Short Stories, Film Reviews, and Recipes

Month: March 2023

Harassing the Diamond King, Act Two

*** Recipe Included: Cast-Iron Pizza***

“If you don’t think life is absurd or unfair, go see my therpist. When I asked her what she was writing as I relaxed on her crimson leather couch and spilled my soul to her, she said, ‘Just making a few notes, nothing to worry yourself about, but since I’m a progressive therapist, I’ll give you a sample’…this guy is a psychopath; he’ s selfish, ignorant, godless, funny-looking, pretenious, unsanitary, vertically, mentally, and phyically challenged, pungently fragranced, lacking cells on both sides of the brain, profane, overly passive aggressive, overly active agressive, and just an all-around dull turd!”

Anynomous Foosball Champion

*** Death and Love on the Run***

“Now, we’ll take a look at what has the Diamond King sweating carbon… this one didn’t irritate him and his online pals as much as the cat video. We’ll view that later, “ said Prollen. He dimmed the lights with the remote and hit play.

The video began with a black screen and a caption in bright white letters reading, “How Love (and Diamonds) Can Conquer Anything.” The screen faded into a black-and-white scene showing a young couple grinning at each other as they sat together in the darkness.

Their toneless skin suddenly had a spotlight shining on it, and it made the sad pair glow like they were on a stage. You could vaguely see the bench they were sitting on, but the rest of the frame lacked definition. They were a glimmering, slightly depressed couple floating in a pitch-black universe.

Jarvos couldn’t wait until the end of the clip and blurted out, “Did he borrow Stephenson to shoot this?; It looks just like the Jaylene video. He’s not cheap, and this looks like his style.

“He even found a similar actor; she looks like the crybaby from the original commercial. That’s crazy. How would the Butttruth afford someone like Stephenson?”

Prollen glared at Jarvos and calmly said, “Yes, as I said, the similarities are obvious. It’s not the work of a single amateur with a few dollars to spare. This one is well-produced; a team had to make it. Not just an average wannabe, and no, Stephenson didn’t shoot it.”

“I talked to him this morning, and he seemed offended that I accused him of working for someone else. After telling him we were looking into other production companies for Jaylene’s commercials, he became much friendlier. But I believe him. I don’t think it was him.” Prollen unpaused the video.

The woman in the clip stopped smiling and looked sadly at the camera. “This ring has been in my family for generations,” she said. “It’s not just a diamond sitting on precious metal. It’s a gift from God. I can’t tell you how many times it’s comforted someone in my family when times got tough.”

With her eyes welling up with tears, her husband reached over and put his arm around her to comfort her. She said, “This ring shows that love and a little luck can overcome just about anything.

“Well, they can’t conquer death, but they sure helped my family survive. The story of how this diamond wound up in my family began many years ago when my grandfather was clipping his toenails on the front porch.

“He always said dirty nails were good for the soil and made sure he swept the clippings into the lawn.” She smiled for a second, possibly thinking fondly of her grandpa’s grooming routine.

“He heard a car racing down the road to his house, and he walked down the driveway to see what was going on.” The screen flashed white and then showed a black muscle car barreling down a dirt road with a dust cloud in its wake.

“The driver was going too fast and lost control around the curve by the driveway and crashed into the woods. My gramps said the concussion shook his birdhouse off the oak.

“He ran to the wreck and found a dying man and his bride lying by the smoking car. They were covered in blood and pieces of glass from the windshield, and my grandpa said the bride looked much worse than the groom.”

“I guess they weren’t wearing their seatbelts when they plowed into the tree, but it was more than just that. They had lost a lot of blood before they even got in that wreck. “

“Gramps found out later all about the couple’s story, but he sure didn’t mention to the cops that he had grabbed the wedding ring off the bride’s bloody finger. I don’t think she was completely dead at that point, but I don’t hold that against him.”

“Well, the story was that Martha and Johnny had been married that morning and decided to rob a bank for their honeymoon. They got plenty of money, but the getaway didn’t go well since they didn’t plan on an off-duty security guard coming to retrieve the jacket he’d left on his last shift. This is how it went down…”

The screen faded away and showed a security guard walking into the bank parking lot. He paused to scratch his butt, and he turned his head and saw a well-dressed, masked couple, both with bleached blonde hair, with large white bags running toward a black car.

He later told the cops he had reacted quickly with his gun (and bragged he had used an extended clip: fifteen rounds in his 9-millimeter), but actually, Hank Besper had froze and waited until they started out of the lot before he unloaded on them.

He knew it was his moment to shine; hopefully, he’d get on the force after doing this. No more security work and no more disrespect. Remember your training, he thought, and everything will work out. The scumbags will be dead, the money will go back to the bank, and you’ll be a hero. It’s almost Miller time, buddy; just hang in there and shoot straight.

The car screeched out of the parking space and roared towards the exit (and Hank) at high speed. He pulled the trigger quickly and managed to shatter the drive-thru window of the fast food restaurant across the street with one of the 13 bullets that missed their targets. Two more “known” bullets grazed the car’s roof and damaged the brick of a nearby church.

One whizzed over the passenger side mirror and shattered the plastic tire of a toddler’s Big Wheel while the three-year-old rolled beside his father on the sidewalk. Martha was shot in the neck through the windshield, and Johnny was hit in the shoulder.

His last “identified” round cruised to the left of its target and blew off the Dodge’s side mirror. Two out of fifteen isn’t bad, I guess, Hank thought. The scene faded back to the melodramatic wife.

“It’s very romantic when you think about it, but Gramps said the inside of that crumbled car was a sight. That was back before everyone was snapping pictures from their phones. “

She paused for a second, caught in her memory, and smiled. “He painted a picture of the accident scene and titled it Plush Interior Crime Scene. It made my grandma gag whenever he pulled it out to show it to people.”

“It’s probably good that they’re dead because, for God’s sake, before the robbery, Martha was wanted for killing a door-to-door salesman with a wiffleball bat. She knocked him off the 5th-story balcony of her apartment into the windshield of a Buick. “

“The poor guy was only hawking pop-up bibles and trying to make a living. And Johnny, well, he was wanted for assault and torturing his kidnapped victims with an enema kit. He supposedly got the idea from some pervert in Illinois.”

“After the guts and brain matter were removed from my grandfather’s property, the soil still looked stained. You’ll see it if you return to the same spot today. We used to call it the ‘Lovers’ Last Stand.'”

She teared up while smiling, but her husband gave her a confused look. “Weird, huh? But it’s also kind of beautiful.” She wiped away another tear.

“Anyway, the ring’s been in my family ever since, and anytime life takes a massive dump on one of us, the ring is shared. I gave it to my sister last year when she was going through a rough patch.”

She looked at her husband with puppy-dog eyes and blew her nose into a Kleenex; a small piece of it, aided by mucous, flew between his incredulous eyebrows.

“She’s struggled with a glue-sniffing addiction for years, and it’s taken a toll on her. Besides her lungs being all gummed up, she kept gluing the tube to her face when she nodded out.”

“My sis fought through it, though, and with the Lord’s grace and this blessed ring, she went from huffing rubber cement to Elmer’s. She even stopped snorting the keyboard cleaner. Now she’s doing great. Everything she huffs, smokes, snorts, or injects is organic.”

Her husband smiled and pulled her closer into a hug. After a kiss on her head, he asked, “where does the ring stay when no one’s in trouble?”

“What do you mean, Elliot?” she asked.

“Well, you pass this ring around to everyone in the family who’s had a loss or is a screwup like glue-baby Jill, and it makes them feel better, right? But how does the family decide where the ring is stashed when everybody is happy?”

“Do you rotate it around, or maybe you have a time when, let’s say, your sister is pulling from the ring’s immense power to make her drop that epoxy tube, and she’s had it too long, do you have to confiscate it?”

“Have you had to say, sis, you’ve had your time with the ring, but now it’s time to give it to your uncle Davis cause his hemorrhoids are acting up, and he needs some diamond voodoo?”

With her face turning red and her fists clenching, she tried to keep her cool; she took a deep breath and resisted the urge to slap him.

“Those are all valid questions, Sherlock, but should I have passed it to you when you were fired from your last job—when you were caught on film sneaking into the boss’s office and licking her keyboard?”

*** Dirty Digits ***

Jarvos covered his mouth to stifle his giggles, but his boss still noticed his eyes filling with water.

“All right, I’m glad you think this is all so comical, but we’re not finished. I think Jaylene’s commercials are overly dramatic and maybe cheesy, but they’re not as pretentious or …elitest as the ones in the ‘80s and early ‘90s.”

“I’m sorry, sir,” said Jarvos trying to wipe away his happy tears and struggling to catch his breath. “It’s just, the Butttruth’s models are right on. She’s the spitting image of the sad mama from the diamond ring ad, and her husband . . . looks just like the guy Jaylene hired, the one with the eyebrow deformities.”

“And the background music. It’s public domain stuff but sounds like he had an orchestra.”

Prollen doubted that his star joker really masterminded the videos, but he had to ask since so much was on the line, and it wasn’t about their reputation; their lives were at stake.

“Jarvos, did you have anything to do with this?”

“What? No, sir, I’m not that creative.” His colleagues all grinned in unison, everyone but Prollen. “I just think it’s funny. I don’t have the time or money to pull off something that looks that good. The film quality is much fancier than anything on my website.”

“Your website?”

“Yeah, but don’t worry, I don’t have my name or any connection to Nelters on the site. I only designed it to win a bet.”

“What was the bet?”

“Well, first, I have to say that I won the bet. Please, no applause, everyone. Anyway, Mel, my neighbor, told me one night that he couldn’t believe his cousin was getting rich from selling online courses on how to make hemp clothing for injured cats.”

“Just injured cats?” asked Prollen.

“Yeah, you know, sweater patterns for three-legged cats and ones with bulbous heads. The guy is making a killing off it. Well, I said, Mel, anyone can make money selling useless products or information online, and I bet him I could come up with something ridiculous to back up my claims.”

“The bet was for $500; if I lost, I had to buy $500 worth of merchandise from CrippledKittyHempFantastique or whatever it’s called. I created Switchingoffthemlights.com, won the bet, and continue to profit from my site.”

Prollen stared at him for a second and considered moving on, but he had to know what the fool had created in his downtime. “Ok, before we move on, enlighten us. What is the switching the light thing about?”

“Exactly what you said. It’s mostly just photos and short films of my finger switching the lights on and off. But I keep it interesting, and I always change the setting and sometimes disguise or modify my finger.”

“Last week was Thumb Week, and all the switches were manipulated by my left thumb.” Jarvos held up his thumb and slowly turned it for his audience like he was doing an ad for a hand model agency.

“The nail looks better on this one than the one on the right, and I like to keep things up-to-date and polished on my site. During the Dirty Digits week, I purposely jam coffee grounds in my nails before hitting the switch, and the one where I wear a dirty bandage is especially popular.”

“I got thousands of views and now have a skincare startup paying me for their ads. I also sell a course on light switch remodeling.  I didn’t think anyone would ever download it, and no one did at first.”

“But after about three weeks, it started picking up. You know, when that storm hit the coast a few months ago, well, somehow, that helped boost my course purchases.”

“You wouldn’t think people whose homes were nearly destroyed would care about their light switches or the covers or the best lighting to photograph light switches, but they apparently put it high on their list of remodeling projects.”

“It’s nuts, but I’m glad. I was able to go to Paris because of it, but man, it’s an insane world, isn’t it?”

His colleagues stared at him in disbelief, but in the back of each of their minds, they weren’t surprised. Although he was talented and well-liked by most, his sense of humor sometimes rattled the traditionalists in the organization.

“During Halloween, I’ll have monster fingers, bloody fingers, sexy fingers, fingers smeared with chocolate, greasy fingers, fingers with the bone poking out, and, you know, stuff related to the holiday.”

“I play scary music in the background, something creepy like ambient music from the 80s, and in one film, I have a fake hand getting stabbed when it reaches for the switch. Oddly enough, my most popular film is one of a hand getting slapped with a slice of pizza before it turns the light off.”

“Last month, while I was waiting for my car to get fixed, I wandered into the garage and took a few shots and videos with more industrial-looking switches. Most of them look like gigantic versions of the ones you’d see in a circuit breaker panel.”

“But man, that place was dirty. I understand a garage isn’t gonna look like an operating room before they start slicing patients up, but I expect a little more from a European auto shop. I mean, some dude’s whitey tighties, soiled, I might add, were hanging out of the garbage can.”

“But it’s not surprising, considering how things turned out. The mechanics were pissed when I started messing with the lights. I have to click them back and forth quickly when I make short films, and I heard one of the guys yell, ‘ You can’t pop them on and off like that idiot. You’ll blow the breaker!’ I think that’s why my Porsche smelled like sauerkraut.”

Marshall smiled and wondered why a garage would have sauerkraut on hand. Maybe they keep a jar in the back in case they encounter someone obnoxious like Jarvos, or they could have dismantled a Reuben and smeared the fermented cabbage under his leather seats.

“I want to get some in a manufacturing plant or something like it, but I’m trying to avoid getting arrested. Oh, one more thing, during Safe Sex Week, I wrap a condom around my finger…”

“That’s enough! Thank you so much for considering our reputation, Mr. Snoyner. Please avoid flicking the lights around here. You can do that in your downtime when you’re creeping around a paper mill or slaughterhouse.”

“We’ll look at this next masterpiece if there aren’t any more interruptions. It’s not a parody of a specific Jaylene ad, but, as you’ll see, it mocks Darden directly and pokes fun at the company’s failed pet jewelry line.”

“I’m not sure why my predecessor would allow one of our subsidiaries to embark on such a ridiculous concept, but luckily, Jaylene recovered from that disaster. And I have to say, when Darden took over Jaylene after Serinno left, he did an incredible job rebuilding the company’s image after so many deaths. “

“At the end of the video, the Darden impersonator exaggerates the number of pet fatalities even though the actual figure is pretty shocking. It wasn’t 1,700, but at least 50 animals died from the toxic jewelry, and, incredibly, Jaylene survived it, and we, in turn, survived it without dumping them.”

“Maybe it was unfair of the filmmaker to target Darden since he came in after the scandal, but these videos are for entertainment, not for toppling the king of diamonds and his ego.

“And everyone who’s familiar with him knows he’s a good ‘ol boy from his online videos, so they parodied him instead of Serrino. I think that bothered Darden and his fury has animated several of his online fans, but we’ll get to that later . . . let’s watch the next film.”

End of Act Two

Up Next: Harassing the Diamond King Act Three: Mary Poppins Kills a Butterfly and Bobcats Hunt Darden P. Johnson.

Harassing the Diamond King

Act One

“The Farmer’s Almanac told me my pigs’ tails would freeze in January unless I kept ’em warm, and except for the duct tape at the base, they look pretty cute with that puffy pink insulation on their tails, especially the ones that aren’t covered in crap.”

anonymous

The executive office of Nelters Inc. is only five miles from Almond Rock and somewhat hidden in the dense oak and pine forest. It’s a far cry from the company’s previous location on the 25th floor of the Horlen Elkes Tower in the city.

Nelters is a global corporation that owns mining operations, jewelry chains (including Jaylene and Kaleb’s), precious metal distribution centers, trucking companies, and recycling centers.

Unlike the view from the city, on the roof of the Almond Rock office, you could see rolling grasslands that turned tan in the winter, dense forests of eastern white pines and white oaks, and the looming Chesline Leer Mountain range.

There were no abandoned buildings with broken glass, ozone warnings, unidentified aromas, attorney billboards, bikers with androgynous hairstyles, or well-dressed prostitutes.

Almond Rock and the surrounding area, including the high-end residential properties that housed many of Nelters’ employees, was a safe place to live, for the most part. It had a low crime rate, but in the past year, the crimes that occurred were more bizarre and violent than those of other small towns in the state.

***The Last Thoughts of Frank, R.I.P.***

Frank Skolly, Nelters’ IT chief, unfortunately, came to work early on Fridays before anyone entered the parking lot. He liked to leave early to get home before his wife so he could make dinner. Friday was their “gourmet night,” and it usually took him several hours to prepare the meal, including the appetizers.

The security attendant checked the lot in the morning at 7:00 am and in the evening before he left, but he failed to recognize anything strange about the late ‘70s Mercedes with a red flame decal on the hood and a key-lime paint job.

The day before, the driver used a stolen guest pass to enter the parking garage and parked across from Frank’s usual spot. The car’s tinted windows allowed him to remain unseen, and he spent the night in his car.

When he saw Frank exit his car at 5:45 am, he started his engine, pulled slowly out of the space, and headed towards him with his foot slammed on the accelerator.

Frank turned around when he heard the engine’s roar and then ran at full speed towards the elevator and stairwell. Instead of ditching them, he held his briefcase in one hand and breakfast burrito in the other.

He looked back and tried to zig off to the right. With only a few yards to the stairway exit, the car slammed into his back and flung him into the concrete wall next to the elevator.

His briefcase flew to the left and bounced against the guardrail, but his beloved burrito (a homemade recipe) splattered against the blue emergency light, coating it with orange hot sauce, white cheddar cheese, onions, peppers, and bits of runny eggs.

The Mercedes slammed on the brakes, backed up, and raged forward as Frank, stunned and dizzy, turned around to face the light-green luxury junker.

Why were the West Germans obsessed with that color in the 1970s? Frank thought before it smashed into him, forced the hood ornament into his chest, and pinned him against the wall.

The car quickly reversed, with the engine smoking and wheels turned to the right. This ripped the hood ornament from Frank’s chest and left him crushed and bleeding in a fetal position on the concrete.

The car reversed 50 feet and stopped with the white smoke from the hood getting thicker and mixing with the morning fog. The driver held down the accelerator and brake while the engine roared.

The smoke billowed towards the roof of the parking deck and seemed to be in tune with the screeching moan of the 8-cylinder.

Frank, broken and bloody, tried moving his head towards the car and was hit by its blinding headlights. Squinting from the light, he tried shielding his eyes with his hand but couldn’t get his left hand to obey as he propped himself up a few inches with his right. I’m surprised his lights work, he thought.

His mind always seemed to wander at odd times. He’s really going to burn out that engine if he keeps it floored like that, and it will cost a pretty penny to service unless he has a solid service contract with the dealer, which is prepaid and isn’t a good deal, but hey, it’s convenient, and you don’t have to worry about some Bubba Fett murdering the repair job.

But wait a minute, that’s maybe a ’77 model or so, and there’s no way you’ll get a service contract with something that old. Why did I even consider that but, more to the point, why is this flame-trimmed freak after me? I wonder if that’s Kelly’s husband, but doesn’t he drive a Puegot?.. Maybe it’s a Citroen…

The driver released the brake and quickly adjusted the steering wheel so that his left tire was lined up with Frank’s head; the tires squealed in place, then roared forward.

The driver-side wheels missed his head but plowed over his neck and chest, and the car slammed on the brakes as the mangled front grill smashed into the wall again. With the engine clanking and smoking, the driver put the car in reverse and backed slowly over Frank’s head.

Frank’s final thoughts were related to the last image he saw before death: the spinning Hardline Ridge tire. He had thought Hardline? I deserve better than that. My God, those crummy 4th-world tires are discount quality, at best. Belkmontison, Eribbiccinni, or the one named after that Pilgrim would be perfect.

What was it called again? Smith’s Tires, or was it spelled the old-timey way, like Smythe’s Tires? I know there’s a Mayflower brand, but that’s not it; they make gluten-free fritters, not tires.

After three weeks of investigating the crime, the Almond Rock Police could not identify suspects, a motive, or much evidence, except the mess found at the crime scene.

Although they had a few calls about a green Mercedes being spotted and checked nearly every repair shop in the eastern side of the state, the cops had no leads about the murder weapon’s location.

Cecilia, Frank’s wife, was having a difficult time dealing with the details of his will. Unlike men his age, Frank took out a will as a newlywed and left everything to his wife.

He was intelligent but paranoid about death, and when he talked to his lawyer about his will, he added a few ridiculous clauses to ensure his passing was memorable.

Cecilia initially rejected his final request, but she honored Frank’s wishes and had the organist play Butt to Buttresucitation by Funkadelic at his funeral.

*** Companion Pet Performance Art ***

Marshall looked down at his phone and kept looking up while he walked towards the elevator of Nelters’ parking garage. Like many of his colleagues, he initially hesitated to stare down at his phone in the lot after what had happened.

Marshall’s wife sent him a picture of a large, spotted cat relaxing in a lawn chair next to their backyard pool. Beneath the photo, she asked, “Isn’t this Bob’s?” Man, he thought, his cats barely ever leave the property unless he’s walking beside them. He forgot that Laura had not met one of the web’s rising pet stars.

The proud cat looked like a cheetah but was smaller and leaner and had gold fur and black spots. Luckily, he wound up at Marshall’s house instead of three doors down at Clyder’s. Dr. Clyder had four Tibetan Mastiffs.

However, although the dogs were fierce and massive, they weren’t as agile as Rita. She could leap over a six-foot fence easily and sprint like a track star.

Looking at the photo closely, Marshall realized it wasn’t Rita; she always wore a black collar and was smaller than her brother. No, that’s the other one.  I think that’s Edgar; he’s quicker than the others and maybe smarter, he thought.

“Yes,” he texted, “That’s Bob’s cat. Give him a call to pick it up, or go outside and say, ‘Edgar, go home to Bob,’ but don’t yell; just say it calmly at a normal volume. He’s harmless. He won’t get angry if you yell, but he’ll get scared. He’s the sensitive one, and sometimes when he gets scared, he urinates.”

Bob’s parents, Ellen and Michael, were retired cat breeders. They owned a massive tract of land in the Appalachians, where they allowed a colony of rescued felines and their retired breeding stock to rule the land and irritate their neighbors.

The cats claimed various parts of the 80-acre area as their territory, but they were trained to avoid attacking the chickens near the farmhouse, and although some of them were fascinated by the odd creatures, the cats never crossed the line with the hedgehogs.

Bob said his dad fell in love with the spiked blobs after a trip to England, and he was one of the first people in the United States to breed them.

Before retiring, Michael and Ellen left their adult children in charge of the cattery and traveled the country with a performance group that featured feline and canine acrobatics.

One of their fan’s favorite acts involved a Russian Blue cat named Judas, who wore red boxing gloves embossed with tiny yellow hammers and sickles.

With the Russian national anthem blaring on the loudspeakers, he strutted into the miniature boxing arena with his butt proudly propped up, meowed to the crowd, and turned around to face his opponent.

Judas growled at a patriotic Pekingese wearing American flag shorts and sat down in front of him. He raised his right glove and repeatedly punched the dog in the face, switching from right to left after four punches until it rolled over and played dead. A white-haired Siamese kitten wearing a bowtie played the referee; he jumped over to the dog and pawed the mat 10 times to count him out.

Little Chubbs the Pekingese had padded headgear, much like a boxer’s sparring partner, and Judas never made contact with the gloves. The duo was trained intensively to pull off the gag, and it only took Chubbs a few hours to learn how to move his head back slightly every time Judas threw a punch near his nose.

However, some people didn’t like the inter-breed boxing match because it was so convincing. They thought the wicked cat, with a name like Judas, was beating the poor Pekingese senselessly.

After several angry letters and death threats, an animal rights group, The Pekingese Purists, showed up to protest the Sucrose Lake performance. They headed to the restrooms to get changed, and none of the attendees questioned their appearance when they rushed out of the bathroom exits in Canis familiarus regalia; the onlookers thought they were part of the show.

Before their dress rehearsal, Michael and Ellen asked their assistants to watch their animals while they stretched their legs. As they walked around the outside of the cement dome of the coliseum, a low rumble erupted behind them.

Michael turned and said, “What’s that? It’s been getting louder as we’ve been walking…is that growling?” Ellen turned around and grabbed his hand when she saw them.

A large group jogged towards them and then stopped. They stood together wearing black and white costumes and rubber Pekingese masks. The couple turned around and casually walked in the other direction, but the Purists started to follow them. Some of them started to yip and growl as they walked.

Ellen and Michael went from a brisk walk to a light jog, and the activists picked up their speed until they were running, but after closing in on them, they stopped suddenly. They made snorting noises that turned to yelps and transitioned to high-pitched howls.

The five Purists in the front started throwing paint bombs at the fleeing couple while a few on their flanks launched the bombs with giant rubber slingshots. One ballon hit Micheal in the head, soaking his gray hair with red paint and Pekingnese urine. He was lucky compared to Ellen.

She was pelted with two bombs that hit her in the back, but when she turned to confront the attackers in a rage, she was hit in the face by a large one launched from the slingshot.

Some of the staff came to their aid to hose them off while the others chased after the activists, but the cheap paint dye and dog urine made Ellen feel like her eyes were burning. Later that night, Bob rushed her to the hospital when her eyes swelled up.

After Ellen’s eyes were treated and drained, she lost her vision for six months. She and Michael decided to retire their animal act permanently and return to breeding and training.

Eyeballs, Manhood, and Killer Siamese

Like his parents, Bob and his wife Laura loved cats and were exceptional trainers. Some of their colony acted like guard dogs, but they never crossed the property line or bothered the neighbors, which is why it was odd that one was relaxing next to Marshall’s pool.

Although the local police and animal control had never received calls complaining about Bob’s cats, they were called to his house recently, along with a few ambulances.

A small, ignorant group of friends decided to rob the house after one of them heard a rumor that Bob had had rare coins, loads of cash, and gold. They were right about Bob being wealthy, but he didn’t keep gold or rare coins on his property.

Before the men got close to the two-story stone-trimmed home, they were stalked by the night patrol. One of the men dressed in black whispered, “it’s bad luck to do this on a full moon cause people are expecting crazy shit to happen, and they’re prepared. ”

Everyone kept walking and ignored the comment until the crew’s leader, Smitty, said, “I heard it was good luck, and as you know, I’m usually right. Now, shut up, and let’s go rob this dude. He won’t be back till Sunday. Besides, he doesn’t even have a security system.”

Smitty was wrong about the moon and mistaken about Bob. He was watching a movie with his wife in the bedroom and wasn’t checking the wildlife cameras on the property. He usually scrolled through them on his phone before bed, but he was having too much fun watching The Thing with Laura.

As the four men in black approached the topiary garden in the backyard, a seal-point Siamese named Cleavus, with a white hemp collar emblazoned with the word “KILLER” under his chocolate face, waited in his favorite weeping beech pruned like a giant mushroom with his tan fur hidden by the branches and leaves.

Laura had spent several years perfecting her garden and worked on similar projects as a landscape designer. Most of her shrubs and trees in the topiary zone were shaped like vegetables or fruit, but she had one giant boxwood devoted to Kurt Russell.

He saw them come closer and trembled with excitement; Cleavus was always up for a challenge and seemed happy that visitors had wandered into his territory.

He clinched the branch beneath him tightly and swayed slightly back and forth until he centered his balance and remained motionless. He licked his lips, and as they approached, his ears bent back, and the hair on his back stood up.

Cleavus watched until the second-to-last man passed by and sprang from his hidden perch. He landed on Smitty’s face, shredded his ears with his front paws, and kicked back into his eyes with his back claws.

Smitty yelled, which sounded like a loud whimper, as he covered his eyes with his gloves. The others turned and were stunned at seeing a cat launching off their friend’s face.

Cleavus twisted in midair like a circus cat and landed in the face of Smitty’s best friend, Reese, who was known as the lady’s man of the bunch (even though he smelled like potpourri and graham crackers), and instead of repeating his prior attack, the cat slashed the masked Romeo’s eyes with his front nails and kicked his back claws into his mouth.

The two remaining burglars turned to run away but were met by the blue-point Siamese brothers, with their backs arched and tails fluffed up.

Josephus and Andy Kapp, who looked like miniature blue panthers, walked towards them slowly, making growling sounds like sputtering small motorcycle engines. The guttural noise from the felines’ mouths was constant and increasingly becoming louder.

The men froze, and the cats changed their motor sounds to hisses. Andy Kapp made the move first, but Josephus was a split second behind; they reared back with their tails thumping on the ground and jumped into the unlucky men’s genitals.

They bit down hard (and deep) and shook their heads around as they had been trained. Andy Kapp took a few punches to his head and neck before he swiped the man’s scrotum with his left claw and dropped to the ground.

But Josephus’ victim tried to pry him loose instead of hitting him, which only worsened his pain and made the cat dig in harder. He finally released his grip on the cat as his chances of procreation sank lower, and Josephus sprang off his chew toy, hit the ground, and dashed toward Cleavus and Josephus.

Cleavus groaned at the pair, signaling them to stand guard, and ran to the cherry-stained gazebo next to Kurt Russell’s impressive green mullet. He crept over to the southwestern corner and hit the silent alarm under the bench with his right paw.

“Man! Right when the head starts crawling away,” said Bob as he paused the film. He looked at his clothes lying across the room on the dresser and didn’t want to move, especially after his eyes drifted to the curves of Laura’s right leg wrapped around his left.

I’m so lucky I married a woman with calves like that...so symmetrical…like elongated grapefruit…mine are like wilted eggplants…pathetic! Bob thought. “Well, I guess we need to put some clothes on for the five-O; I don’t want them to think we’re nudists, ” he said.

When the police arrived, the cats were sitting twenty feet in front of the screaming men, with Cleavus perched in front and Andy Kapp and Josephus behind him, forming a triangle. A low-toned wail greeted the officers from the trio while they turned their heads toward their victims.

“The hell? “said officer Steve Neen of the Almond Rock police department. The cats shined in the moonlight, and their calm motionless bodies, with the full moon beaming above and the gruesome scene below, seemed to pull Steve into a brief trance. It didn’t seem real or possible.

Josephus turned his head towards Andy Kapp and licked him behind his left ear, where he had been punched. “That’s something else,” said Steve, as he pulled out his phone and snapped a picture; Cleavus raised his head and released a “waaahhh” in acknowledgment. “See ’em looking at us like that, Sarge?”

Steve moved closer to the group and bent down. “They’re…they’re purring, sir. Do you hear that?” He reached down and petted Cleavus on the head, and he purred louder.

“Don’t ya think they look proud of it?” asked Steve to Sergeant Alfred Gillington.

Alfred studied the gruesome-looking group, clutching their faces and crotches, and sighed. “Well, Steve, I don’t think a cat, even a dang Siamese, is capable of showing pride, but I …”

He was cut off when Smitty yelled, “officers, officers!” and stumbled and fell when he tried to stand. ” Wait,” he said, pulling off his gloves and moving his hands over the large knobs that were his eyes.

He started to scream when he realized his swollen, slashed eyelids and eyes seemed to grow larger by the second. Later, at the hospital, one nurse would whisper the nickname “fish eyes” to another before his face was bandaged up.

“Well,” Alfred paused for a second to let the man scream louder again. “I’ve never seen a feline blind or neuter a man before either, so…yeah, they look proud.” He turned when the floodlights kicked on above the walking path around the topiary garden.

Bob and Laura appeared on the northern side and walked up to the police. Bob, with a big smile, said, “Good evening! Looks like those guys have had a rough night.”

He looked at the squirming burglars and started to giggle. “What a pile of pathetic jackasses. They had no idea what was creeping around in the night.”

“You know, it may be a good idea to mention to the EMS folks that their wounds will probably get infected. It’s not guaranteed, but who knows what was on their claws!

“Those cats live part-time in the house, but most of the night, they’re stalking around the property by the gardens. Josephus killed a mole the other day and batted it around before biting its neck, so his nails could still have loads of bacteria and possibly faint traces of fecal matter, and you know what that means?”

Alfred stared at him blankly and shook his head back and forth. “It means that something is gonna get plucked out or chopped off if these buttheads don’t get the proper medical attention and follow the recovery instructions.”

Training the Untrainable Beasts

Animal rights activists in the state applauded the blinding and ball-biting attacks, but the authorities and his friends were unaware that Bob could train wildcats.

When he was five, his father introduced him to Mortimer, a pet mountain lion. His parents had a few scars from training him, but he became a loyal family pet and constant security guard. If someone entered the property when the family was indoors, and the cat didn’t recognize them, he screamed and sent them fleeing.

He lived for 21 years, and later as a teenager, Bob raised and trained a bobcat named Melba Toast without his parent’s help. Mortimer (or Melba Toast) wasn’t allowed in the house but followed Bob around from a close distance whenever he played outside.

Unlike most cougars, he stayed active during the day when Bob was around and slept at night when the family went to bed, but he was always alert.

He intervened when a seven-year-old neighbor picked on five-year-old Bob before he walked into the house for supper. Donny, the bully, called him kitty boy and shoved Bob into the prickly shrubs near the front door.

Though the tan cat didn’t hurt the child, he scared the stool out of him when he leaped from the bushes, screamed, and showed off his fangs.

Mortimer’s high-picked wail was enough to scare an adult but would not, in most circumstances, lead to an evacuation. Donny sloshed away crying and never bothered Bob again.

No Menudo in the Parking Garage, Please

Marshall’s wife replied, “I thought you were kidding, but it worked. He made a weird whine and walked away.”

As he was saying goodbye, he saw Jarvos running up to him with a wide grin on his face. “What do you think this is all about; what has the ‘ol silver beansprout all riled up, and what the heck were you listening to when you drove by?” he asked.

“Menudo, of course. And I don’t know what this is about. Maybe someone left another thong tied to the side mirror of his Bentley,” said Marshall.

“Or…another fake profile set up in his name.” Their boss had a lot of friends but also had his critics.

As they entered the elevator, Marshall grinned and said, “I was hoping it was a meeting about getting a new coffee machine.” He hit the 5th-floor button, backed against the wall, and stared at the ceiling.

“Why is a machine that only makes one cup at a time sitting in our break room, asked Jarvos, “and why do some of those flavors taste like cough syrup?”

Online Parodies

Kent Prollen stood with his armed crossed and watched his department heads file into the conference room. Karen Murphy, Kent Oleander, Marshall Dullar, and Jarvos Snoyner had each worked for the company for over six years, but Marshall had been there the longest.

Although Nelters’ interior was post-modern in most of the building, the conference room had green wallpaper and cherrywood paneling. It made new visitors feel like they were entering a smoking lounge at a gentlemen’s club in the Prohibition era. Prollen’s predecessor had lived in another time—in his mind—and his influence had not yet been erased.

He wasn’t imposing, but Prollen could be intimidating when necessary. At 5’11 ¾”, with bright white hair, long stringy arms, and a lanky body, he looked more like a game show host than a CEO. However, his reputation for quickly resolving conflicts kept his staff from relishing surprise meetings.

He had a sense of humor but rarely smiled when someone told a joke or tried to be intentionally humorous at a meeting. Today, Prollen didn’t look particularly angry, but something else was hidden in his face. Was it . . . concern?

“Good morning, everyone. Well, it’s not a good morning for Darden; he’s worried someone is trying to discredit him and somehow damage the company with online attacks.

“A satirist is targeting Jaylene’s sappy diamond commercials. Darden calls them terrorists, but as you will see, the videos are only parodies of Jaylene’s commercials.”

“The prankster’s online handle is thehonestbutttruth… whatever that means.” Prollen looked around the room and saw Jarvos snickering about the profile name. “Yes, it’s a hilarious name, but some of his footage initially seems to toy with plagiarism.”

“The filming style, soundtrack, and even the models look like the ones in the Jaylene ads. But, our lawyers claim that the filmmaker has not violated copyright laws.”

Prollen pushed a button on his remote and turned to look at the wall-sized video screen “Here, you’ll see the company’s logo.

butttruth Productions  
Free your blinds, and your rickets will follow

“Darden is online spreading a theory that this drawing has hidden code embedded in the graphics. I disagree and think it’s the only low-quality aspect of their operation.

“It looks like someone used a spirograph program and fooled around for five minutes, but that silly fool is convinced it contains viruses intended to cripple Jaylene.”

“The man isn’t a complete idiot, but lately, he’s been a little erratic. I think someone is dosing his pork rinds.”  

Up Next: Harassing the Diamond King: Love and Death on the Run and Dirty Digits.

Cooking and Cinema’s Short Story Series: Knee-Deep In Golden Toads

Coming to your phone, computer, tablet, and refrigerator on Friday, March 17th

I haven’t posted reviews or recipes on Cooking and Cinema in a while, but I’ve been busy writing short stories when I’m not editing and writing for work. Although some tales are unrelated to cuisine or films, I’ve included links to new recipes I’ve developed in the last three years in each story.

All of my work contains humor (at least, what I consider humor), but I wouldn’t categorize it as comedic since it also has violence, horror, tragedy, love, hopelessness, pathos, Rogaine, prize-winning mullets, and mealworms.

The short story series, Knee-Deep in Golden Toads, includes twelve stories broken down into several posts. Part one of the first story, Harassing the Diamond King, is coming soon. I hope you enjoy it, Christopher.

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