocodile, rapidly running on all fours towards the ring.  The crowd booed the animal mercilessly, and to King Krush’s credit he snapped his jaws in anger at a few people.  As the croc closed in near me I saw blue war paint spread across his back and snout. 
To my complete surprise, King Krush pushed off his front legs and stood up on his hind legs, using his tail to balance.  He then climbed into the ring as a referee waddled into the center. 
That’s right.  My alternate self, “Sergeant Bronson,” was a professional crocodile wrestler. 

Saturday, September 10, 2011

September 11: Never Forget.

Everyone has their "where were you when the planes hit the towers?" moment. 

Mine?  I was asleep. 

I worked swing shifts at Vital Processing down in Phoenix, and usually didn't get to bed until 2-3 a.m.  I turned off the ringer on my apartment phone so I could sleep until 10-11 a.m. 

When I woke up around 11:30 I was shocked and surprised to see 24 missed calls, with nearly 20 being from my mother. 

Instead of listening to the voice mails I called Mom and turned on my television.  As the phone rang, I thought that the images on the television were a new movie trailer.  It was almost surreal.  When Mom finally answered her phone she informed me of the attacks, and the Pentagon attack.

"Your brother, he's okay," she informed me.  My brother had just barely moved to D.C. to go to law school at George Washington. 

"Well, of course Brett's fine," I said. "He doesn't go to school at the Pentagon." 

The whole day was remarkable.  I called my work to see if they knew (they did) and mostly just sat there, like the rest of America, stunned and glued to their chairs in horrified shock and anger.   But I wasn't awake for the initial live shots of the towers' rapid descent. 

There is something unique about the emotional response to 9/11.  Part of me wants to desperately forget the atrocities that took place that day almost ten years ago. Forgetting can help heal, but this is something that we cannot forget.  It truly changed the nation.  For a short period, we were united as one nation.  Political affiliations didn't matter.  We were Americans.  Patriotism became a societal norm for the first time since World War II. 

And though we will become united again tomorrow as we remember and tell children about the importance of the day, we will soon forget, and the nation will again risk drowning in the mire of "your side vs my side." 

I hope we remember.  I hope we never forget what it was like to have this country unified.  It took a terrible tragedy, but for a short time we loved our country again, and would do anything to protect its values.  We rallied behind a polarizing president.  We would do anything for our neighbors because it was American to do so. 

Though I may never forget what happened that day, I will also never forget how proud I was to be an American afterwards. 

Let us never forget that. 

"The cost of freedom is always high, but Americans have always paid it. And one path we shall never choose, and that is the path of surrender, or submission." -- John F. Kennedy

Friday, September 9, 2011

The Shinning, and other Musings

So, I'm watching The Shining, which of course deals with a writer who goes batshit insane with cabin fever.  I had forgotten how creepy the movie is.  It also sends flashbacks to when I was 10 years old, and I was up at our cabin in McCall, Idaho in the winter.  For some reason everyone thought it would be okay for a 10 year old to not only watch the movie, but watch it in the middle of winter.  The icing on the cake was having to walk home, in the dark, across the snowy road to get back to my cabin.  When I asked someone to walk me back to my cabin, I'm pretty sure the response was, "you're fine."

And that got me thinking.  For the most part, writers write what they know.  If I was to write about my father's troubles with alcohol, and my experiences dealing with it, that would ring home because it was something I experienced. 

If I wrote about my experiences at being so horrified at the idea of walking across the road late at night, the story would be true to my own life.

Where am I going with this inane rambling?  Just a bit.

So we write of our experiences.  We write what we know.  So what happens when we have an idea that occurs our own experiences?

We escape into that world, and that world, for a short time, becomes our reality.  It becomes our experiences.  When I write about Vincent going to other realities, my experiences become altered by the world in which I place the characters.

The fact that the human mind is capable of such things is pretty astounding.  It is this escapism, this idea of experiencing new things that drives me to write.

I can't wait to finish my degree so I can focus more on what I want to do.  The desire has never left; only the time to feed my desire to escape and experience new things has dwindled. 

So.. there you go.  Now, to finish watching the Shining...I mean, the Shinning.

Gus

Monday, September 5, 2011

Future Murder at Saint Maricopa Church

Wrote this for my upper level creative writing class. I'm not terribly happy with it, though I think that has more to do with the forced word count. I could have rattled on with a lot more info on character backgrounds and motivations. Oh well. Enjoy!


Future Murder at Saint Maricopa Church

She was never wrong in all the years I had trusted her ability to predict and read the future through the cards. When I last visited her this afternoon, her gray eyes burrowed deep in seeing the future and fate present itself through the mystic art of tarot, I sat patiently and waited for the results.

She looked up at me with those same eyes after some time, the incense smoke swirling around the small clay hovel she had built for her own mystic purposes. Her wrinkled skin shifted across her ancient face as she frowned at the cards.

“Are you sure you want to know this one?” she asked, her graveled and throaty voice grating the words out.

“Why wouldn’t I?” I wondered. “I don’t come here for answers to the universal questions.”

She sat back from the small rock where her cards were laid out and folded her rugged hands together. “You come here for clues, and yet I have never given you clues, only outcomes, Private Detective Jonathan Mills.”

“You provide me with the location, and I deduce from there. You once told me the cards don’t give you details anyway.”

“You are correct,” she said as she pulled out a cigarette from her shirt pocket. “And for twenty years, have you ever caught anyone in the middle of their nefarious deeds?”

She knew me too well. For twenty years, I had never caught anyone in the act, but I had caught my share of criminals after the fact. With the exception of one…

“Listen,” I groaned in frustration, “just give me what the cards say, and I’ll pay you your usual fee.”

She lit her cigarette, blowing out smoke from one side of her creased lips before speaking. “A murder will take place at the Saint Maricopa Church, just outside Santa Fe this evening.”

She rarely saw murders in her readings, so I perked up. “What time?”

“You ask questions which the cards do not answer,” she replied. “They have given their small window to fate’s path, so now what do you propose to do?”

“Go there,” I said as I stood up, dropping the small bag of marijuana on the rock table. “Until next time, Wendy Crow’s Eyes.”

“Good luck, Detective,” she said as she greedily grabbed the baggie. Within 15 minutes I was driving north on I-25 towards Santa Fe in my 1988 Ford Taurus with the windows down.

I pulled up to the decrepit remains of the Saint Maricopa Church about two hours later, the evening sun The sun was beating relentlessly down upon the high desert as I turned the engine off. The church was located in the middle of nowhere. Sagebrush and dirt surrounded the grounds for miles. The only road to the church was the one I drove up, and I couldn’t see any other cards in the vicinity.

The church reeked of the traditional Spanish catholic churches built during the early colonial period. Red-brown adobe ran across the walls up to red tiles about twenty feet high along its fairly sizeable structure. Arched windows ran their way symmetrically around the building. A central tower rose above the square roof, a bell tower presumably used to let the congregation know when it was time to pray.

It would have been pretty if anyone had used it in many, many years. There was no upkeep of any kind. Sections of the outside had crumbled to the ground years ago. Bird nests could be seen in the bell tower, which had lost its namesake years ago. The place stank of raccoon and rat shit. It was the perfect place for a murder. No one had been there in ages.

But why aren’t there any cars, I asked myself as I pulled out my handgun and walked towards what remained of the entrance. Where two wooden doors should have provided entrance into God’s domain, one door sat rotting on the ground while the other stubbornly tried to hold on to its hinges the bottom. I quietly stepped over the rotted boards and quietly entered into the church’s bowels.

Whoever was there last left with clear haste. The wooden pews suffered the same fate as the defunct door. Dust and dirt covered everything. The stone altar still stood, but was covered in spider webs. Rats went scurrying as I progressed farther into the building. A bible sat on the altar, its pages rotted beyond understanding. Bird shit could be found scattered across the dusty building. Bird nests rested on the rafters above. A solitary crow began its incessant yapping at me, as I was the intruder to its domain.

At least it’s not hot. Fall had come early to the region, and the temperature inside the building was almost cool. The evening sun shot through holes in the walls, firing off rays of dusty light across the empty building.

What a shithole, I thought to myself as I searched for any signs of recent entrance. Only my own footsteps could be seen on the dusty canvas. Walking around the untouched church, it became apparent that no one had stepped inside the building for many, many years.

She can’t be wrong, can she? I asked. She has never been wrong. Her predictions had always led me to crimes that had already been committed. The sudden possibility that a murder was still to take place, that fate may still have its hand in the game, scared the bejesus out of me. I had to get out of there. I holstered my firearm and ran for the exit.

“You!” a slightly muffled voice screamed from above the broken stairs in the bell tower. “Don’t leave yet!” As I turned to look up the stairs the laser sights of a gun shot through the dusty air, the red line pointing straight at my forehead as I looked up.

Oh my God. She wasn’t wrong. She was dead-on.

“Take your gun out of your holster and put it on the floor,” the muffled voice said. I slowly took out my sidearm and placed it on the dusty floor. A slight scent of mint wafted its way down from the opening. That scent. Where have I-

“Now, walk towards the altar, and don’t try reaching for the gun you have hidden at your ankle! Don’t turn around either, and let me know when you get there.”

I’m going to die, I thought to myself as I walked towards the altar. I have played fate’s hands too long, and now I’m going to die, and the one son of a bitch I have hunted for years will go unpunished.

“I’m at the altar,” I yelled out. The cover of the bible was somewhat in tact. I could see La Santa Biblia on the cover with the year “18-“ but the last two numbers had worn out. I heard the sounds of someone landing on the ground behind me, grunting as they landed.

“Didn’t think I would have landed that,” the muffled voice behind me said, a hint of amusement and pride in his voice. “Turn around.” I did as I was bid.

Behind me stood a very tall and thin man whose clothing was at best, eccentric. He wore Converse All-Stars, pinstripe dress pants, and a bright orange t-shirt that read “There is Beauty in Chaos.” He wore black leather gloves, and had a ski mask on, which caused the muffled voice. His firearm – a Desert Eagle .50 with a laser sight – was still pointed at me, but he started to lower it.

“Mills?” The voice asked, and he pulled off the mask.

It was him. It was fucking him!! Darren Apollo, arguably the greatest criminal mastermind ever to exist in the last 100 years, was standing right in front of me.

His black hair was cut short. Hic icy grey eyes formed a look of surprise, causing his slightly hooked nose to rise slightly. His crooked smile formed across his unshaven face.

You have got to be shitting me. It was as if my entire world had upended itself in those few seconds.

“Darren,” I managed to say, gritting my teeth. My head swooned. Disjointed flashbacks and memories slammed me in the face.

Teenager. Mother killed. Murdered for her wedding ring and necklace. Remember the smell of her perfume. Rosy, flowery scent. Was there. Saw the man. Same face in front of me right now. He smiled his crooked smile, winked, and ran. Scent of mint?

First detective job. Jewelry heist. Connection to Darren? Note left by burglar. “More Chaos Coming,” it said. Note smelled like aftershave or cologne, almost minty.

Years later. Chasing a suspect down an alley. Smell of rain. Shots fired. Shot in the leg. Blood mixing with rain in the alley ground. Same minty scent wafts over me as I lose consciousness.

I shook my head and tried to clear the thoughts from overtaking the situation. “What the Hell are you doing here?”

Darren picked up my gun and walked towards me. “She said there would be a murder here, and I wanted to see if it would really happen,” he said, his slightly raspy, throaty voice echoing through the room.

I laughed. “Oh man. How long have you been seeing Wendy?”

“Actually,” he paused as he pulled out a clove cigarette and lit it, “this was the first time. Friends in my line of business told me that she had no qualms about assisting the less…how do I say this…amiable of society. How long have you been using her mystic abilities, Jonathan?”

“Ever since you shot my mother.”

“Oh please,” he mouthed as he blew out smoke. “You know how clichéd that sounds? So I killed your mother. So what? Life is too short to worry about chasing after your mother’s killer.” He looked down at my clothing. “I see your fashion sense hasn’t changed much. The same blue jeans. Same Doc Martens. Same God-awful blue button up shirt. Couldn’t your fashion sense at least grow with your age? You gained some weight around the middle as well. For shame,” he said, tsk-tsk-ing me with a wag of a finger.

“How did you get in the bell tower? Where is your car?”

“It’s called a motorcycle, and a bit of climbing. You didn’t go around the building, did you?”

“No, I didn’t.” He always was a strong guy. “How long have you been following me?” I asked as he motioned for me to sit on the ground. “Was it after you shot me?”

He drew another drag. “Do you realize that I have kept my eye on you for years? You have been the closest thing I have to an actual arch-nemesis. I’m Sherlock, and you are Moriarty. I’m Luke Skywalker, and you are the Emperor. I’m Butch Cassidy, and you are the Sundance Kid. You nearly caught me after the jewelry heist in New York. Do you remember the name of it? DeBurg Jewelry. Some Jewish Asshat who had more money than he could possibly ever use.”

“You also shot me in that alley ten years ago,” I angrily said. “That bullet shattered two bones in my leg and hit an artery.”

“No need to get angry at me,” he murmured as he sat down across from me, gun still pointed at my head. “You were chasing me. What did you expect? That I’d throw rat traps on the ground to distract you, and try to shoot you with a pellet gun to deter your chase?

“So why didn’t you kill me?”

Another drag from his cigarette. “I’ve asked that question myself. One night after I killed an older lady because she thought my shirt was disgusting, I came to the conclusion I have stuck with to this day. Being me was getting boring. It was growing stale. That night as I buried the old lady, I concluded that I needed someone to add excitement to my life. The way you chased me down that alley, even as I saw you bleed all over the rainy concrete, I saw the seething hatred in your eyes to hunt me down no matter the cost. I knew then that you would chase me across the earth if need be. So for ten years, you have come closer and closer to accomplishing your goal. You have been married twice. Your last wife left you because you were more in love with your job. And now, here we sit, me with a gun pointed at you, and you… Well, what do you have to bring to this conversation?”

I ran my hand through my long blond hair. “Fate says a murder was to take place here. So here I am.”

Darren shook his head. “Come on, Jonathan. You can do better than that. In fact, let’s have a philosophical discussion, if you don’t mind.”

“I do mind, Darren,” I replied. “If you are going to kill me, then just kill me.”

“I’m holding the gun, so how bout you just be patient for a bit, mmkay? Listen, what I want to talk about is God and Fate.” He put out his cigarette and stood up. “Fate has driven every decision I have made in my life, just as it does to everyone else. That’s why I emphasize the word. It’s important to me. Fate suggests that you and I are here for the same purpose. To either witness a murder, or to see a murder after the fact.” He started waving his arms around as he talked. “Okay, so we are both here for the same purpose, but we have both known each other for years. Fate has played us a brilliant hand in coming up with the path that led us here today.”

“What path?” I asked. “Fate had nothing to do with it. It was chance that you had never seen Wendy before today, and that the cards provided the same answer to the both of us.”

“Fate and chance are closely tied, can’t you see that? God doesn’t give a shit about his own creation any more.”

“I have a hard time believing fate would allow you to keep doing what you have been doing.”

Darren laughed. “That’s the beauty of it! We all make our own path. I’m shocked that you have never seen this until my brilliant deduction provided the way to see it. We control our own Fate. We provide the path that is laid out in front of us. God himself, or the crazy Indian woman, can only see what Fate they create for us. But,” he smiled, “that is the Fate they created. That is not the fate I have created for myself. You chose to avenge your mother’s death by hunting down the killer. You chose your Fate.”

That actually kind of makes sense, except…

“You changed any fate I would have had when you killed my mother. You forced me down another path. You changed the hand I was dealt at that moment.”

Darren shook his head. “You still don’t see, do you? Maybe you are my arch-nemesis because of your detective skills. You sure aren’t my intellectual equal.” He pulled out another cigarette and lit it. “Listen, Jonathan. Yes, I killed your mother. Yes, that was a life-changing event. But you didn’t have to become a cop. You didn’t have to get kicked off of the force for forging evidence to make sure someone received his or her comeuppance. You didn’t have to spend your life chasing me like a dog chases a car. Don’t you see? You created your own fate!”

What if he is right? I wondered. “That doesn’t change anything about right now, “I replied. “We are at this point because fate has chosen that we meet at this time, and now someone has to die because fate demands it.”

Darren groaned. “You still don’t get it, do you? That isn’t my Fate. That isn’t your Fate. Wendy and God, the paths they see for us? Doesn’t mean shit. They could give me the yellow brick road for all eternity, but if I walk off that path, if I choose to step into the wilderness beyond the path, there is nothing they can do to stop it.” He put out his cigarette. “And that leaves me with a quandary.”

“Do you shoot me?” I asked. “That’s the question, isn’t it?”

“Maybe it is. Maybe it is my Fate to kill you. But I don’t think so. Not today. Give me your ankle gun.”

“What are you going to do?” I asked as I pulled the gun out from my ankle holster.
“I’m not going to kill you.”

Oh, well that’s good. “Why won’t you? You have the shot.”

Darren chuckled, a glint of madness seeping through his eyes. “Because I want to step off the path laid out by God and Wendy. I want to tell them to fuck off. And frankly,” he smiled, “you are too much fucking fun to have around.” He took out the clip from both my guns, emptied the bullets and put the empty guns in his pockets. “Listen, the next time we meet, how about we meet somewhere over coffee or something, ‘kay? It was a long-ass drive to get here.” Then he backed off and walked out the church.

No, I said to myself. I can’t let him leave. I have waited too long for this chance. I scrambled up and ran to the door. He had run behind the building and was about to hop on his dirt bike. I flew towards my car and unlocked the trunk. I could hear the dirt bike’s engine roar to life. I lifted up the blanket in my trunk to reveal the hunting rifle below. It had one round in it. As I turned, I could hear his bike roaring past me. I moved towards the trunk, leveled the gun and looked through the scope.

Please, God or Fate, make this bullet hit its target. That was the only prayer I had ever said at that point in my life.

Darren’s shirt showed up in my crosshairs, flying down the dirt road. I pulled the trigger.

Through the scope, I could see the impact knock Darren off the bike. He landed with a harsh thud on the dirt road as his bike spun out of control.

Thank you, God or Fate, I thought to myself as I grabbed a loaded handgun from my trunk. I ran towards Darren.

He laid there, blood pouring from the wound in the middle of his back, causing his shirt to turn a unique shade of blood-orange. I turned off the safety to my gun as I walked up to him.

He looked up at me, fear in his eyes. “Jonathan,” he struggled to say as blood began to curl around his lips, “I create my own Fate! We were to keep chasing each other until we grow old and useless to society!”

I pulled back the hammer. “Fate said there was to be a murder,” I replied. “Someone has to die here.” To my surprise, he laughed.

“Even now, you still haven’t learned,” he said. “Well, do it then.”

I aimed for his head, and pulled the trigger. Darren was dead immediately. A breeze sent his minty smell away from me. For the first time in twenty years, it smelled clean.

I took a deep breath, walked back to my car, put the guns away and drove home to whatever Fate had in store for me.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Writing the Great American..Short Story?

To start, I'd like to thank everyone who has read my story, and I'd like to thank my brother and my dad for helping me edit it as time grew short, and the looming deadline to submit for a contest crept closer.

I still intend to polish it, and submit it for publication and other contests. I have also had some ideas as brief follow-up stories for each reality, at least on my blog. I am working on one right now, and should have it posted this weekend.

One thing I have discovered during the rapid process of trying to compile and finish a near-7000 word story in such a short time is how much one can miss with the first rough draft. Even though I understand that rough drafts are specifically written to be critiqued, it doesn't make it any easier. I think the short deadline left me less vulnerable to any negative emotions one can feel when your own words are attacked, and for that, I am grateful.

I am debating whether I keep working on a bunch of short stories, or hammer out a novel. The story idea I have come up with lends itself to short stories. It also helps that I'm short on time most days, so at least for now I think the choice has been made for me.

Anyway, thanks for reading it, and if you actually read this, do yourself a favor. Go buy a bag of Tootsie Roll pops, and eat one, and only one. Enjoy it.

I said one. I SAID JUST ONE. Weirdo. I didn't say stick as many in your mouth as possible. The owl says, "how many licks does it take to get to the center?", not "how many can you jam in your mouth like a yokel?"

Thanks again everyone, and keep an eye on the blog. I plan to post more here now that I have the writing fever again.

Gus

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Punch Line Isn't Funny

I was always amazed that the Alternate Reality Device, when activated, refreshed my senses with a burst of vanilla and coconut. I suspect the aliens that created the device must have been considering selling it to humans at some point. I could imagine the marketing team commenting on how humans don’t like the scent of sulphur and moon rocks, and to just shove some potpourri and smelly “human” items into the device. Oh, and lights and shiny screens. We humans do love our flashing lights and doodads.

The device opened up its tear in space-time, plopping me down upon a somewhat deserted alley, crammed between two big buildings painted a nauseous shade of beige. For an alley it was remarkably clean. No bums, cardboard boxes or leftover pizza anywhere in sight. No concrete stains; no rats, dead or alive, to offend the anti-rodent crowd; no druggies begging for change; I was pleasantly surprised.

“My compliments to the alley cleaners,” I mumbled, placing the device in my satchel. I separated my datapad from the device, flipped it open, and let the flashing lights and gizmos dazzle me as it warmed up. Eventually, it loaded to the home screen, and I pressed the A.I. button. I was greeted by Bannock, the computer’s remarkably hard to understand Artificial Intelligence. Artificial Intelligences are allowed to choose their accents, and for some reason (I’d assume just to annoy the Hell out of me) Bannock chose a mix of Scottish and Irish. It sounded like a cross between a Leprechaun and Sean Connery.
“Greetings, sir! Wha’ canna do fer ya?” Bannock cheerfully chirped, its throaty, slightly smoky voice irritating me even before the accent kicked in.

“Have you had a chance to search for him yet?” I asked.

“Confirmed, sir! I tol’ ‘im earlier today tha’ ye be planin’ on meetin’ ‘im in a backalley away frum the population of this reality, sir. Wuld ye like me to summon ‘im ‘ere?”

“No, that’s okay. Just point in the right direction.”

“Aye, Laddie! This way, ye basterd!” A holographic arrow shot up from the display, pointing north. I started walking, my Converse All-Stars squeaking on the clean cement.

The sun was shining as I came out into a street devoid of people. Buildings towered around me, most of them the same boring vanilla as the buildings surrounding the alley. I didn’t see any windows on any of the buildings, which I found only slightly odd.

The sidewalk was as spotless as the alley I came from. The streets were two lanes wide, and instead of cars zipping by, guys dressed in 1950’s outfits and girls wearing poodle skirts and sweater tops rode antique-looking bikes down the road. I could hear Elvis’ voice crooning through a speaker attached to a streetlight. A 1950’s style diner stood at one corner, but aside from that bit of color, I couldn’t find a single smidge of rainbow in any direction. There was nothing but beige buildings stretching for what seemed like miles.

Something is off here, I thought to myself. I hit the AI button again.

“Bannock,” I whispered, “did we go back in time? I didn’t know you could do that!” I was impressed.

“No, sir! Our placement on the space-time continuum is right were it means ta be. I canna scan the surroundin’s fer anything unusual, if ye like.”

“Please do. This place is stuck in the 1950’s, except…off. Let me know.”

“Aye, sir. Over and out!”

Usually, when visiting other realities it was fairly easy to blend in. Nearly every reality I had ever visited had at least a portion of the population who wore t-shirts and jeans. I could meld with the populace until I met my target.

Not here, I thought to myself. I’m a big damned bleep on the radar if someone is watching. And everybody was watching. Everyone stared at me, mouths practically agape. I became very conscious of my simple black tee and jeans, a stark contrast to the over-indulgence of all the replica costumes from the days of the Big Bopper. Three people nearly crashed their bikes as they turned their heads to gawk at the weirdo in their realm. One guy spilled his soda on his Daddy-O bowling shirt. A young kid with greased hair ran away in horror. I need to find him, and fast.

I put on the datapad’s attached glasses, which displayed the same arrow on the inside of the lens, put the datapad back in my satchel and started to walk a little faster.

“How close are we?” I whispered to Bannock through the earpiece.

“Not far. I tink ‘e is comin’ this way, in fact.”

“Thank God.” Seriously. Poodle skirts, rolled jeans and ducktail hairdos? I half expected to see an “I Like Ike” poster.

“I’ve finished mah scan of tha surroundin’s, sir. This whole city is one giant complex. It’s massive, by God, it is! There be a wall as big as I ever have seen, and there ain’t a way out. There be over ten million people livin’ in this oversized fortress, sir.”

“Thanks for the info. What can you tell me about the society? What do I I need to know?”

“Still workin’ ye bastard. Scannin’ a society ain’t like readin’ James Joyce’s Ulysses. It takes a fair bit longer than that!

“It should be easier. Keep working on it.” Lucky Bannock. He read Ulysses in less than a second while the rest of us suffer through entire classes to get through it.

“Aye sir. In tha meantime, I believe our target is right around the next corner.”

Sure enough, I turned the corner into an alley, and promptly ran right into my target. We both exclaimed gasps as we nearly collided, and backed up a step from each other. After the surprise wore off, I offered my hand in greetings.

“Hi, Vincent #37. I’m Vincent.” Vincent #37 stood in disbelief, as his brain tried to catch up with what his eyes saw. It was always this way. My alternate selves would stand slack-jawed as I handed them a pamphlet titled “Broken Reality: The Five Steps on How to Meet Your Alternate Self.” Dr. Phil Windbag, who was in fact not a doctor at all, wrote the pamphlet. It was full of flashing lights and pictures of Dr. Windbag, a balding, walrus-like human who oozed sleaze from his mouth with every smile. The pamphlet’s steps are as follows:
1. Keep breathing. Yes, reality has been broken, but it’s nothing we can’t fix with a little science and sandwiches.

2. Denial. You are going to deny that your alternate self is standing there, talking to you. This is normal. Don’t curse, run away or start praying to Buddha. Just suck it up, recognize that denial is part of the game, and move onto step 3.

3. Acceptance. You will begin to rationalize what you are seeing, and accept it as reality. Again, this is normal. Ask your alternate self for some candy. They just might have some! And then you have candy from another reality! Your friends will be jealous and you will be worshipped like a Demigod. Really.

4. Gratification. You’ve just had a conversation with your alternate self! You should thank science for making this possible. If you aren’t thankful for this opportunity, you should be ashamed. Please let your alternate self know you aren’t gratified, and they will show you why you should be.

5. Donations. Please feel free to donate an item of clothing, money or even yourself to the science cause! All donations will go to the Dr. Windbag Foundation For More Science-y Stuff in Society.

It wasn’t the greatest example of how to deal with meeting your alternate self, but the lab boys made me give it to every alternate self I visited. So far, no one had given me anything. At least they got to meet their alternate self. I did always feel bad that I never had any candy though, and promised the next reality I visited I would have some sweet and tart candy to hand out, like taffy. Everyone likes taffy.

I handed Vincent #37 the pamphlet. “This might help a little. Maybe.” While he read, I got a good look at #37. Same dark hair, though he had his hair greased back in the same 50’s style as the rest of his society. Same glacial-water blue eyes, same ridiculous chin; he had my floppy earlobes as well. I suspected his nose would have been the same, if I hadn’t broken mine twice in fights when I was younger. He was a bit pudgier around the middle, but everything else rang home as very similar to myself. He had a striped green and black Daddy-O bowling shirt on, and simple dress pants and black dress shoes.

After reading the pamphlet, he looked at me. “I am grateful, if a little confused. Will you still show me why I need to be gratified?” He was genuinely confused.
“No, that’s a joke,” I responded. “At least I think it’s a joke.” I had a hard time believing that this stiff was actually me. Nurture makes a big, big difference.

#37 nodded unconfidently. “I think I understand. Am I supposed to laugh?”

“Only if you want. You can throw the pamphlet away, wipe the grease from the bacon you will eat for breakfast tomorrow on it, make a paper airplane with it; I don’t care. Anyways, nice to meet you, number #37! Can we go somewhere and talk?”

#37 looked at my clothing. “I don’t know if we can go many places in public with you dressed like that. You will stand out.”

“Yeah, I realized that. What’s up with all the fifties style? Did you guys not get the memo about what happened the last fifty or sixty years?”

“No.” He was dead serious. “The only memo I got was that I needed to meet my alternate self in an alley.”

A little dense, I thought to myself. “It’s a joke. I figure you can fill me in.”

#37 nodded. “I’m actually heading somewhere right now that might be safe for you, if we hurry. The Compliance Officers may not have seen you yet.” He started walking down the street. “Hurry.”

“Compliance Officers?” I asked as I hurried to match his stride. “What are you talking about?”

“There’s a lot going on here that I can’t talk about. Please be patient, and in a few minutes we can talk.”

As we walked down the small street, colorless canyon of boring buildings blocked the sun. I didn’t see or hear anyone as we continued down the street. Aside from the Elvis playing over the speakerphone, I hardly heard a sound. All the gawkers must have gotten their fill and left.

“Man, even with Elvis playing, I bet you could hear someone fart a half-block away, “ I tried to laugh away the uncomfortable silence.

“I don’t know if that is supposed to be humorous, but flatulence isn’t a funny subject,” he angrily whispered.

“What? Why? Of course it’s funny.” He had a lot to learn about being me. “Are you telling me you’ve never heard a fart joke?”

“Passing gas in public is forbidden.”

“Well, sure, it’s frowned upon back at home, like urinating on park benches, but you know, we do it anyway, and no one guns us down. Anyway, I’m talking about it as a joke. People do know what a joke is here, right?”

#37 stopped, sighed, and looked down the street, as if seeking an answer to my query in the distance. After a few seconds, he sadly turned towards me. “What if I told you that we don’t know what jokes are? What if I told you that laughing or enjoyment of any kind is forbidden? What would you say then?” He continued walking.

My God, I thought. What a horrible reality I’ve visited. Of all the realities I’ve been to, this might be the worst, and I’ve seen worlds without beer and sandwiches. I shuddered.

“I’m sorry,” I responded. “You have to understand that I am not given any information about the society I jump into. How did it come to this?” I tried to be polite, I really did. But no jokes? I can’t even joke about that.

“We can talk more when we get to our destination. Be quiet for now.”

I tried to keep quiet as we walked. I truly did. Unfortunately, curiosity is a wicked creature. It tries to kill cats, humans who ask too many questions, and the elderly.

“What happens when someone laughs?” I quietly asked.

His face turned white, either because he was afraid to answer or he couldn’t believe I hadn’t shut up like he asked. “They are taken to the Ironic Punishment Division in FreedomCorp’s Ministry of Sin and Punishment tower. No one ever returns from there.”

“A corporation runs the state here?”

“Please, be quiet,” he hissed. “They are always watching.” To emphasize that point, he motioned to three cameras about fifteen feet up each wall to either side of us, barely visible on the walls that surrounded the alley we were in. As I looked around, I also caught two more on the floating bridge above us, and mini zeppelins navigating the narrow alleys with cameras and mic booms hanging down from their rafters.

“Man, these guys have more cameras than Big Brother.”

At the mention of Big Brother, #37’s face turned even more perilous. “Please, no more talking, and follow me.”

Shrugging, I did as I was told. We walked down the alley a bit, into what appeared to be a crossroads of sort. As we turned the corner, the scope of what #37 was up against came into full vision.

“Mother of Mercy,” I gasped as I looked up. And up. And up.

FreedomCorp’s main complex hovered a few blocks away, but it was big enough to block out the sun – from horizon to horizon. The complex had thirteen major superstructures, surrounded by numerous other buildings below. The superstructures stood easily over two hundred stories, jutting up from the center of the city like a big middle finger to ward off anyone who even thought of going against the corporation. Every building was made of clear glass.

“There must be hundreds of buildings in their main complex,” I murmured, looking up at the ominous structures. #37 nodded.

“There are the ten ministry buildings, the Justice building, Parliament, the Office of Compliance, and hundreds of others as well. The people who work for the corporation live in the complex.”

“What are the ministries?”

“Well, I already mentioned the Ministry of Sin and Punishment. There’s the Ministry of Peace, the Ministry of War, the Ministry of Freedom, the Ministry of Foreign Entanglements, the Ministry of Meat and Grain, the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Creationism and God, and finally, the Ministry of Secrets.”

“So it’s one big bureaucracy? Man, what happened here? We are still in the United States, aren’t we?”

#37 turned in anger at me. “At least whisper. Don’t people in your reality know how to keep quiet?”

“Sorry,” I sheepishly mouthed as we continued to walk. “So, we must be in the United States, but where?”

“I found a history book from an era called the 1950’s. I believe you would call this land ‘Texas.’”

I nodded. “Well, that makes perfect sense then. Back home, Texas politicians have been going backwards for decades. So where are we going?”

“Please, just be quiet for a few more minutes. We are almost there.” We walked along a concrete walkway. Since I couldn’t ask any more questions as I walked, I set my datapad to record everything about the society it could; the dialect, what’s in the buildings, how many people live here,etc. I can delve into the world a bit later, I thought to myself as #37 sped up his walk. How could a society let this happen? Why do people put up with this? Where is everyone? The initial look at the society flooded my thoughts with questions, most of them a confused jumble as to how a population could let this happen.

After a few minutes#37 took a good look around to make sure there weren’t any cameras around, and then lightly tapped his foot on a slab of cement in an irregular beat. The sidewalk next to where he was standing groaned and opened up to a hole. He motioned for me to follow. We came down a few steps, and then we walked down a long, dimly lit tunnel. I am not sure how long the tunnel was, but my Datapad said 10 minutes. Being a tad claustrophobic, it felt like 12 hours.

Eventually, we came to a door, the kind in old mobster movies-ancient, dingy, rusty, with a slat for peering out. #37 knocked twice, then three times rapidly. The slat slammed open to reveal a set of brown eyes.

“Password?” Brown Eyes grumbled.

“A priest, an airline pilot, and a banker walk into a bar,” #37 proudly said. Brown Eyes glinted in approval, until he looked over at me.

“Who’s the new guy?” Brown Eyes asked #37. “He your brother or something? You look a lot a like.”

“Sort of,” #37 responded, “but I’ll vouch for him. His name is also Vinnie.”

“Same name as you, even looks like you. Strange coincidences. Does he know any good jokes?” Brown Eyes demanded

“Do I know jokes? Does Batman dress as a bat?” I chuckled loudly. This startled Brown Eyes and #37.

“Keep it down, dammit! Get your butt in here.” Brown Eyes slammed the slat shut, unlocked the heavy door and let us in

At that point, I didn’t know what to expect. The first thought in my head was that #37 was taking me to a headquarters for a resistance against FreedomCorp. I expected to see walls slathered with maps and architectural designs. I wanted to see people with weapons, soldiers ready to do battle against the oppressive regime. I was hoping to see hordes of people reading intelligence and communication reports to gain weak spots in FreedomCorp’s systems.

What I didn’t expect was an auditorium of sorts, with a small stage. The stage had a brick background, with a piano and one mic stand in the foreground. Surrounding the stage were circular tables with chairs. On each table was one of those ugly red candleholders you see at every Italian restaurant. Doorways similar to the one we came through could be seen throughout the auditorium. Between the doors, a young kid with his hair slicked back handed out bottles of water. There must have been ten or fifteen people, all dressed alike.

What the Hell is this place? I thought to myself. The brick stage and the mic stand finally brought clarity to my confusion.

“You’re joking, right? A god-damned comedy club?”

“We don’t joke,” #37replied. “Well, except here. And yes, this is a comedy club. We try and come up with something funny – FreedomCorp burned every book that ever made anyone laugh or chuckle. You have to understand what it is like, to never laugh. We had to have someone steal a dictionary that existed before FreedomCorp came around just so we know what laughter even means. We come here to try and bring some joy to this joyless world.”

“Jesus, if it’s jokes you want, I have plenty of those. But why do you accept this? Why put up with it?”

“We don’t want to die,” Brown Eyes responded. “They would most certainly kill us. We would rather live like this than risk dying for something we can’t understand anyway. Where are you from, Vinnie? You aren’t from around here, are you?”

“No, I’m not, but that’s beside the point,” I angrily responded. “I’m no freedom fighter, but when someone is doing something horribly wrong, you don’t put up with it, you know?

“You don’t understand,” #37 said, crestfallen. “We only know what FreedomCorp has given us. We don’t know any better.”

Again, clarity struck me across the face. “Earlier, you gave me a warning glance when I mentioned Big Brother. You know what that reference means, right?”

“No. We only know not to mention it out loud.”

“My God. You poor bastards have never known any better than what they gave you, but you must have an itch to scratch if you started this comedy club.”

“Small steps,” Brown Eyes slightly grinned. “You have to start somewhere. Seriously, where did you come from?”

“I’m sorry,” I muttered, ignoring Brown eye’s question. “I just… it’s hard for me to understand how this could all happen. But that conversation can happen a bit later. Who wants to hear some jokes?”

“You can be up after Bryan,” #37 replied, leading me to a table. “Want a drink?”

“Do you have anything other than water?”

“No.”

“Water, then.” #37 snapped his fingers, and the teenage greaser brought two bottles of water.

“So what kind of jokes do you normally do here?”

“Well, whatever we can. Right now, we are trying insult comedy. Bryan is our lead insult comedy writer. Here he comes now!” We all stood up, lightly clapping as Bryan took the stage.

Bryan was a tall drink of water. He was wearing a light gray suit, with slicked back hair and shiny black shoes. As he walked out on stage and we took our seats, I could tell by his gait that he would bomb.

I’ve seen plenty of comedians in my day. I even tried a couple nights at the local improv club, to no avail. You pick up tips from watching successful comics. Comedians tend to have a way with how they walk up to the mic. It can range from self-deprecating to prideful arrogance, but all comedians know that their movements mean as much as what comes out of their mouth. Audiences can sense when a comic isn’t comfortable, and that negative aura can be as blinding as the stage lights.

Bryan nervously walked up to the mic, shuffling his feet with anxious abandon. The problem with such anxious behavior is it doesn’t breed smiles or laughs, and I knew right then this wasn’t going to be funny. Sweat slid down his face and into his blue eyes as he cleared his throat and began his routine.

“Hello everyone,” he mumbled. “How about that walk in here, huh?”

No one laughed, least of all me.

“So, um, I see some people in the audience. Can I call you fat?”

No one laughed. I groaned.

“Cause I can tell a good joke if I can call you fat.” A couple more seconds of silence. “Okay, what about ugly people? Any ugly people I can make fun of?”

He was completely lost. He didn’t even know how to form a joke, much less deliver it. It was like watching him try to swim upstream in a river filled with mutant eels, and without him knowing how to swim in the first place.

I felt bad for him, so I raised my hand. “I’m ugly. You can make fun of me.”

Bryan looked relieved. “Okay sir, what’s your name?”

“Vinnie.”

“Okay Vinnie, do you know why you are ugly?”

“…No, you’re supposed to tell me why I’m ugly. I don’t tell you.”

“Oh! Oh my…umm…your forehead is huge, and your nostrils flare up when you say the letter ‘O’.” #37 chuckled.

“That’s not funny,” I whispered.

I heard Bannock chime in from my pocket as well. “His comedy is more offensive than me ma’s excuse for a cup o’ tea. Why not just piss inna cup o’ stout and call it Black and Urine? Cause that’s what this lad is servin’ us.”

“Shove it, you little bastard,” I mumbled, turning off the A.I. button. I stood up. “Can I help you out Bryan?” I asked him as I walked towards the stage.

“Sure.” He looked relieved.

I grabbed the mic. “Okay, so we’ll start by making fun of my forehead. As you had mentioned, it is quite big. Did you know, it is so big that when bugs crawl up on me at night, they consider the race across my forehead to be a marathon?” Some chuckles from the audience. “And my nostrils flaring up? When I was a kid I used to snort whole chickens up there with ease!” More laughter. “Yeah, whole roasters!”

“But seriously folks, I’m so ugly that my mom used to wash my clothes on the ‘hideous’ cycle. I was such an ugly kid that my dad wanted to sell me to science as an experiment, and they wouldn’t take me because they weren’t sure I was human. I’m so ugly I had a country declare war against the U.S. in order to keep me from visiting and scaring the natives. I’m so ugly, the last date I had made me wear a bag on my head.”

Loud laughter now. Loud, boisterous, and absolutely beautiful. Every smirk, chuckle, grin and guffaw was years, perhaps decades in the making. Goosebumps ran across my body as the realization of what I had brought to these people dawned on me. I have brought them joy through the simple act of laughing. How amazing, and terribly sad at the same time.

“But enough about me, let’s talk about Bryan’s mom…”

* * * * * * *

After half an hour of telling the best jokes most of the audience had ever heard (though I would rate my performance as “meh”), #37 and I sat down at one of the tables near the back as another aspiring comedian took up my mantle.

“It’s a pity you don’t have any beer,” I said as I stared down into my glass of water. “I’ve had a beer at every reality I’ve been to so far, with the exception of one. I was on a 27-alternate reality beer streak. This will break that streak.”

“I’m sorry to hear that,” #37 replied. “Alcohol is not allowed in Eden. It creates angry blood, which causes men to sin.”

“Eden? That’s the name of this place? How deliciously ironic,” I chuckled as I leaned back in the uncomfortable chair. “Before I start digging into your world, and who you are, I suppose you have some questions about me, and where I come from.”

“Oh, goodness gracious, you bet I do,” #37 said, eyes hungry for knowledge of anything outside the prison gates he called his hometown. “How did you get here?”

“Well, aliens crashed years ago in New Mexico.” He stared at me blankly. “Oh, New Mexico, it’s in the desert mountains about a thousand miles west of here. Anyway, the government found the wreckage, and has been reverse-engineering anything and everything they could from the stuff they found. Apparently, a few years ago they deciphered the plans to create the Alternate Reality Device which tears holes into space-time. Combined with Artificial Intelligence, scientists soon realized they could track down their alternate selves. So, here I am.”

“So, you’re a scientist?”

I laughed. “Far from it. I’m a journalist. Specifically, I write works for the Las Vegas Weekly Schmutz. The whole magazine is nothing but made-up stories. It’s purposely fake. As an example, a few months ago I wrote an article about a dinosaur that was discovered alive a few years ago, and is now the greatest chess player the world has ever seen.”

#37 chuckled. “That’s pretty funny.”

“You are getting it now! High Five!” #37 awkwardly stood up and gave me a high five, and sat down again quickly.

“So are you still writing for that magazine, or is this job part of that?”

I shrugged. “Eventually, even faux journalism becomes stale. I got tired of writing headlines for articles about giant squids the size of New York sacking the Midwest. I heard about the Alternate Reality Device from a friend who works at the alien research lab, and signed my life away to the facility to let me use the device to visit my alternate selves. They loved the idea. ‘You’re expendable, a good writer, and you already have a knack for writing the absurd. Just bring back some stuff for science to help with our funding. The presidents from Texas keep slashing it! ’ Riker-he’s my boss-said to me when I met him. So, here I am.”

“Wow. What has it been like so far?”

I thought about it for a moment. “It’s been…interesting. There’s always something that surprises me about what the universe is capable of, you know? How can one reality vary so differently from another? Why is it that I’m given an opportunity to succeed in a world that is so…open…that the right word? While others are so unfortunate? It’s been humbling, man.”

“So, if you write crazy stories about made-up things, how will someone differentiate what you are working on now from your previous work?”

“Well, the scientists will be publishing my works as a weekly story in their e-magazine, Hooray for Science! I hope that will add some legitimacy to the words.

“Are you married? Any kids?”

“No,” I told him as I motioned to greaser-waiter boy for more water. “No kids, no marriage. I’m okay with that though. You?”

“Marriage is forced upon you at the age of 26.”

“Damn! Then that must be pretty soon, then. We’re 25 in a month, yes? Do you get to choose?”

“Nope. FreedomCorp decides who marries whom. ‘For the Greater Good,’ they always say.” He sat in silence for a moment, uncomfortably looking at the ground. I wonder what is going through his mind right now, I thought to myself. “I want to escape this place?” “I hope my wife isn’t as ugly as Vinnie’s jokes?” “I sure could go for a churro right now to cure my sadness?” I had no clue.

“You’ve got to tell me how all this came about.”

#37 said as he motioned for a water refill. “You have to understand that I don’t even know that anything I know is actually true! Most of our history is only what we have been told by FreedomCorp.”

“How? It’s pretty hard to get rid of the history of the world. Pretty damn big place, you know?”

“Well, until I read that old textbook that said we were a part of the United States, I was told that FreedomCorp had always existed. ‘In the beginning, There was God, then the Corporation,’ my teacher told me when I was young. The corporation provides a means to make sure you get into Heaven. Everything they are setup for is to shield us from the outside world, which they say is full of sin and the wicked vices that stain the good name of God. Fear of the unknown drove the rise to power, and has kept them in power all these years. They control everything we have ever learned.”

“That’s remarkably stark,” I commented before getting a shot of inspiration. “Hmm. This probably won’t make sense to you, but Plato-he’s this genius philosopher from forever ago-wrote this amazing essay about some cave, and an allegory of something or some such thing.. Damn, I knew I should have paid more attention in my Philosophy class. If only I could remember. It totally relates to what’s going on here…Oh well. Never mind.” Not enough inspiration. “Back to the topic at hand: why are there so few people outside? This complex is gigantic.”

“No one is allowed outside until they reach a certain age. That’s why the buildings are so big. If you can prove yourself to your local priest, you may gain access to the outside.”

“Add that to the tally of stuff that doesn’t make sense here. What about the clothes everyone wears, the Elvis music, the random diner on the corner?”

“Again, we do what the Corporation tells us to do. They claim the clothing, the music, the diner, are all representative of what God considers being the perfect form of human function. I don’t really understand it, but anyone wearing anything outside the norm gets punished. If we looked like you do right now, we would be dragged from our apartments and ‘cleansed.’” #37 shuddered. Note to self: ask what “cleansing” refers to later.

“What religious works does FreedomCorp claim to adhere to? I mean, what’s their creed?”

“From what I understand, it’s their own. Are you saying there is more than one religion?”

I laughed. “Yes. In fact, if this world is based on the teachings of Christianity, I’d have to claim it was a little wacky, even for some of the fringe Christian religions.”

“They call it simply the ‘Will of God.’ Our teachings speak of one God. I don’t know anything about Christianity.”

“Fair enough. What about you? What do you do?”

#37 sighed. “I view camera data from Sector 12 and report any possible illegal activity. It’s a sector a good distance away from mine, so I don’t have to report anyone I know.”

“Sounds…boring.”

“It is, but we don’t get to choose our profession. We are ‘called’ to the position from our local priest.”

What about hobbies? What do you do for…well, you already mentioned fun isn’t allowed, but how do you spend your time?”

“I am required to work fourteen hours a day for six days a week. On Sunday, we are given time to do our chores and read our scriptures.”

“So, no time for anything but sleeping, eating, and praying?”

“Yeah, that’s about right.”

“How did you find out about the comedy club?”

“Bryan and I found an abandoned tunnel a few years ago. Every Sunday after our prayers have been recorded as proof of our faith, we have worked on this club.”

“Why start with a comedy club?” #37 pondered the question for a moment. “I think we wanted to try and create something enjoyable. So much of our lives are spent doing the will of the corporation, that we have forgotten how to feel anything but numb. Bryan and I wanted to learn to laugh, to feel joy. We spread the word slowly to people we could trust, and a few weeks ago, we opened up for business, as it were.”

Remarkable, I thought to myself, that in the face of fear, these people only want to laugh. “I can see how not being able to laugh can be taken for granted,” I said as I spun the empty glass on the table. “I mean, I’m a schmuck for sure, but I also really enjoy my life, you know? The littlest things make me chuckle, and you have never been given that.”

“After we opened this club, we realized the possibility there might be more to this world than what is beyond our walls. To tell you a little secret, “#37 moved closer to me, “I hope to start more clubs under other sections soon. I hope that, bit by bit, it will help to open people’s minds, and maybe help us find a little truth”

He leaned back in his chair, a look of pride mixed with fear stamped across his blue eyes. Well, fear and pride go hand in hand with what he wants to do, I thought. “In some ways, I envy you,” I said. “You may be stuck in some nightmare, but you have the guts to start somewhere to make it right. I really hope you can make a difference.”

“I hope so too,” #37 said, looking around at his creation. “Small steps can make a big difference in the long run. I know it’s not much, but we can’t fight FreedomCorp in a big battle, it’s got to be small steps.”

“Yeah, it’s like this idea called Chaos Theory, where a butterfly flaps its wings and creates a hurricane-“
Our conversation was interrupted by a very alarmed Bannock.

“Lads, I be readin’ incomin’ folks down multiple tunnels, and I be doubtin’ they are here for an encore!”

#37’s face went white as he jumped up out of his chair and motioned for Bryan to come over. “Your…computer thing…Can it tell me if anyone is heading down the pathway behind the bar? That’s our hidden tunnel.”

“Aye,” Bannock said, a tone of sadness soaking through his ridiculous accent. “I don’t like breakin’ bad news to good folk, but you be surrounded.”

“Who could have told them?” Bryan screamed. “We vetted everyone here, who could have-“

“Sorry ta interrupt yer tirade, but I tink it was tha laughin’ they heard,” Bannock said.

My stomach immediately turned on itself. I had never felt that sick my whole life. #37 stared disbelievingly at me.

“You…you caused this?”

Oh no, I thought. “No, I mean…It’s just…You are looking for jokes, for laughter, right? All I did was provide you and the audience with what you wanted. I never thought-“

“Compliance Officers are on their way to take us away to ‘cleanse’ us,” #37 screamed at me, “and it’s all because you made us laugh too hard and too loud!”

Bryan put a calming hand on #37’s shoulder. “It’s not his fault. We knew the risks when we built this place. We knew that someday they might be right outside our doors, ready to take us away. Whoever your friend is, he’s stuck with us.”

“No, he’s not,” #37 replied. “I can’t explain, but he gets to escape. So go now while you still can.”

I shouldn’t have spoken. I should have waved goodbye, activated the button to go home, and left them to their own lives. But I had to know what would happen to them. Curiosity’s clammy hands wrapped around my voice box, and forced out one last question.

“What happens when you get ‘cleansed?’”

“They force confessions of your sins through torture,” #37 explained as word spread to the audience of the incoming raid. “they waterboard you, burn your hands with acid, and only after forty days of torture and fasting will they let you go-if you have survived. Most don’t.”

I felt sick as they crashed against the heavy door. Louder and louder. “I’m sorry,” I told them. “If I could stop this from happening-”

“Can you take us with you?” #37 interrupted desperately.

“I’m sorry, son,” Bannock replied. “Tha device only allows for one human, and it can only be used by tha Vincent from our reality.”

Louder explosions, banging sounds, drilling noises mingled with the cries and screams of the audience. #37 looked completely defeated, his head down, his eyes burdened by the reality of his immediate future. I stood up, opened my satchel and pulled out the Alternate Reality Device. It was the size of a softball, with jagged edges of a peculiar metal that shimmered like obsidian. I hooked the datapad to a small input, and pressed a button. The ball split in half, and a shadowy mist with forked lightning began to form around me.
“I’m sorry,” I said behind guilty tears.

#37 looked up at me. “Promise me that you will write about us,” he demanded. He was coming to terms with his fate, and it emboldened him. “Don’t ever let anyone forget what happened here.”

I won’t, I thought to myself and nodded.

Satisfied, #37 looked at the flash of welding sparks exploding beneath the front door. The mist continued to climb around me, covering me almost to my neck.

Suddenly, to my surprise, #37 laughed loudly. “Life is one big joke, isn’t it?” He laughed and spread his arms defiantly. “It’s one big practical joke. Like someone throwing a pie at your face when you least expect it.”

“It is,” I replied, “but unlike a pie in the face, this punch line’s not very funny.”

#37 laughed some more. “No, it’s not. The punch line isn’t funny, is it?”

The mist enveloped my face as the metal door fell to the ground, and I disappeared from #37’s existence.