The remainder of the text

“Hmm?   No,” the chicken shook his head.  “No, I was raised in the city on fluoridated water.  It’s the only explanation, given the amount of candy I eat.”
            Nozregull checked his watch again.  He had just enough time to run up to the observatory and back.  While he was away the chicken substituted the eggs boiling in the pot with ones purchased from Pier One.   The noxious lacquer with which they were coated steamed away, filling the kitchen with fumes as green as the chicken itself.  Imagined as he was, the bird was immune to their effect; but Nozregull, returning in happy anticipation of lunch, was floored.
           
Flames of the Thirties Ignite the Smell of Christmas Catalogs

            “I wasn’t aware that chickenlore was among your specialties,” Grimmery remarked as he sat down.  Rubbing his nose with one hand, he slipped Torman’s book onto the low table between the two sofas with the other.
            “Oh, you can keep it,” Torman offered.
            “Oh, thanks,” Grimmery smiled.  He touched the book with a finger of no social distinction, thereby declaring it as taken.
            “What about these ‘flames of the thirties,’” Shab, documenting the components of Torman’s liquor arrangement, asked.
            Torman considered.  He stared at the cover art of the book on the table.  He had painted that picture at great personal expense, letting his employment at the Multiphase Debaclery go to hell in his fevered determination to finish it.
            “I guess there’s no way around it,” he decided.
            Taking a breath, he looked up at the two men who formed his audience and began, “The smell of Christmas catalogs is, like the lacquer fumes from the green chicken’s eggs, not only poisonous, but flammable.”
            “Aha,” Shab mumbled, nodding and pouring a glass of Imperial Football Wrapping Paper, a fine sippin’ whiskey.
            “Now, it seems to me that, under the rules established by the group, the thirties, a time marked by contrasting images of poverty and glamour, were under the direction of Grimmery here.”
            “Me?” Grimmery marveled.  He picked up the book from the coffee table and examined the cover as he listened to Torman.  He smiled.  The picture on the front of the book was of two men seated at machines of unknown function, facing each other.  Around them swirled the airborne diatoms of conflict.
            “Grimmery was the one that pushed Mayor LaGuardia to pass out presents to homeless children at the same time that the limousines of the rich were being stacked in the hot new nightclub’s coatroom.  The resulting conflagration ignited the smell of Christmas catalogs.  And that’s all there is to it.”
            Torman leaned back on the sofa.  Had he been eating peanuts he might have dusted his hands at this point.  Seeing the look on Shab’s face he added, “Of course, the Sears Wish Book wasn’t around back then and if it had been, it wouldn’t have had that peculiar smell, but—“
            “Is that the best you can do?” Shab demanded.  He drained the last sip in his glass and came around the side of the old telephone wire spool that Torman had converted to a bar. 
            Torman merely folded his arms and looked from Shab to Grimmery and back.
Shab took a seat next to Grimmery.
           
Browning Cuticles for Black Cherry’s Amended Scheme
           
            After Torman left Judge Tankard, the latter carefully replaced the half-dozen biographies of Neil Armstrong that he had taken down.  He returned to the story he had been reading before Torman’s visit.  Entitled Browning Cuticles for Black Cherry’s Amended Scheme, it was only one of four exciting, full-length stories in an old issue of Clogdick magazine that he had found among the possessions of a deceased client.
            In the story Danfred Masani, a trooper with the Golden Pupditch Attendants, had taken responsibility for his contempt and established seven areas in his mother’s house where he would ritually manufacture satisfaction and acceptance in his life.
            “Why don’t you try going back to church?” Danfred’s mother begged.  She thought the seven altars not only ugly, constructed as they were from pictures torn out of magazines and bits of junk Danfred had picked up on the side of the road, but blasphemous in their import.  Her son was essentially worshipping heathen gods! 
            Judge Tankard particularly enjoyed the conclusion of the story, in which Lyle Alzado returned from the grave and had dinner with President Carter’s family.
           
Three Men Examine Their Master’s Nodules for Signs of Tampering

            With the aid of the industrial lubricant emeraldease, Torman, Shab, and Grimmery were able to slip inside Judge Tankard’s throat for its monthly inspection.
            “Given the lack of detectable evidence of tampering during any of the previous inspection,” Torman opined, “I would suggest that we change to a bimonthly regimen.”
            “It would be less of a hassle,” Shab agreed.
            Grimmery, painfully maneuvering around his companions, began checking the third and fourth monocular nodules just below the digressory ridge.
            “I don’t know,” he said, “The judge goes to a lot of banquets and things.  Anybody could sneak in here and plant a bomb or something.”
            “Your sarcasm only strengthens my conviction,” Torman replied.  He asked Shab to make room for the toolbox as he brought it down from his shoulder to the floor of the moist red cave.
            “Easy,” Shab insisted.  He had to squeeze hard against Grimmery to keep the sharp edge of the metal box from cutting into his belly.
            “One of these days he’s going to hear us talking about him,” Grimmery warned, and not for the first time.

New Beginning

A Record of Noises Made in the Forest

            There were three men.  Their names were Torman, Shab, and Grimmery.  As they made their way through the forest along a narrow path, they each reflected on the nature of their relationships with the others.
            Torman considered the other two men to be his colleagues.  Grimmery felt that Torman and Shab were his friends.  Shab, it is interesting to note, referred to the others (in letters home and in his own thoughts) as his companions.  These distinctions are not that important, but they do indicate that there was a lack of unity among the little group.  In fact, when Grimmery suggested that they come up with a collective name for the three of them, Shab immediately thought of “the three companions,” alluding to the famous Tales of the Three Companions, whereas Torman sarcastically responded with “The Useless Book Characters Group.”
            The reason they were heading into the forest was to check on recording station #4, a small, automated data collection post.  This was actually Torman’s job, but he was thinking of turning it over to Shab because Torman wanted to devote more time to his writing.
            “So I’m just along because you needed to borrow my vehicle,” Grimmery concluded mournfully.
            “You’re an integral part of our tightly-knit organization,” Torman, walking in the lead, assured him.
            “Our original vehicle was stolen,” Shab wrote to his family, which included many cousins and relations extending out into little anthropomorphized droplets.

Deficiencies in the Beach-Hive

            “When did you first notice these… problems with the structure?”   Judge Pancreas Tankard asked the young man.
            “Well, I could tell the structure of the hive was flawed as soon as I saw the blueprints.”  The young man, who went by the name Drone 64, tugged at his face mask.  It didn’t fit correctly, having been the property of another young man whom he had killed in order to infiltrate the hive.
            “I see.  And when was that?” The judge’s fat hand held a fancy pen poised for further notation over his legal pad.
            “Several months before construction began,” Drone 64 answered after some deliberation.  “I’ll say January of last year.”
            The judge’s pen descended.
            “Now, Mr. 64, you do understand that I am a judge and not an attorney, although I did fulfill the duties of that latter office in my earlier career, and as such I, if this case is to move forward, will not be able to act directly, but through intermediary agents under the auspices of a legal instrument known as secret denouncement.”
            Drone 64 nodded.  “I understand,” he said.
            “Very well.”  The judge moved his jaw out and to the side, staring at his notes and considering.
            “One more thing,” he finally spoke, “You mentioned something about the toilet facilities being inadequate.”
            “That’s right,” Drone 64, who had been cleaning his right antenna with the prosthetic barbed tongue appended to the bottom of his mask during Judge Tankard’s silence, answered the older man.  “I guess they figured that since the population of the hive is overwhelmingly female, the drones wouldn’t need but one restroom, and that just isn’t the case.”
            Tankard looked into the black, multi-faceted half-domes covering Drone 64’s eyes.
“Did it occur to any of you that, given the unorthodox nature of your… community’s living arrangements, you might use the females’ facilities, or even not to have gender-specific toilets at all?”
            Drone 64 shifted in his seat and smiled as best he could, using his wings as tools of expression as he had been taught.
            “Well, Judge Tankard,” he laughed, “I don’t know if you know it or not, but the urino-genital equipment of giant bees, as well as their rectal formations, are distinctly divergent when it comes to males and females.”
            The judge grunted and wrote on his legal pad, “Flightless.”
           
Persons Interested in Publishing My Book Should Prepare Themselves for a Shock

            Unless there is a firm promise of significant money involved, I am unwilling to alter anything in the book, even at the risk of rendering the work more accessible to the average reader.  Also, the front cover will be illustrated by me.

The Squids Have Come to Settle the Salad

            The salad itself occupied over 80% of the platemass.  Some of the dressing (it was ranch) had slopped onto the bare surface of the plate, creating a site that would later prove perfect for the creation of an amusement park.  For now, however, there were arguments about whether it should be excluded from the lottery determining who got what parcel of salad.  Those squids determined to get the most desirable lots gathered about the little card table set up adjacent to the macrotable on which the salad waited and bartered ruthlessly amongst themselves for tickets printed with what they considered the luckier numbers.
            The style that year was a flat hat and a string tie such as that worn by Colonel Sanders.  Almost every squid about the card table was dressed in this style.  Kabril Dumontaine was wearing this costume when he was drawn aside by a squid covered in lavender spots.
            “Hey, pal,” the spotted squid said to him.  “How’d you like to get a prime lot high up on a cherry tomato?  The very summit of the cherry tomato.”
            Dumontaine had heard there were speculators illegally offering parcels outside the lottery system and he assumed this to be one of them.
            “Of course I would,” Dumontaine replied.  “But, to be honest, I had my heart set on a nice garlic-saturated crevice of some ideally-positioned crouton.”
            The spotted squid, who introduced himself as Phloor the Honest Dealer, laughed and said, who wouldn’t?  As luck would have it, however, he also had preliminary access to just such a parcel as that which the cleverly dressed gentleman desired.
            “Before the lottery has been drawn?” asked Dumontaine.  “Isn’t that illegal?”
            Phloor looked down at the tips of his standing tentacles and shook his head slowly.
            “Well,” he drawled, “You see, the thing about that is that it’s a matter of what should be illegal and what shouldn’t.  The way I see it,” he looked up at his fellow squid, “Bidding on a parcel of salad sight unseen, taking a chance that what you’re paying for isn’t actually what you’re going to get… well, it seems to me that that’s what ought to be illegal.”
            (What was being offered was a look at the site.)
            Dumontaine played with one of the ends of his string tie pensively as he glanced at the piles of numbered tickets on the card table.  “OK,” he nodded, turning back to Phloor the Honest Dealer.  “My son’s coming with us.”  He pointed to a young squid standing bored some feet away.
            Phloor readily agreed and, after slipping through a gap in the fence of carbonated oil that surrounded the restricted area, the three squids were soon traipsing down the gently sloping side of the plate towards the salad.
            “That’s genuine space-porcelain, made in a gravity-free environment,” Phloor informed them, gesturing at the blue and white pattern beneath them.  Dumontaine replied that he had read about it in the prospectus.  His son, whose name was Koksofen, was clearly uninterested in any of this.  He kept his tertiary tentacles firmly in the pockets of his goathide vest and thought about the concept album that he would like to record if he only had a band.  By the time the trio was surrounded by Phloor’s armed accomplices he had decided on a fantasy interpretation of Benjamin Franklin’s Parisian sojourn.

Each Grain is Marked with a ‘B’ to Distinguish it from the Surfer’s Non-Pareil

            Such markings are, for obvious reasons, only visible with the help of a microscope. 
            “We need to keep them small,” Fawn Dogwood explained as she led the group through the factory.  “No one wants to buy rice with stuff written all over it.”  She laughed, thinking to encourage the group to laugh with her.  They always did.  Yet this group was different: instead of being composed of dead-eyed tourists from Mitsuschlange or Protoburgh, it was a group of congressmen and their pet scientists.
            “What do you think the ‘B’ stands for?” Congressman Hawtry whispered to the two scientists huddled within his protective aura.  Dawson and Linville, each nominally employed by Discoverytime Funkabulus, a think tank funded by Hawtry’s PAC, quickly discussed the question in the secret, doubletime lingo of their trade.  It sounded like two insects trading clarinet licks.  Dawson, the marginally more sociable of the pair, turned to the congressman at the conclusion and announced,
            “It probably indicates ‘Buttermonk’s,’ the name of the company.”
            “Ah,” Hawtry replied.
            “But then,” Linville countered, looking, not into the congressman’s eyes, but at the patriotic symbol pinned to his lapel, “It could stand for ‘booger-free.’” He paused.  “That’s an important consideration for some consumers.”
            “Having trouble with your scientific advisors, Hawtry?” Congressman Whalebore asked with a partisan smirk. 
            “We’re fine, thank you,” Hawtry returned, refusing his fellow legislator’s offer of a drink from the miniature bar concealed beneath his jacket.
            “Gentlemen,” Fawn Dogwood, tour guide first class, drew the attention of the group back to her.  “Eyes on the gold line, please;  we’re moving.”  She gestured at the floor.  Four other, differently colored lines ran parallel to the gold one.  Just beyond the granular impression tower, however, they diverged, running away in all directions throughout the factory.  Where they went and what their different colors meant were not explained.  Some of the scientists speculated about this, but only for their own amusement, as such matters lay beyond the purview of their tour.
            “When do we meet with Mr. Buttermonk?” Senator Traplust demanded once again.
            “This is the depooling scoop,” Fawn Dogwood announced, ignoring the senator and his oft-repeated query.  “This is where we combine the rice with a silica-based laminate that promotes both greater shelf life and digestive durability.  In the case of our millet and barley products the process is similar, but requires the presence of a wax catalyst to ensure adequate fungal separation.”
            Several of the science advisors exchanged looks of appreciation.  The terminology sounded good.
            “Is Mr. Buttermonk trying to avoid a meeting with this investigatory committee?” Traplust, one of two senators in the group (otherwise composed of lower-house members), tried again.
            Fawn Dogwood sighed heavily, fixing the senator with a stare reserved for difficult tourists, the kind that want to know if any fingers ever get severed.  Before she could formulate an appropriate reply, however, her face broke into a smile of relief and delight.         
            “Why, Senator, here is Mr. Buttermonk now,” she declared, holding aloft a hand.  The congressmen followed her gaze, turned, and saw an elderly man in a hydraulic ambulatory walker coming toward them, flanked by two saturnine attendants.  While the congressional delegation mentally prepared itself, the eyes of its scientific subset focused on Buttermonk’s mode of transport.
            “The neural interface must be punctually disabused,” Dawson quietly observed.
            “Very expensive,” Linville responded.
            “Welcome, gentlemen, welcome,” Lawrence Buttermonk croaked.  So old was he that it was rumored his mother had been a Civil War bride.  Certainly he could remember his grandfather, who had founded the company during the days of hemp seed soup.  He offered his hand to each of the congressmen in turn, stretching the flabby, flaking lines of his lips into a smile both amphibian and aimlessly lecherous.  “I hope this young lady has been adequately acquainting you with our operations.” 
            “Indeed,” Traplust assured the other man.  “I wish I had a half-dozen like her on my staff.”  The senator wondered if the tour guide’s fiery red hair was duplicated in the crux of her long, high-stepping legs.
            “What we really came to see,” Congressman Hawtry reminded everyone, “Is this surfer’s non-pareil.”
            “Ah, surfer’s non-pareil,” Buttermonk repeated, chuckling gravely and looking at the hands of everyone before him, searching for something incomprehensible to those not consumed by a century’s worth of paranoia.
            “Yes, Mr. Buttermonk,” added Congressman Hooper, the youngest of the visitors.  “We want to know exactly what it is and why its manufacture requires 100 million gallons of water.”
            “Oh, I think that’s a bit of an exaggeration, don’t you, Congressman?”  Buttermonk chuckled again, this time bringing a pulpy foam to his lips that he wiped away with a thumb and forefinger, transferring it to the floor with the indifference of sovereignty.
            “How much water is involved?” Traplust wheedled, smiling crookedly.
            Buttermonk reiterated that it wasn’t an ocean’s worth, and offered to show the committee something of the procedure.
            “Finally,” muttered Hawtry.
            “I’ll bet my rectumeter it’s a three-stage process, converting microsauces of retinal reticence into vertical bioleum,” Dawson spoke, as much to himself as anybody.
            Linville nodded, taking the bet, even if only internally.
            Whalebore belched adventurously.
            It took two elevator cars to transport the group to the terminal level, the site, Buttermonk informed them, of the surfer’s non-pareil division.  Fawn Dogwood said nothing, not knowing what she would be allowed to say.
            Down a wide corridor lit by flashing yellow lights on the walls and whose floor was painted, not with any color-coded lines, but with hundreds of yellow and black bars, they followed the hissing sound of Buttermonk’s walking machine.  The ceiling was lower than before.  The pipes and I-beams were just over their heads.  At the end of the corridor they faced a scuffed wall of sheetrock marked by spray painted admonitions to safety and security.
            “Fawn,” Mr. Buttermonk addressed the young woman, “You have your key?”
            “Yes sir.”  The tour guide stepped forward and removed a lanyard from her pants pocket bearing a single, small key.  This key she fitted into what everyone had assumed was an ordinary electrical socket low on the wall before them.  She turned the key in the hidden mechanism and stepped back with her head cocked to one side as if listening for something.  The group followed her lead and, indeed, were soon rewarded with a low rumble that seemed to come from everywhere.
            “What is it?” someone asked.
            “You’ll see,” Buttermonk had to shout to be heard above the rising noise.
            “Any minute now,” he added as the noise took on a crackling, popping timbre.
            Suddenly there was a great thud that jolted everyone.  Congressmen and scientists clutched at each other.  Buttermonk’s attendants caught at the handles on the old man’s robotic chassis, both to steady themselves and to keep their employer from falling over.  It was over in a second, however, and everyone quickly regained his posture.
            “What was that?” someone shouted.
            “Come see!  Come see!”  Buttermonk insisted, turning awkwardly on his metal leg supports and lurching back down the corridor the way they had come.  He led them to a window just outside the corridor through which a brilliance like that of a cloudless day over a snow-covered field could be seen.  Which was odd, thought more than one of them, as it had been typical junket weather earlier: rainy and drear.
            “Ah,” Buttermonk sighed as he hogged the window.  “Yet another success for our company!  No one else but Buttermonk’s could have dreamed of such a thing!”
            “What are you talking about?”
            “Let me see!”
            The group crowded into the window as the old man backed away laughing.
            “It’s popcorn!” He shouted.  “A single, giant kernel of popcorn!  A popcorn kernel as big as an ocean liner!  And now, expanded to its full size, it’s as big as a town!”
            “Damn,” Dawson cursed softly.  He turned to Linville.  “You should have bet me,” he said.
            “I did,” came the mousy, almost inaudible reply.

The Stork Receives its Training as a Non-Clerical Puma

            “And over here,” the goat touched a yellow plastic bin at the end of the table, “Is where you put your miscellaneous screws and bolts and things.”  He looked at the stork.  “You think you got it?”
            The stork, who, as you may have guessed, was dressed in a rather realistic puma costume, hastily replied, “Sure!”  He nodded reassuringly at the goat.  He just wanted to be left alone to get his bearings in peace.  In time he would learn the job the way he always learned everything: by discovering for himself how things worked, how they fit together.  He always created his own system, he—but the goat was still standing there, watching to see that he got underway.
            “Let’s see,” the stork said aloud.  “I put the buttons in the blue bin.”  He dropped a handful of buttons one by one through his fingers into the blue bin.  ‘B’ for buttons, ‘B’ for blue.
            “That’s right,” the goat encouraged.
            “And these little army men go in the brown bin.”
            “Yes.”
            He would have to remember that the little green army men did not go in the green bin.  They went in the brown bin.  The miniature coprolites, which had been brown (presumably) when they were freshly dropped, millions of years ago, went in the green bin, exactly the opposite.  That was the way one learned—mnemonically, creating one’s own associations.  The goat was talking again.
            “Only try to pick up the pace a little bit,” he said.  “Old Ravenstein likes to walk up and down this aisle and he likes to see industry and application.  Those are two words you’re going to hear a lot around here: industry and application.”
            “Got ya,” the stork nodded in brotherly agreement.
            Eventually the goat wandered off to another section of the floor.  The stork glanced around, examining the other workers through the eyes of his puma mask.  There was a large frog, a couple of vicuñas, and a dog of some kind.  All were engaged in various sorting operations.  The stork turned back to his work with a sigh.  He didn’t really want to do this.  Maybe he had made a mistake.  The puma costume was hotter than he’d expected.  He took a sip of water from the bottle he had concealed in his tail.  Suddenly music began blaring from the work station of one of the vicuñas.  As the stork angrily stared at the two vicuñas, who were nodding at each other, his attention was just as quickly drawn to the opposite direction by a voice at his shoulder.
            “Food and drink are not allowed on the workroom floor.” 
            It was Ravenstein, apparently, for the stork could not imagine who else it might be: a short, hunched black bird whose great age could be inferred from the pulsing red veins surrounding his pupils and the warty, scabby flesh massed about his talons.
            “But that’s OK,” the stork countered, throwing out a fluffy purple paw towards the vicuñas’ portable stereo.
            “What?” Ravenstein wondered.
            “That music.  Forcing other people to listen to music that they don’t want to hear.”
            Ravenstein turned his head slightly, keeping his eyes on the puma before him.  His beak moved oddly as he questioned the use of the word “people?”

Tourgripping Disputants in the Hold of Febora

            “Now, you have, quite understandably,” Judge Tankard began, clearing his throat and frowning with the downward movement of the dislodged throat matter, “No idea of what febora is.”
            Torman, sitting across the desk in a state of expectancy, nodded, urging the judge to explain.
            Tankard leaned towards Torman.  The ancient cufflinks proclaiming his allegiance to a defunct fraternity flashed as he did so.
            “I assume you will convey this information to your associates?” He asked.
            “Not if you don’t want me to,” Torman replied.
            “On the contrary,” the judge reassured him.  “I want you to tell them.  I want you to act according to your customary methods.”
            Later that day, therefore, Torman sat down with Shab and Grimmery inside the old pansy tank and revealed what the judge had told him.
            “Febora is a type of fish that can be worn as a hat.”
            “That makes sense,” Shab’s eyes brightened.  “A combination of fedora and remora.  Hat and fish!”
            “No, not exactly,” Torman was quick to correct him.  “This thing is more like a porkpie, like something Buster Keaton would have worn.”
            Grimmery turned impatiently from the anterior peephole.
            “What the fish looks like,” he insisted, “Is not as important as what’s to be done about these poor tourists.”
            Torman and Shab laughed.  Was he kidding?  He had to be.  Grimmery didn’t care about any tourists.  But he did.  “My parents were tourists,” he explained.
            “The thing to do,” Torman answered his friend, “Is to alter the jigsaw puzzle map of the USA.”
            Shab’s eyebrows drew together.
            “In what way?” asked Grimmery.
            “Well, as it is now, the map shows a man waterskiing over much of the lower half of the state.  We’re going to paint over him with a lightfast acrylic whitewash and, in his place, paint in a large green blob in a general’s helmet.  He’ll have dust puffing up around his pseudopods indicating strife.” Torman looked from one man to the other.  “This will warn people away from the area.  Or, at the very least, it will indoctrinate future generations with an understanding of what to expect if they choose that area for a vacation.”
            Grimmery scratched his nose.
            “We are talking about Florida, right?” he asked.
            Shab, too, had a question.
            “This is what Tankard said for us to do?” His eyebrows were still knitted.
            Torman nodded heavily, assuring them that it was.

Fondles the Crater in Puppydog’s Purse

            The pansy tank, mentioned in the previous story as an ideal place to hold a secret meeting, had started life as a typical, armored, mobile piece of artillery as used by hippie soldiers of several phony generations during the cinematic wars of the past fifty years or so.  However, since being abandoned in a field of clover and daffodils some years before, it had been painted shiny pink and further covered with large, crudely painted flowers of yellow and white.  In the shadow of its turret gathered the puppydog, the brassiere, and the melonanchor.
            “If only we were strong enough,” the brassiere lamented, “We could open the hatch and climb inside.”  He looked up at the steel beast and frowned.
            “Let’s not worry about that now,” the melonanchor told his colleagues.  “We’re plenty safe here.”
            “We may be secure, or comfortable,” the puppydog retorted, “But safe?”  She opened her purse and took out the cards.
            “Now how do you play this game, anyway?” The brassiere asked. 
            “Well,” the puppydog began laying out the cards one by one on the flattened grass.  “It’s not so much a game as an activity.”  Ladybugs and caterpillars explored the edges of the cards, clambering from a blade of grass or the stem of a flower to a card and back, ignoring the larger creatures and ignored by them in turn.
            The melonanchor examined the cards.
            “They’re motorcycles,” he announced.
            “Not all,” the puppydog interjected.  He laid out a few more cards.  “See, some are monsters.  And some are scenes from that popular film, Nationwide Ideograms of Peat-Destroying Cornborn.”
            “Never saw it,” the brassiere confessed, though this made him look like an oddity at the time.
           
A Man Forces Chicken Entrails into the Cabaret Peas
           
            Certainly you will want to know what “cabaret peas” are, given that, as an American who has never set foot on continental Europe, you are justifiably ignorant of such matters.  That being said, you have, of course, heard of the cabaret tradition in Germany, and perhaps think that these legumes are in some way connected with that particular variety of theater.  However, the word “cabaret” in this case refers to the stage-like structure in which the peas are compelled to sing and dance in a revue dealing with contemporary political and social topics.  These peas were developed through the efforts of the Department of Agronomy at the university over the course of many years.  They are a delicate breed requiring constant attention.  Farmers interested in raising them are advised to educate themselves about recent trends in the modern musical theater and to practice using a whip.  Knowledge of costume design is usually not necessary, as the peas can easily be made to resemble almost any character or concept needed through the use of a “helper vine.”  This is a symbiotic organism that slowly grows around the base of the main pea plant, both taking the place of an audience, should one not be available out in the wasteland where you live, and also eventually strangling the cabaret peas to death.  This last function is more important than you yet realize, for it is easy to get emotionally attached to a particular performer and hesitate in the harvesting, preserving, and consuming of it when the time comes.
            The chicken entrails were fresh, still wriggling with life as the man tossed them in a paper sack and started his march towards his neighbor’s hobby farm.  His eyes were fixed and bloodshot.  As he stumbled over the field on his grim mission they reflected the late afternoon sky, but giving it a redder cast, as if Krakatoa had exploded yet again.
            “Sending millions of metric tons of dust and ash into the atmosphere,” he thought absently as he kicked in the rear entrance to the former goat house.
            The peas, some still in their kimonos, faces covered with cold cream, screamed and lunged about in a scene from some documentary reenactment.
            “Eat it, ya scum!” the man commanded, catching the peas up in groups of four and five at a time.

A Man Sneaks into a Cult’s Executive Headquarters
           
            After he began to feel a little better (“he’d had a cold or something,” said Luise) he braced his legs inside tall boots with laces seven feet long.
            “With these I can stand and walk,” he thought, looking at himself in the mirror.
            (“Do you look like a marine?”)
            As he stepped out into the contrariness of the summer’s heat he realized how grateful he was that he didn’t have to have anybody’s permission to take this initiative.  Ever since his debts had been magically, miraculously, surgically taken away he had been “free from all those bastards who tried to tell me how to do every little thing.”
            He’d written a poem about it, which, in all honesty, was almost incomprehensible as an expression of his freedom, his relief, his feeling of independence.  Luise told him as much, handing it back to him with a look of moth-raping-cat.  She reminded him that he was supposed to be sneaking into the cult’s executive headquarters.
            Yes, he nodded, walking boldly into the lobby.  The building was a former hotel, each room converted to some purpose vital to the cult’s continued growth and existence.  Anyone could walk into the lobby, for that was where the public relations and recruitment committee had set up their operations.   The man, whose name was Limbostan, examined the materials on display closely.  He attracted the attention of a large, tail-less beaver in a red vest.
            “Do you have any questions?” the beaver asked.
            Limbostan pretended not to speak English.
            “Baa baa maba baa baa.”
            The beaver smiled politely.
            “Is that a Slavic tongue?” he asked.
            “Baa baa maba baa baa,” Limbostan repeated, gesturing intently at one of the posters.  It was an old Calvin Klein ad that had been annotated thoroughly, arrows and numbers all over.
            “Yes? Yes?” the beaver urged, touching Limbostan’s shoulder and leading him closer.
            Later, having crammed the beaver’s body into an umbrella stand left over from the building’s days as a place of lodging, Limbostan made his way into the kitchen.  To his amazement the red vest fit well.  For once the legend “one size fits all” had proven true.

Tiger’s Domestic Arrived and Attempted

            In those days the jungle was, however dangerous, yet a comfortable place.  One didn’t labor under a grimy film of sweat and dirt.  In fact, if one (and I assume there is only one of you and not a whole vanload of loudmouthed young people) wanted to, one could step into a small, dark pool and bathe.  Flower petals floated on the surface.  The ground about the pool was soft and free of particles that might stick to the bottom of your feet.  It was like carpet, I suppose, and the whole of the jungle was like a large, climate-controlled room.  But I don’t want you in my pool.  I don’t want you in my jungle.  Not unless you put on one of these costumes.  The tiger one will do.  Now you are a tiger.  You can balance apples on your head, if you like.

An Organization of One

            As the sole member of the art movement known as Lo-Proc, I feel a little silly, but, as silliness is one of the core principles of this movement, I also feel justified in issuing this manifesto without resorting to proclamations of principles or sweeping statements of doom.  For, as will be seen, each blog is a hair growing on the monster.
            Ah, the manifesto!  It is the expression of my symbolic suicide.  The facts of my daily life are such that, as Ray Bradbury advised, I really should just kill myself.  But, sitting here in the bathtub, writing these words, imagining them printed on a big piece of paper in some Dadaist-era typeface, and passing copies of it out to the dream people come to pay their respects, I decide to keep on living, at least long enough to see it all not come true.  Symbolically, therefore, the disease coiling latent in my very DNA takes the place of the expensive gun, the reckless drive, or the fistful-of-pills-and-bag-over-the-head.
            They stopped me from speaking about my depression earlier by threatening to take away my family’s livelihood.  But by the time they read these words it will be too late: my livelihood will have mutated into something else.  I want my livelihood to be my public contempt for the fear of losing a livelihood.  I want my manifesto to be that I have no fear of being silly.  The manifesto is nothing if not a declaration that purism is my enemy and rambling incoherently is my method.  Maybe something of use will come out of it.  It is philosophy by attrition.
            Now, an explanation, and then we can continue with the rest of the project.  Lo-Proc is short for “Loath Procurement.”  The idea being that, as “Procurement” is the name of my personal philosophy, “Loath Procurement” would be the theoretical version of that philosophy as tailored for handing on to other people (should I want to start a cult or something).  Lo-Proc also brings to mind Lo-Fi, a musical movement whose aesthetics and ideals I both agree with and am a part of, whether anyone ever hears that side of my work or not.  And finally, that leads me into the art which I make now under the banner of Lo-Proc: most likely you’ll never see it, even if you somehow manage to read these words.  It’s all luck, it’s all luck.  Fifty percent of it is not your fault.

The Sexual Repairs Will Never Let Me Forget the Date

            It was the first day of August.  I was just entering the last phase of my cold: coughing.  I tried to drown out the TV with early Sun Ra, but the young Blount just couldn’t compete.  So I sat there and dealt with it—all of it.  The pain in my feet, the despair, the goddamned stupidity.  Out of some vestige of manners or good taste I can’t claim to be an intellectual exactly, but I can, in all honesty, make a claim to intellectual interests (or pretensions), which is as close as one can get a lot of the time in an environment such as this. 
            The tiny Marshall Allens entered through my toes, making their way upwards, dragging expanding cables behind them.  A doctor had recently ordered me to wear a heart monitor, but, given the time already wasted in his office, I refused; now the cables, lettered and numbered with appropriate messages of goodwill, sloshing paint everywhere with lively intent, encircled my heart.
            “You spoke of despair earlier,” the physician recalled.  “Is there no hope then?”
            There’s always hope.  Hope is imagining a way out, plausible or not.  The problem is that someone with a big imagination can conjure up hope from a planet of chicken shit.  Given that I have to turn out work no matter what the circumstances, I’ll just incorporate my despair and leave the hope for that blaring TV in the waiting room.

The Parts of the Bomb that Are Indebted to Elder Welder

            Torman and Shab were amazed at Grimmery’s knowledge of the bomb.  They listened as Grimmery pointed at the various parts of its mechanism and explained their functions.  Exchanging looks, they smiled at these hidden depths in their friend.
            Even the bomb, standing semi-narcotized on the viewing pedestal, part of its tin carapace cut away to facilitate such viewing, seemed amused.  Sleepily, the great monster asked the men if they could guess what the significance of the red paint on a few of its innards was.
            Grimmery moved his head back and forth.
            “I assume,” he answered, “That those are the parts that were designed by Elder Welder.”
            “Elder Welder?” Torman repeated as the bomb laughed slowly and low.  “Who is he?”
           
There is No Link Between the Plethmethyst and the Sea Girdle

            Brilliant engineer he may have been, but there was one puzzle that Elder Welder could not solve.  As Grimmery later told his friends over coffee, the plethmethyst and the sea girdle, each an integral part of the bomb’s workings, yet functioned inside partially closed subsystems, interacting with other parts of the bomb (in some cases the same parts), yet having no connection with each other.
            “I’m thinking of a sexual comparison,” Grimmery grasped for a better word, the right word, other than “comparison.”
           
An untitled interlude
            There must be one word that means “similar example.”  Anyway, why not just fake it?  Why not just tell a lie?  I have a suspicion that all great successes are founded on at least one lie, usually an exaggerated version of the turning point, the great insight, the step through the right door, accidental or not.  Does it matter if you planned it out?  It might.  Look at me.  If I had been willing to plan things out, this might have been a real novel.

A Man Sets Up a Home Inside the Stomach of the Bipedal Clam Potato

            Since there were no windows the man, who had taken the wrong pills that evening, was forced to hang his curtains around partially-framed paintings of fictional New York personalities like Mr. Sleepycrud, the Theory of Deep Itching, and the Epitome of Leadership. 
            “You like to read?” Torman, who visited the man on Friday, asked upon noticing all the books waiting to be put up on the walls.
            “Well,” the man demurred, “I like putting the contents of books into my brain, but the actual process of reading—I find it tedious at times.”  He ran to the toilet, barely excusing himself.  It was his first time using the facilities and he was a little disappointed that it had to be in such urgent circumstances.
            Torman selected a few books that he didn’t think would be immediately missed and slipped out, heading for the only other significant organ.

A Man Coaches Pink Elastic Reflectors Under the Exhumation

            “Who died?” Torman asked Captain Ipecac, gesturing with his burrito at the open grave.
            Ipecac, who, as a police officer, was under no obligation to answer Torman, nor even to acknowledge their common humanity, walked away.  His black tactical sneakers left prints like a trail of circus peanuts in the disturbed earth.  He nodded at the man with the clipboard as he joined him among the straps and cables hauling the box full of Pelican Boy into the light of day.
            Torman took a bite of his burrito.  As he chewed he weighed the differences between the man with the clipboard and the man down in the bunker.  Which one would look better in a sombrero?

Something I Ate Flowering in the Colm Like Long-Stemmed Clovers

            Shab read over my manuscript as we waited for the next penny to fall from the catwalk.
            “You probably should explain what a colm is,” he suggested, handing the spiralbound notebook filled with messy, scribbled handwriting back to me.
            I glanced up at the catwalk.  I saw a couple of fat fingers dart out of one of the peepholes, but no coin fell.
            “I try not to explain anything,” I told Shab.  “Besides,” I sighed, feeling weary.  I had taken some unaccustomed pills earlier in the evening.  “The whole idea is that the text will be accompanied by illustrations of one kind of another and maybe they will answer that question.  And if they don’t—well… it’s probably better that something like a colm is left to the reader’s imagination.”
            “‘Colm’ is probably a real word—with some definition that’s nothing like what you expect.”
            I frowned.
            “Come on, make with the pennies!” I shouted.
            The law enforcement official, dressed as a typical college graduate and amateur athlete, descended the fireman’s pole and glowered at me.
            “I have every right to kill you where you stand,” he warned.
           
A Monumental Disregard for the Jellyfoot Jacker
           
            “Urban legend or not,” Albania concluded, “The Jellyfoot Jacker is now most definitely a cultural icon.” 
            A man in a Jellyfoot Jacker costume nodded forcefully beside the smiling woman.  He had just begun to slap Albania’s upper arm with the tip of his tail when the
            Story ended, the film image was replaced by that of a roomful of Jellyfoot Jacker merchandise.
            The truckstops sold three comic books together in a plastic bag.  The book visible on either side of the bag was a Jellyfoot Jacker title, but the unseen one, the one in the middle, was invariably something like Tiger’s Domestic or Non-Clerical Puma.  Most of the kids looked on these latter titles like an adult would an apple core—inedible and incomprehensible in a world of seedless grapes.  Strunk, however, eagerly took these rejects for himself.
            “So everyone is happy,” Mother remarked from her seat beside Father, who drove the car.

Mr. Penguinmate is Gaseous

            In issue #16 of Non-Clerical Puma, which Strunk now opened and began reading, the Stork, having successfully fooled Ravenstein into believing he was a diligent worker, was finally introduced to Mr. Penguinmate.
            “Mr. Penguinmate,” Ravenstein addressed the large bird of indeterminate species behind the massive spectacles, “This is Gummy Puma, from the small item sortation division.”
            Mr. Penguinmate looked up from the randomly heaped collection of papers and paper-related items on his desk.  He made a low, wavering noise that the Stork understood was meant to be interpreted as speech.  It sounded something like, “Uhahohuhhhnnnuhohahhhhmm-hmm…”  The eyes behind the glasses were many times magnified, sleepy, and deceptively inquisitive.
            The Stork smiled vaguely as he shook the old bird’s wingtip.  He stepped back from Mr. Penguinmate’s desk with a friendly enough smile, but no words of any consequence came from the Stork’s mouth either.  He had merely said, “Hello.”
            Outside the old bird’s office (which was both cavernous and oppressively ornate; Mussolini would have been jealous) Ravenstein started to chide the Stork for not engaging Mr. Penguinmate more.  That was not the way to get ahead.
            But suddenly he began coughing and clutching at his chest.  “I’ve only got one lung,” he gasped.
            The Stork later found out that Ravenstein had lost the other lung in Korea.
            “Shot out by the communists,” the Goat explained.
           
Interrogated About the Celebrity Backwash

            He had been dreaming about his own death for years, only he didn’t know it.  No one did in those days.  We’re not talking about how one dies.  These dreams weren’t prescient.  No, they were about the state of being dead.
            “All of my suspicions have been confirmed,” Dr. Phonogist, Physician to the Stars, told Ed Waker.  When pressed, Dr. Phonogist revealed that Rod Stewart had once vomited into an aquarium.
            Were Rod Stewart’s dreams about death as well?
            Dr. Phonogist considered.
            “I’m sure some of them were,” he decided.
            The room in which the highly paid doctor was interviewed was clearly a hotel room.  More than a few viewers noted that the paintings over the beds were by Asger Jorgdorf.  One was of a sheep/house and the other… well, the other was hard to make out.
            Ed Waker pointed at the other painting with his pen.
            “What would you say that painting is of?” he asked.
            Dr. Phonogist glanced over his shoulder.  He grinned crookedly, though his eyes remained those of a dangerous, wealthy man.
            “Is this to be an empathy test?” he wondered.
            Across town Rod Stewart met with Andy Summers in secret. 
            “So you think that, in a way, you become a painting when you die?” Stewart kept his voice low.  The back room was safe, but was it secure?
            “Well, that’s a metaphor,” Summers replied.  “But, in essence, yes, you become the visual landscape, the scenery, if you will.”
            Stewart nodded.  He looked at the tabletop and thought about things.
            “But not just the visual landscape,” Summers added.  “I mean, eventually, wouldn’t you became part of the greater electromagnetic spectrum?  A snapshot of it, anyway.”
            Dr. Phonogist didn’t tell Ed Waker, but he had developed a cure for looking more and more like Harpo Marx.

The Imperative Green Will Know Better Next Time

            Judge Pancreas Tankard did not fear his own mortality.  He credited this to his personal philosophy, developed over many years and put into practice every day.
            “I have told you of the expectant high,” Tankard reminded a group of acolytes come to learn his system.  “For those of you who haven’t been here before, this is a method best reserved for those familiar with the drug experience.  Familiar enough so that just thinking about getting high, with the sure expectation of doing so later in the day perhaps, is enough to induce an autovicarious feeling of being high.  Chiefly, the euphoric aspects.  Sensory distortion is something more difficult to achieve in this way.”
            The young men sitting about the room listening to the judge exchanged smiles of delight.
            “Sir,” one of them raised his hand to ask a question.  “Are you speaking specifically of marijuana?”
            The judge looked at the young man over the top of his glasses, which had fallen forward in the animation of his talk.  He chuckled from deep in his phlegm-carpeted throat.
           
All the Suffering I Went Through Over My Poor Penmanship, And It Was All for Nothing

            For a couple of years I had been looking forward to learning how to write in cursive.  I saw it as the grown-up way to write.  Of course, my parents, with their nineteenth century mentality, did not use the term “cursive;” they spoke of “writing,” as opposed to “printing.”  On a related note, when I began second grade, the year that I would begin learning cursive, my father said that I would now need a “tablet,” which I thought meant a pill of some kind.  He said it was to write on, and I imagined an aspirin composed of many flaky layers of paper.
            After I started learning cursive, however, I very quickly lost interest, because it entailed a lot more work, and a lot more patience, than I was willing to put into it.  My teachers and parents were always denigrating my penmanship.  It got to the point that my mother would make me laboriously copy passages out of books at home.  I cried the whole time at the torture.  That’s what it seemed like: torture.  It was so unreasonable to me to try to make my letters look exactly like the ones on display.
            Once I got to fourth grade, however, I started going to a new school.  This was a private Christian school.  I remember the teacher taking me out in the hall so as not to embarrass me in front of the other children.  She asked me, “Did they not teach you cursive in public school?”  I told her that they had, but that I preferred to print.  I don’t remember what she said to that, but I do know that, except for my signature, I never wrote in cursive again.  For the next eight years, however, even my printing was called “messy.”  My father referred to it as “chicken scratch.”

Knackered by Thrombosis of the Gills

            “They don’t make Blue Horse tablets anymore,” the gravy-colored beast snapped.  “In fact, children are issued their own laptops from day one.”
            “Even in Eskimo territory?” Clumberja wondered.
            “We don’t use the term ‘Eskimo’ anymore,” the beast, in its bra of jungle webbing, informed Clumberja frostily.
            Things certainly have changed, Clumberja, who was Judge Tankard’s niece, thought.  Her t-shirt had a picture of the iconic blue horse on the front.  On the back it said, “Take One and Call Me After Christmas Break.”
           
Attention Filth in Brackets

            OK, now the real novel (that is: an extended narrative) begins.
            Torman had been listening to Ministry lately.  He didn’t like the way Al Jourgensen had fucked up his face.  All those piercings.  It was stupid.
            He had a job inspecting data collection stations throughout the deserted area.  His employer, Cleanliness Disconception Limited, expected Torman to visit each of the twelve stations every month.  He had to open up the metal box mounted on a post and collect the data inside.  This took the form of small organic pods deposited by the Squirrel People.
            “So that’s why the data can’t be transferred electronically,” Torman’s friend Shab realized.
            “That, and the fact that there is no wireless reception out in the deserted area.”
            Shab’s countenance soured at the mention of the word “wireless.”  The world was now a much impoverished place. Torman had been right about that.
           
The Strainer Pursuit of Sequester

            He was a big man.  Big and good looking.  But now he was getting fat.
            “You thought you were going to be a movie star,” Colonel Calculer accused.
            “Bionic feedback makes us whole.”
            The holes in the colander—we have improved drainage efficiency by turning them into slots.
            “I thought that we had determined that wire mesh was more efficient.”
            “We’re taking into account clean-up time as well.”
            Hot water, immediately put into action, takes care of most problems in the kitchen.  But who cleans up as they cook?
            Doesn’t it spoil the enjoyment of the meal?  The same sort of people who feel that flossing is a waste of time.
            We have developed a colander floss, but it’s difficult to use.
            Selectively open or closed.  Closeted colander collared.
            Duran Duran’s more experimental work was released under the name Batwingus.  Simon LeBon’s voice was electronically altered.  Many assumed it was a witch of obesity on vocals.  The half dozen covens containing such creatures are well known in the British Isles, but here in American they are so slow we think they are concluding.

There Were Four Tigers

            Torman, Shab, and Grimmery had just reached the fourth data collection station.  Torman was explaining to Grimmery, who had joined the party only about two hours before, the procedure for inspecting the station when four tigers emerged from the surrounding woods.

(Children’s story version)

            Torman was getting tired of his job with Cleanliness Disconception Limited.  He invited his friend Shab to join him on his monthly route to see if Shab would be interested in taking over the job.

            There were twelve data collection stations scattered throughout the deserted area.  Torman had to inspect them each month.   He and Shab had just finished with the third one when they returned to where Torman had parked his vehicle…

…but the vehicle was gone.
            “Somebody’s stolen it,” Torman barked.  “Now what do we do?”

            Shab had an idea.
            “Grimmery doesn’t live too far from here.   We can go to his house and borrow a vehicle.”
            Torman was skeptical of what “not too far from here” meant, but he agreed.  It was the best option they had.

            As it turned out, it did take a long time to get to Grimmery’s house.  By the time they got there it was dark.  Grimmery, who had known Torman and Shab since high school, let the two spend the night.  In the morning all three of them set out in Grimmery’s vehicle to finish the route.
           
            At the fourth data collection station Torman opened the metal box mounted on a wooden post to collect the pods deposited within by the Squirrel People and to read the special thermometer inside.  He had just begun explaining about these things to Grimmery when…
           
…from out of the surrounding woods emerged four giant tigers.

            Torman, Shab, and Grimmery made it into the vehicle before the tigers got too close.  In fact, Torman managed to finish his work at the station and close up the box before getting to safety.  So really the situation hadn’t been that dangerous. 
            “But it sure was scary,” Grimmery laughed.

The Grill is Allergic to False Begumbo

            Detective Matriarch had been sent to Florida with his assistant Zoominor to follow up leads contained in some old letters relevant to the Lord Panweefius case.  After a difficult, hot day matching local landmarks with descriptions made by Aunt Mary (rumored to be Lord Panweefius’ lover), the two men returned to the hotel.  There Matriarch was appalled to discover that he was expected to cook his own dinner over a personal barbecue.  Zoominor, a man of working class origins, unlike Matriarch, had no problem with this.  As there was plenty of beer and everybody around the pool was also cooking out, it contributed to a party atmosphere.
            Detective Matriarch disgustedly retreated to the hotel lobby to peruse the brochure rack and its many local dining and sightseeing options.  He had just begun unfolding a brochure about nearby Fort Picklechip (site of the Fort Picklechip massacre) when a woman joined him.  She methodically worked her way through the brochures, taking one of each.
            “Souvenirs,” she explained on catching Matriarch looking at her.
            “I usually content myself with the contents of my room,” Matriarch replied, wondering how stupid he sounded using such heteronyms.

My Opening Mace is a Gluteal Resin

            “So you’re a detective,” the woman, whose name was Carolingia, wondered as they waited for their drinks to arrive.  The restaurant they sat in was Ma Gifford’s, the only place in town still open (besides McDonald’s and similar purveyors of what Matriarch would have called shit were he not in the presence of a lady he was increasingly desirous to impress).
            “Yes,” he replied with a smile.
            “And you’re here on a case?” Carolingia was younger than Matriarch, but not by too much.  She had rather a large nose and flat chestnut hair.  Her smile was infrequent and narrow.
            “Yes, but not alone.  My assistant, Zoominor, is with me.”
            “Is this your first time in… Florida?  I was going to say America, but I guess that’s assuming too much.”
            “No, you’re right,” Matriarch answered with a chuckle.  “I have been to America before, but never Florida.”  He leaned forward.  “I don’t like it very much.”
            Carolingia smiled.
            “Where did you go before?” she asked.
            “New York and Chicago on a police training tour.  I particularly—“ His reminiscence was cut short by the simultaneous arrival of their drinks and Zoominor, who breathlessly announced that Schiffwerfer had been spotted near the old coal mine.
           
A Man is Forced to Spend the Pennies in His Loafers

            Schiffwerfer, who found the idea of a coal mine in Florida highly implausible, yet incorporated the concept into his later thriller, Cling Salt Arrangements in Ordinary Bread Beards.  Once again, in order to get his book into the hands of his readers, Schiffwerfer was forced to self-publish.
            “No one will publish anything I write,” he complained to a man dressed as one of his friends.
            “Have you tried any of the university presses?” the man asked.  “From what I’ve seen, they’ll publish any old crap.”
            “What I’m really concerned with at this point,” Schiffwerfer continued, ignoring the man’s foolish suggestion, “Is the cover art.  I want a painting by Asger Jorgdorf.  I’ve always had a thing for books with his artwork on the covers.”
            “Why don’t you paint it yourself and claim that Jorgdorf’s ghost psychically directed your hand?”
            As much money as that idea would have saved, it proved unnecessary.  Not only was Jorgdorf not yet dead, but several weeks later at the Andy Summers Fan Fiction Convention in Sweden, Montreal Island, Schiffwerfer was introduced to Jorgdorf.
            “I’ll tell you what I’ll do:” the great man told the writer.  “Since they’re taking the Rugwa series away from me, I’ll let you use the painting that was going to be on the cover of the next Rugwa book.”
            “How could I ever afford that?” Schiffwerfer whined, overwhelmed.  “As it is I’m going to have to turn all my furniture over just to find the spare change to get the books printed.”
            “Friend,” Jorgdorf kindly replied, “Don’t worry about it.  Just assure me that your book’s plot appropriately complements a picture of a fat, moustachioed warrior in striped pants butchering a giant hornet and you can use the painting for free.”
            Schiffwerfer smiled.  “He called me ‘friend,’” he thought, “Even though he isn’t dressed as one.”

Traveltalker Reacts to the Spermicide

            “One of the newer products that the Buttermonk people are working on is a spermicide made from corn syrup.”  Rawkintowel, a policy analyst working for Senator Clacker’s group, discussed recent concerns with his pet, a transparent tank of alternating layers of sweaty aspic and oil of okay.
            “This tank was connected to a vibrational motor,” Mare’s Wood later explained to Cheap Victor.  “Thus infusing the system with the necessary energy to understand and respond to Rawkintowel’s words.”
            “Through the neural collective of all the microbes within the system,” Cheap Victor added.
            “Quite so,” acknowledged Mare’s Wood.
            “Thus we see that Senator Clacker endorses collectivization, groupthink, and, let’s call it what it is: communism.”
            Such an opinion was not only beyond the purview of the Buttermonk Graineries’ official spokesman, but also represented a potentially irresponsible leap in reasoning.  It was the position of the Buttermonk Graineries that only Senator Clacker himself could answer for the new spermicide’s effectiveness, patriotism, and embodiment of stereotypically hermit-like individualism.
            “After all,” the spokesman concluded, “The Senator has spent the last year investigating corn syrup and its supposedly deleterious properties.”

Rectally Indeterminate Contraband

            Judge Tankard filled a glass with giant hornet’s milk directly from the abdomen of a giant hornet trapped in a special wall-mounted dispenser.  He performed this action one-handed, as the other could not be diverted from the task of holding a book, so engrossed was the judge in reading.
            “And what was the judge reading?” little Albania demanded sarcastically.
            The judge was reading a book by Torman, Rugwa Exposes Sire Moot’s Lie.  This was a continuation of the Rugwa series, which Spanish Jackson had begun fifty years before.  As Torman explained to a journalist, he had been asked by Jackson’s heirs to continue the series.  It seemed that of all the writers working in the Barbarians and Beatles genre today, he was the most suited to continue the story of Rugwa. 
            “The only problem,” Tankard addressed Torman the next time he saw him, “Is that the heirs who approached you did not have the full legal right to make such an offer.”
            “That’s why I was hoping you could talk to them,” Torman begged.  “I didn’t do all this work just to see the unsold copies pulped as ‘unauthorized editions.”’
            The judge smiled.  He thought it far more likely that the unsold copies would be pulped as unsaleable.  However, he said nothing of his literary opinions.  Instead he focused on his unsuitability for such a task.
            “I’m a judge now, Torman,” he spoke with paternal kindliness.  “And even when I was an attorney, my specialty was those wrongly accused or convicted of murder, especially if the wrongly accused or convicted was a young, pretty lady.  No,” he shook his big, old head.  “What you want is an expert in copyright and exploitation of celebrity likenesses.”
            Torman desperately wanted to press the judge, to get him to help him, but he was far more interested to hear the judge’s opinion of the book, so he dropped the matter.

Sire Moot’s Lie is a Mexican Boulevard

            Rugwa, for those of you unfamiliar with the character, was the hero of a series of twelve books (eight of them novels proper, the remainder collections of stories) by the quasi-German author Spanish Jackson.  This Rugwa starts off the series as a typical barbarian warrior in something of the Conan mold.  However, over the course of each volume he not only ages, but goes through many changes, eventually becoming a space travelling, semi-mechanical musician and poetic bowler by the final book.  Speculations about what further adventures and learning experiences Rugwa would have undergone have dominated discussions among fans of the character ever since Spanish Jackson’s premature death put an end to the series.
            Now, Torman, a minor writer in a fringe genre, had been asked to continue (however dubiously) the story of Rugwa, the man in the striped pants.
            “I took the striped pants as my starting point,” Torman told the journalist (a younger fellow attached to the literary review, Dichterischer Deutung).  “I realize he only wore them in one of the original books, but they’ve become firmly associated with them in the minds of the fans.”
            How Torman, who was barely known even among the tiny community of readers of these books, had been chosen to carry on Spanish Jackson’s legacy, would make a good story in itself.  Luckily, he had incorporated some of that very narrative into his own take on Rugwa, the man whose striped pants now bore an extra, secret pocket.

The Monorail is Followed by the Suspension of Grief

            Rugwa had not shit in days.  As he took his seat on the train that would take him to the spaceport he reflected that he had better make one last effort before getting on the ship.  He hated to shit onboard; the toilets were too cramped and, once seated, he only wanted to stay seated.  He would immerse himself in a couple of illustrated magazines.  Despite years among the civilized and highly technologically advanced peoples of the east, he yet remained a barbarian at heart.  The less he was reminded that he was beyond the comforts of the earth’s bosom the better.
            It was a good thing, therefore, that the car he was in was empty.  Rugwa got up and crouched behind a couple of seats at one end of the car.  He pulled down his black-and-white, horizontally striped pants and strained at the blockage that seemed to be just within the confines of his rectal chamber.
            He had achieved only minimal results when the train unexpectedly stopped and two passengers stepped into Rugwa’s car.  As the train existed solely to transport passengers from the terminal to the various concourses and back, passing completely over the intervening swamp, the entry of the two newcomers was something that shouldn’t be happening.
            Rugwa noticed that one of the two men was David Spade, the comedian, before either of them noticed him squatting and taking a shit in the corner.  However, this imbalance was not long in being redressed.  Spade glanced around, spied Rugwa, and punched his companion on the shoulder, nodding towards the ongoing activity.
            “Be done in a minute,” Rugwa grunted in reply to their stares.
            Spade and his companion, a big man who was obviously in his employ, fulfilling the roles of bodyguard, minder, agent, and friend turned to the doors as one, but they were already closed.  The train was in motion.  The latter man, later identified in court documents as Allan Josam, remonstrated plaintively with Rugwa, stepping forward as if to protect his charge from the obscenity on display.  “What are you doing?” he demanded, not so much for a description of the act, but more for an explanation of why.
            Rugwa, meanwhile, had only now realized that he had nothing to wipe with.  He glanced around frantically and found a newspaper not too far out of reach.  He only had to expose his bent, half-naked frame momentarily to reach it.
            “Just one minute,” he repeated as he tore the paper into sections and cleaned his backside.
            “You know, they have restrooms in the spaceport,” Josam told Rugwa. 
            “He’s probably homeless,” Spade said to his friend in an undertone, as if to mitigate some of the social transgression.
            Rugwa managed both to cover up his pile of waste with the paper and to keep everything behind the seat.  He awkwardly got to his feet, pulling his pants up as he did.  Standing before the two men he held one last piece of paper in his hand.  He looked at it in amazement.
            “Hey, is this you?” he wondered, pointing at an ad that, indeed, promised the appearance of David Spade at a local nightclub the night before.
            “I like those pants,” Spade muttered, turning away from Rugwa.
           
The Wraith is Posted in its Entirety to the Alphabet Flag

            Being still a barbarian beneath his layers of painfully acquired civility, Rugwa could not shake his barbarian’s fear of the supernatural.  Thus, when the old hag warned him that Worm Tower was guarded by a wraith, the mighty adventurer nearly gave up any idea of penetrating its ancient stone mass and obtaining the treasure within.  His adventurer’s avarice, however, coupled with the old woman’s promise of a way around the wraith, overcame his reluctance.
            “All you have to do,” she told Rugwa, “Is throw these magic beans at its feet.”
            Rugwa stroked his long moustachios as he contemplated the dozen or so grubby old beans in the outstretched palm.  Each had been marked with a ‘B’ in a suspiciously oxidized pigment.
            “How much?” he asked finally, looking into the hag’s face.  Could that face have ever been that of a pretty little girl?
            “Either three pieces of gold now,” she cleverly bargained, “Or half the treasure when you return.”
            Rugwa, equally clever after so many years in the world, smiled.  It was a good bargain.  After all, he reasoned, there probably wasn’t any treasure.
            That night, armed with the magic beans, Rugwa slipped past two patrolmen guarding part of the wall surrounding the old city and approached Worm Tower.  With the acquisition of the written word had come the ability to think to himself in whole sentences.  Now he mentally debated the origin of the structure’s name.
            “It is possible that it was erected by some long-defunct worm cult,” he considered.  “Certainly there is nothing in its appearance to suggest a giant worm rising out of the ground.”  His thoughts were contradictory and tenuous from the tension of making his way along disused streets scattered with rubble and weeds.
            To obtain access to the tower it was necessary for Rugwa to unleash the pressurized foam in his shoe auxiliaries.  This launched him to one of the windows high overhead, as the street doors were blocked.
            “The moon reveals a creepy vista,” he thought, looking down from his perch.  “This tower was built in the days before glass was widely available.”  As he turned to the interior of the tower his thoughts turned to the history of architecture and city planning.  He became so engrossed in this, speculating on such topics as sewage, municipal sectors dedicated to specific professions, and the durability of stone, that when he came upon the wraith he was more shocked to realize that he had forgotten about the possibility of its existence than its existence.
            “Only he who salutes the alphabet flag knows whereof Eric Dolphy sleeps,” the wraith intoned mournfully.  Its voice was like unto an arctic crowbob, if such a creature of avian connotation exists.
            “I can’t understand you,” Rugwa answered.  Indeed, not only were the wraith’s words cryptic, but were spoken in a dialect extinguished hundreds of years before.
            The wraith repeated its intonation.  By the way, it was ghost-like in appearance: a floating, luminescent bedsheet with vaguely elephantine tusks and trunks snaking out around the edges.  Very scary, especially in the darkness.
            Rugwa frowned, unsure of what to do.  Then he remembered the beans.  He scooped them out of his vest pocket and threw them before the wraith.
            “You said feet,” Rugwa bitterly reminded the old hag (and aren’t all hags old?) as he threw aside the shabby cloth covering the entrance to her hovel.
            The old woman glanced irritatedly at the big man.
            “What?” she croaked as she turned back to the primitive TV set.
            “The wraith didn’t have any feet,” Rugwa let her know.
            The hag looked again at Rugwa.
            “So what happened?” she demanded, as if suddenly remembering the earlier events of the evening.
            The barbarian space traveler, disheveled, scuffed, and bleeding from a half dozen places, grunted in disgust.
            “You wanted half the treasure,” he sneered, “Here it is.”
            As the centuries-old laugh track burst from the TV a sheep’s fetus landed in the hag’s lap.

            What was the other half?