Author Topic: So There I Was. . . Anthology  (Read 4452 times)

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Offline Eishtmo

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
For some time (nearly two years now), I've been writing a series of stories known as So There I Was. . .  They're intresting, but in the end pointless, tales of my strange life.  Anyways, I'm now getting into what could be called the "second season" of the stories, known as So There I Was. . . Road Trip to be posted in Warpstorm.com's City of Light Station.  With this in mind, I've decided to go ahead and post the original series here, in an effort to attract new readers.  So, once a day until I finish, I'll be posting each of the stories, and once finished, the first of the So There I Was. . . Road Trip will go up for all of you to read.  Comments are not only accepted, but demanded.  Read or not, I don't care.  These stories never had a point anyways:

So There I Was. . .
The Party


   So there I was, a sock in my mouth lying in a pool of vomit, probably my own.  I was in jail, again.  Don’t feel sorry for me, I’ve been in jail before from being lude to police officers, to suspicion of murder (they’ve never proven it).  In fact, the New Harrington city jail was virtually my second home.  Of course, I never remembered it being as crowded as it was that day.

   In the small confines with its pale blue walls and stench of unflushed toilet, nearly thirty people had been squeezed into a small cell.  Which made getting to a sink to wash the dried vomit off my face a delicate task.  “I’m gonna blow!”  You’d be amazed what people will do just to prevent others from blowing chunks all over them.  A quick wash, of both my face and sock, reveled that my standard five day stubble was reaching the seven day mark, evidence that I’d been out a while now.  I shoved the wet sock into my pocket and began looking for a familiar face.  I needed to know what had happened to get me in jail along with most of my neighbors.

   That’s when I saw Jerry, my good, but somewhat spacey, friend.  Friend, of course, means pot smoking buddy, and one of my best customers.  I plopped down on the bench next to him, after shoving another sleeping person out of the way.

   “How’s it going Jerry?”

   “Huh?”  Jerry half woke up to greet me.  “Oh, hey Quinn, you got any for me?”

   “We’re in jail, of course not.”

   “We’re in jail?”  Sometimes I wonder about Jerry.  “That sucks man.  It’s worth it though.”

   “Oh?”

   Jerry finally looked at me with open eyes.  “The party man, being in jail over that party is worth it.  You sure you don’t have anything.”

   “I’ve got an old sock stained with spit, beer and vomit.”

   “Can’t smoke that.”

   “What happened at the party?”

   “What party?”

   “The party we’re in jail for.”  Lesson to be learned here kids, pot rots your brain.  But only if you had one to start with, so Jerry wasn’t effected at all.

   “Oh, that party.  It was a hell of a party.  Let me tell you about it. . .”

   I’ll stop quoting him now, as the next couple of hours were spent trying to get information out of him.  Every now and then, he would fall asleep, ask for some, or just loose his place completely, taking about ten minutes to get back on track.  So I’ll paraphrase the whole mess for you.

   Apparently, two nights earlier, I, along with a bunch of my friends, went to the largest party in known history.  Nearly half of New Harrington was there, a whopping five thousand people, all crammed into the neighborhood around a single house in the suburbs.  The details are fuzzy on what was generally going on, but there was lots of alcohol, drugs, rock n’ roll and general zaniness to make New Years in New York look like a day at the DMV.  The music was so loud, airports were said to call to ask us to keep the noise down.  The flashes were so many, satellites were blinded by asses and tits, giving many a cold and lonely Russian photo annalists a reason to live another day.

   And of course, there were discussions.  Ranging from politics, to religion, to sex, to philosophy, to quantum physics (drunk people talking about physics is something you need to see to believe).  Most were small, only two or three people, all either drunk or high, and none taking the whole mess too seriously.  Except one.  At some point, a small group began discussion who the greatest inventor of all time was.  Now this is a rather silly argument, but being drunk gave it some credence.  Meaning it led to sex.

   Initially, according to Jerry and others, two sides began forming within the entire party.  The first claimed that Malcolm Potts, one of the many inventors of the condom, was the greatest.  The other held Marie Stopes, one of the inventors of the diaphragm, was the best.  Don’t think that this was a male/female split either, half of each were on each side.  Slowly, the argument began to spread throughout the party, escaping the walls of the house where it started, and seeping into the streets.  The two sides now began to separate themselves from each other, and playing a game of “tastes great, less filling.”  I’ll leave you to your own jokes there folks.

   Eventually, a third group formed claimed that the inventor of the saline breast implant, Henry Jenny (I did research to make sure the name was right.  Not much, but I did some nonetheless).  Of course, three is always a crowd, and when there are three groups in a crowd, you know there’s going to be trouble.  The argument escalated, and various weapons, mostly clubs and broken beer bottles, were gathered.  And then, like a crack of thunder (it may have actually been started by a crack of thunder, details are shaky), a riot broke out.

   This is nothing new in New Harrington.  Of course, the scale is new, but the event isn’t.  Hell, I’ve taken part in so many riots, I get calls from anarchists asking for tips, which I give them, for a price.  Hey, I may lead a life of chaos, but I’ve got to eat once in a while.  So out comes the New Harrington Riot Squad, which were almost immediatly run off by a bunch of drunk idiots, swinging clubs, claiming the condom is the greatest invention of all time (I don’t totally disagree, but that’s not the point).  And so, with is best weapon crying in a corner for mommy, Mayor Julian Harrington, the great, great, great, grandson of the founder of Harrington, which was eaten by the flood of ‘93 (dynamite and levees do not mix), called the governor and requested the National Guard be sent in.

   Unfortunately, a good chunk of the party goers were also with the National Guard.  As soon as the call went out, their beepers went off.  The Guard members now gathered together, and after a brief discussion, decided that the guy-who-invented-the-beeping-noise-construction-vehicles-make-when-they-back-up was the greatest inventor of all time, and decided to get rid of these traitorist factions.  So now four sides were pounding away on one another, each holding that the different person was the greatest inventor of all time.  If they hadn’t been drunk, nothing would have happened, but then, there wouldn’t be a story here either.

   After about an hour, the real National Guard arrived, and started busting heads.  Arrests were in the thousands, and gunshots were fired, to no real effect.  Eventually, the riot calmed, and those who had lead it were thrown in jail.  The rest were herded into the Harrington High gym, to await processing.  Of course, that’s not why I was in jail.

   “So,” I asked.  “Why am I here?  I don’t give a damn about this debate.”

   “Uh, what were we talking about again?”

   “Jerry, I’ll cut off your supply if you don’t get your act together.”

   Jerry’s eyes went the widest I’ve ever seen them.  “You wouldn’t!”

   “In a heart beat.”

   “Well, uh, let’s see.  As the crowd started to calm down, the guy in charge of the National Guard and the Mayor tried to reassure those who had not been involved that everything was under control.  That’s when you went up there and gave both of them wedgies.  It was great man!”

   So there you have it.  I was in jail because I gave the Mayor a wedgie.  That asshole has always had it in for me, so I guess it makes sense.  Luckily, I know the cops here, so I should be out in a couple of hours, it is my second home and all.  But I have to agree with Jerry, it was worth it.  I just wish I could remember the Mayor’s face.

   And whose sock this is.
Warpstorm  Bringing Disorder to Chaos, And Eventually We'll Get It Right.

---------

I know there is a method, but all I see is madness.

 

Offline Corsair

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
:wtf::wtf::wtf:
Wash: This landing's gonna get pretty interesting.
Mal: Define "interesting".
Wash: *shrug* "Oh God, oh God, we're all gonna die"?
Mal: This is the captain. We have a little problem with our entry sequence, so we may experience some slight turbulence and then... explode.

 

Offline LtNarol

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

 

Offline Stryke 9

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
I give it a 6 on a scale that stretches off into infinity in both directions.

 

Offline Corsair

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
I just read it again cuz I kinda missed it at some points...
so now... :lol::lol::lol::lol:
is this true? I know, stupid question
Wash: This landing's gonna get pretty interesting.
Mal: Define "interesting".
Wash: *shrug* "Oh God, oh God, we're all gonna die"?
Mal: This is the captain. We have a little problem with our entry sequence, so we may experience some slight turbulence and then... explode.

 

Offline JR2000Z

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
:eek2:
I finally destoryed the Shivan armada and all I got was this lousy T shirt.

 

Offline Shrike

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
I'm so dissapointed I missed that party.  ;)
WE ARE HARD LIGHT PRODUCTIONS. YOU WILL LOWER YOUR FIREWALLS AND SURRENDER YOUR KEYBOARDS. WE WILL ADD YOUR INTELLECTUAL AND VERNACULAR DISTINCTIVENESS TO OUR OWN. YOUR FORUMS WILL ADAPT TO SERVICE US. RESISTANCE IS FUTILE.

 

Offline delta_7890

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:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
~Delta

 

Offline Kamikaze

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:

So there's more of these? :D
Science alone of all the subjects contains within itself the lesson of the danger of belief in the infallibility of the greatest teachers in the preceding generation . . .Learn from science that you must doubt the experts. As a matter of fact, I can also define science another way: Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts. - Richard Feynman

 

Offline Eishtmo

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
Quote
Originally posted by Kamikaze
So there's more of these? :D


Oh yeah!

Anyways, don't fret too much, there have been quite a few people fooled into believeing it was real.  In truth, Jerry's real name is Dennis.  On to the next one:

There was two more episodes between the Party and this episode, but they were lost in a server crash.  I've been meaning to rewrite them, and am slowly getting around to it.  In any case, the house around which the party was centered was mine, and was destroyed.  Which brings us to my favorite piece, Home for the Holidays.  Enjoy:

So There I Was. . .
Home for the Holidays


   So there I was, ankle deep in snow, watching as my sister’s kids bawled their eyes out.  Every Christmas, for reasons I still can’t fathom (okay, it’s for the presents), I go home to spend a ‘delightful’ couple of days with those members of my family crazy enough to come together.  This year, however, I was hoping to spend a tad more than a couple of days, say, a couple of months.  Ever since the party/riot of the century (the 21st century officially began Jan 1, 2001, but it still got the title regardless of what century you say it was in) had destroyed my home, I’ve been living in a tent in my back yard, while lazy, overpaid, underskilled union construction workers rebuild my house.  In any case, the tent, while nice, was getting a bit cold, and spending the coldest months of winter in it was not my idea of fun.  So, staying in my parents house, despite the horrid implications, was sounding better with every weather report.

   So, I took the bus home, using the proceeds of my latest blood and semen sale to pay my way.  When I arrived, I found Grandpa, on my dad’s side, busy with a load of metal and what looked like gun shells in the front yard, and my nieces and nephew crying in the doorway.  I immediately sprang into action (I do that sometimes, despite myself).  Every Christmas, for as long as I can remember, Grandpa has threatened to shoot Santa dead for trespassing, same with the Easter bunny and President Washington (kudos to those who get that joke).  Needless to say, he’s out of his mind, and not in a good way (yes, there are good ways to be out of your mind, it’s loads of fun, you should try it sometime).  As such, most of us kids learned early on to ignore the ravings of the old man.  Of course, setting up what looked like radar controlled anti-aircraft artillery in the front yard is enough to dishearten any little kid, especially my five, seven, and nine year old nieces and nephew.  I quickly explained to the kids that Grandpa didn’t have a chance in heck of shooting Santa down.  First of all, Santa probably uses advanced stealth technology and secondly, Grandpa couldn’t hit the broad side of a jolly old elf if he was six inches (15 cm) away.

   Grandpa, somehow, overheard this and said “Damned if you’re right.  I need flak to take down that good for nothin trespasser!”

   The kids began bawling again.  I quickly told them that all the military surplus stores were closed this time of night and Grandpa would never get flak shells.  Besides, flak is so inaccurate, he’d probably take down a 747 before he even got near Santa.  The children instantly perked up, gave me a hug, then took off with the gifts I gave them.  No, I didn’t get them new gifts, it was the junk I got last year that I wrapped and gave to them.  Don’t get me wrong, I love them, but when you’re virtually broke with your stuff being held for ransom by nazi storage depot owners, you have to make sacrifices.  This is one of them.

   Inside didn’t look any different then the last time I was there, last Christmas.  The tree looked like it hadn’t been moved since then, and knowing my dad’s back, it probably hasn’t (don’t worry, its artificial).  The cute little angel with that strange pointy tree topper sticking up her butt still sat on top of the tree, blinking the steady beat of “Silent Night” thanks to a strange string of lights that beeps Christmas music (unless you push Santa’s belly, which reduces the volume to nothing but blinking lights, as it was now).  Ornaments I made when I was in grade school still hung from its branches along with the ones my sister’s kids made.  God, do my parents love being grandparents.  The kids had already put their gifts under the tree for Christmas morning (tradition) and were clambering around me for more.  I opened my bag and they grabbed at the presents, most of which weren’t theirs, and moved them to under the tree with great excitement.  Sometimes I love being an uncle.

   Speaking of kids, my sister and her husband were busy enjoying a roaring fire, until the youngest kid changed the channel to see what else was on.  Jake, my sisters husband, began yell as if the kid had just started World War III.  Of course, she started crying and ran over to my sister who promptly elbowed Jake for being a jerk.  Jake is okay, I guess, if you like loud mouth, greedy, selfish, self centered, brain dead, jackasses.  Have I mentioned that I don’t like him?  It’s a wonder that my sister stays married to him.  I know she’s smarter than that, should couldn’t really love him, could she?

   That’s about when my mom rolls up (literally), yells at Jake for taking things to seriously, then gives me a hug.  There’s nothing on Earth like a hug from your mom, nothing.  In my case, of course, it means a pain in my back as I have to lean over to hug my mom when she’s in here wheelchair.  Oh well, I can stand a little pain.  She then led me into the kitchen where my father and his mother were busy preparing the Christmas eve meal.  Normally, we’d simply order pizza, but with Grandma around, we have massive vegetable trays that last well into the next day.  Meanwhile, two turkeys sat in the fridge waiting for tomorrows pseudo cook-off between mother and son.  Two meals isn’t a bad thing though, because even if I can’t stay, I’ll have plenty of leftovers.

   Back in the living room, Jake, that cheap bastard, put a bootleg copy of that Grinch movie in.  The absolute worst thing about Jake is not that he’s cheap, but that he can afford to not be cheap.  God, do I hate that slime.  As the children settled down and strained to hear the film, I managed, finally, to get my other Grandma’s attention.  She was relaxing in my dad’s chair (a no-no when I was growing up, then we got a dog and that theory went out the window) with a beer in one hand, a cigarette in the other, and her hearing aid on the table next to her.  Explains why she didn’t notice my arrival earlier.  She greeted me as normal then demanded to know where her worthless son was.  Then she blew smoke in my face and called me a worthless loser again.

   “Well,” I said.  “At least I’m not Jake.”

   “What the hell is that supposed to mean?” Jake yelled.

   Grandma laughed, she knew a joke when she didn’t hear it, and this had to have been a dosy because it got Jake off his ass.  He started toward me, only to have my sister stop him mid step and drag him back down onto the couch.  That’s about when Tommy, the previously mentioned worthless son, and his family arrived.  I like Tommy, and he hated Jake, so we got along splendidly.  My cousins, five and eight each, clambered around the tree looking for presents, then gathered around TV to enjoy the badly recorded film (the shadows of people walking and talking in the theater was crystal clear though).  The veggie trays were now laid out, and for the moment, there was peace, mainly because you couldn’t hear the damn film unless every noise within five miles was tuned out.  Then my uncle Tim, the good son, showed up.  My dad’s brother could do no wrong, and his kid, little Timmy, was an angel.  And we all know that means the kid is rotten to the core.  In fact, I usually buy my dope off Timmy, at a discounted rate (we are family) but when he’s around Grandma, he became a being sent by God.  I wish I had thought of it, I really do.

   The rest of the night went surprisingly well.  Jake and I didn’t get into a fist fight (usually happens at least once every Christmas) and Tommy didn’t either.  As the night wore down, Timmy and I smoked some weed off the back porch, enjoying the way the cold air made the smoke into funny shapes (were we ever high).  Eventually, the rest of the family headed off to bed leaving me and my mom to lay the remaning gifts out under the tree.  All in all, a peaceful night.  As I went to bed, I had a funny feeling that something was missing.  I couldn’t put my finger on it just then, but there was a problem.

   Then I remembered, at about two in the morning, when I first heard it.  For the most part, I’m a night person, except Christmas eve since I have to get up so damn early (around 6 am) for the great unwrapping.  Anyways, during those long, sleepless nights, I stay up and watch old war movies and documentaries on TV, and after a while, you get used to the sound effects and the real noises of certain weapons.  This was flak, and I realized what had been missing, my Grandfather.  I ran outside to see, and hear, a horrible sight.  My Grandpa was sitting in a turret he built, firing flak shells high into the air, at what I’m not sure.  I turn, looking for some answers, any answers, and instead find my family.

   My sister and Tommy’s wife were comforting the children while my mom and the Grandmothers were at the window of the darkened living room watching on in wonder and terror.  Jake was hiding behind a car while Timmy was busy with another joint trying to figure out what the hell all the fuss was about.  Meanwhile, uncle Tim and my dad were discussing which mental home my Grandpa should be placed in when this was all over.  Only Tommy and I seemed to realize that something, anything, had to be done to stop this madness.

   With the flak cannons beating on our eardrums, I leaned toward Tommy and gave him my plan.  “Let’s get him,” I said.  Okay, so it wasn’t much of a plan, but my feet were cold in the ankle deep snow, and I was sleepy.  He nodded, so we charged ahead.  We lept onto the back of the turret and grabbed my Grandpa from behind.  Now, my Grandfather is a big man, we’re talking Andre the Giant big, so he about threw both of us for a loop.  Tommy finally manages to grab his arm and the gun turret starts spinning wildly.  The trigger, for some reason, had gotten stuck, and now flak shells were being tossed through the nearby buildings, including my parents house.  On shell crashed through the window, over my mothers head, and between both grandmothers, and into the Christmas tree, turning the living room into a scene from Backdraft.

   While my mother and grandmothers ran/rolled for there lives, I grabbed for the trigger and tried to get it unstuck.  That’s when I saw it.  A red dot of light, apparently not connected to the turret.  I looked up to where I figured the beam came from in time to see a deer shaped head with a bright red nose and a laser sight.  A quick, and unintentional, due to the thrashing my Grandpa was giving Tommy, look up revealed a sleigh like object being pulled by eight deer shaped objects, and a falling bomb.  I screamed, and with a strength I never knew I had, I grabbed Grandpa and dragged him out of the turret and on to the ground, just in time.  A second later, the turret exploded in a fireball.

   At least eight fire companies had to be called in that night.  Most of the block had been destroyed, again.  I have a distinct feeling that few, if any of us, would be allowed back into this neighborhood.  Not that it mattered, my parents house was torched, and now I had to go back to living in my tent.

   As the last of the flames went out, Jake finally said something.  “Cynthia,” he said to my sister.  “Your grandfather is a ****ing moron.”

   As much as it turned my stomach, I had to agree.  Then, he turned to me.

   “It must run in the family.”

   My parents took up residence in my tent, which uncle Tim and Tommy improved greatly.  It should be fairly warm this winter.  Tommy went home, a hero to his children for saving Santa.  Timmy was busted for drug possession because he insisted on lighting a joint on the smoldering remains of my parents home.  Tim is trying to get him out, but I doubt his chances.  Grandpa ended up in a mental home, and Grandma visits him everyday, hoping that he’ll be better soon.  The other Grandma went home so she could ***** about life in peace.  My sister spent New Years at home with her children and a lawyer, though I’m not sure why.  And Jake, well, he’s in the hospital.  I tried to explain to the officer that I didn’t mean to break every bone in the man’s face, but they wouldn’t listen.  So I’ll be spending some time in the local jail.  Not quite my parents house, but at least its warm.

   All in all, this has to be the best Christmas we’ve had in a long time.
Warpstorm  Bringing Disorder to Chaos, And Eventually We'll Get It Right.

---------

I know there is a method, but all I see is madness.

 

Offline Galemp

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:confused: :lol: :wtf: :nod:
"Anyone can do any amount of work, provided it isn't the work he's supposed to be doing at that moment." -- Robert Benchley

Members I've personally met: RedStreblo, Goober5000, Sandwich, Splinter, Su-tehp, Hippo, CP5670, Terran Emperor, Karajorma, Dekker, McCall, Admiral Wolf, mxlm, RedSniper, Stealth, Black Wolf...

 

Offline Corsair

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Quote
Originally posted by GalacticEmperor
:confused: :lol: :wtf: :nod:

^What he said with a few more :lol::lol::lol::lol:
   l   Merry Christmas everyone! ;)
Wash: This landing's gonna get pretty interesting.
Mal: Define "interesting".
Wash: *shrug* "Oh God, oh God, we're all gonna die"?
Mal: This is the captain. We have a little problem with our entry sequence, so we may experience some slight turbulence and then... explode.

 

Offline LtNarol

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it was good, flak on a front lawn, now that would be a sight...:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

 

Offline delta_7890

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And I thought my family was disfunctional...
~Delta

 

Offline Eishtmo

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Tonight, I present a double feature. Unfortuantly, these also happen to be the worst of the batch.  Both, however, become important for Road Trip, so I'll hang on to them.  Maybe I'll rewrite them someday.  Until then, be gentle, I know they're not as good as the other two:

So There I Was. . .
My Friend Steve


   So there I was, careening toward my death at speeds that should not be done in a car out in the woods, ever.  Its times like these that I relive my entire life over in my head.  The fact that I’ve done it so many times before prevents me from actually enjoying the event as most people do when faced with death.  In fact, I know my life so well because of these experiences, that I remember farther back into my childhood then anyone else I know.  Of course, no one believes me because as far as they’re concerned no one can remember as far back as I can.  Oh well, doesn’t really matter I suppose.  In any case, the strongest moments I relive are the moments that led up to the current attempt to catch Death’s eye.

   It all started with a party that went so out of control, the National Guard had to be called in and my house was torched.  Then I went home for the holidays, where my Grandpa attempted to shoot down Santa Claus.  Then I broke every bone in my brother-in-law’s face and ended up in jail, again.  I was so set though, because now I had a warm place to stay in instead of a tent in my backyard.  Then, I was released.  Apparently, some guy named Chris sent a letter to the judge on my behave claiming I had saved his life.  The judge was so moved, I was released and put on probation.  If I ever meet this Chris, I’m gonna give him a black eye, because now I have nowhere to stay.  That is, unless I called on a friend for help, something I really didn’t want to do.

   Now, I have a lot of friends.  We hang out, drink, break various minor laws and occasionally break a really big law for kicks.  A great bunch of guys and gals.  Unfortunately, most are in prison here and abroad, have been deported, commited, and the rest are under surveillance by the FBI, CIA, KGB (I know, I’ll explain in a minute), FDA, Fish and Game (there are some things you should never do to a fish), ATF, NAACP, AARP, KKK (I’ll have to tell you this one someday), ASPCA, Greenpeace, GOP, UAC (United Ambulance Chasers) and, of course, various insurance companies.

   (KGB is not the real KGB, but the Klingon Guard Board, or something like that.  I won’t go into details, but it involves a Star Trek convention, a semi, something called the “Wig Makers Answer to Rogaine” and the fact that before that date, William Shatner never needed a wig.  I honestly never knew Trekkies could be so damn sensitive.)

   So there are really very few friends I can call on to help me in my time of need.  So I called Steve (he has the shortest rap sheet) and he agreed to let me stay at his place for a few nights.  Now, imagine for a moment the dirtiest, foulest, sickest looking room on Earth.  Got that in your mind?  Good.  That’s Steve’s place after he cleans it and does the laundry, and he’s never done his laundry (I think).  Thankfully, I still had a bit of a cold after standing around in ankle deep snow watching my Grandpa shoot at Santa.  Still, I had about eighteen cans of Lysol and more incense than the local coven.  It’s a foul place to live, but its warm, relatively.  Okay, so the incense keeps me warm.  In any case, I would have to stay here until my parents find a new place to live and move out of my tent.

   After a couple of days, Steve comes in an announces that he’s going to one hell of a party and wants to know if I want to go.  After two days in the hell he calls home, anything, anything has to be better, so I went along.  It took about two hours to get there, driving through the local woods (now being cut down to make way for a mega mall) to an old shack on a hill.  If you ever seen any Evil Dead film, this is that house, only bigger and scarier looking.  Still, there was a hell of a party going on inside, so I didn’t pay attention too much.

   Most of the night is a blur to me.  I remember lots of drinking, dancing and drugs, but not much else.  If the evil dead decided to join us, they didn’t make much noise about it and probably had a pretty damn good time.  I think I did.  The next morning (okay, afternoon, but I didn’t have my watch, so I thought it was morning) I woke up a bit hungover (the more hungover you get, the more used to it you get, either that or I took a lot of painkillers that night) and looked over the scene.  It looked like a mass suicide had occurred the previous day, the sign that this was a great party.  I then looked out the window to see a police car sitting there, and more on the way.

   “Holy ****,” I yelled.  “The cops!”

   The whole room stood up at once, Steve suddenly grabbed my arm and we flew out the back door while the other guests pulled out various fire arms and began firing wildly at the police car.  The newly arrived police cars, including a SWAT van, pulled up and began to return fire.  This whole time, Steve is dragging me to his car, and we go speeding down the road, and away from the shootout.

   Later I learned that the cops had not been after the party goers, but a group of militia men held up in a cabin a few miles away.  The militia men were so infuriated that a bunch of drugged out kids had taken away all their publicity, that they charged at the party goers.  Most of the police made out safely, and later found what appeared to be a battle field between the party and the militia.  I would quote numbers, but you should see them in your local paper, unless they’re covering the event up, again.

   In any case, Steve and I were burning rubber down the forest road at speeds that we really shouldn’t be going at.  This is, of course, where I began.  Suddenly, a tree jumped right out in front of us, and Steve swerved to miss it.  We began spinning around like a blender, hoping and praying that we’d survive to see at least one more party.  Suddenly we stopped dead.  No movement, no nothing.  We sat there stunned.  We looked at each other, and began to laugh.  God, did we laugh.  We laughed as hard as either of us had ever laughed in our lives.  When we heard the horn the first time, we laughed harder.  The second time we laughed even harder than the first.  The third time, however, we saw the semi and stopped laughing.

   I’ll give Steve credit for one thing, he at least got a car with airbags.  We survived the head on collision with the semi, and were later rescued by firefighters on their way to the battle field.  Steve had seven broken bones, a punctured lung, and multiple lacerations, I had a few bruises and was laughing when I was pulled out.  Of course, I went to the hospital, and Steve was sent home.  Gotta love HMOs.  When I first got to the hospital, where I am now, I shared a room with none other than Jake, his face still wrapped in ten pounds of bandages.  When I said hello, he instantly tried to claw his way out of bed, and ended up crawling up the front of a fairly attractive nurse.  His healing process isn’t going well, and I learned today that Cynthia is using this as ammo for a divorce.  Along with the kids, she’s going to take the cheap bastard for everything he has.  Just goes to show, my sister really is smarter than I thought.

   And for the moment, I’m still warm.


So There I Was. . .
At Work


   So there I was, standing behind the counter while this punk kid pushed the gun barrel closer to my face, again.  As unpleasant as this sounds, this was the highlight of my first, and at that moment, possibly my last day at work.

   After weeks of physical therapy, I was finally able to walk on my hands.  That was about when the therapist noticed that I did have legs, and she promptly kicked me out.  So now I was faced with a hospital bill that I had been putting off since they found out that I wasn’t really hurt and Steve was crippled (he also got a very good lawyer, so I’m sure I’ll be seeing more of him in the future).  To prevent paying the bill, I simply slipped in and out of a dozen wards in the hospital, hoping the bill collector wouldn’t find me.  I was in the burn center where I was wrapped as a mummy for three days, then had to go to the bathroom, surgery, where I had my tonsils, appendix, and several organs that may or may not be important removed, the pregnancy ward after conniving the nurses there that I was too pregnant (they figured it out during a sponge bath), and finally physical therapy.

   When I was kicked out, I ran smack into the bill collector, who didn’t recognize me for a moment since I was still on my hands.  Finally, he handed me the bill.  I offered a pound of my flesh, but he said he’d already been through surgery and got 3 or 4, and I still owed them.  Damn.

   So I sat on the small cot in the tent in my backyard, staring at this bill, trying to figure out what to do.  Mom and dad were busy moving their few remaining positions out so they could move in with my sister who managed to force Jake to pay an ungodly amount in alimony.  My mom came over and asked what was wrong and I told her.

   “Is that all?” she said after looking at the bill.  The last 12 years of having MS had desensitized her to really large hospital bills.  I explained I didn’t have that kind of money, and I wasn’t going to as Cynthia for a loan, because she could always find me.

   “Well then dear,” she said.  “Get a job.”

   I laughed, hard.  I didn’t mean to, it just came out.  A job?  Preposterous.  I’ve been out of the house for years and I have yet to have a job.  Mostly I’ve been stealing to live.  Not from anyone who couldn’t afford it, of course.  I would never steal from the guy living in the TV box down the street.  But the one in the refrigerator box is fair game to me.  And if I wasn’t stealing, I was gambling with what I didn’t have.  How did you think I got the house and the insurance to rebuild it anyway?  So I laughed at my mom and asked her to be serious.

   “I am being serious Quentin,” she said.

   I hate being called Quentin.  That’s worse than calling me an eight headed shnook (and I should know).  I knew then she was serious, and I would have to get a job.  But what kind of job?  And how?  My mom handed me the local paper, opened it to the classifieds and told me to read.  So I did.

   And I found a job.  A good job, I think.  I became the cashier of a small shop on the north side of town.  It’s one of those places that has everything, but doesn’t really have anything.  And a lot of people have to be referred to the back room to meet with my boss.  An awful lot of people.  I suppose I could speculate on what they do back there, but I’ve learned enough in my time not to.

   My first day, I stood behind the counter, and sat there, and basically did nothing for about three or four hours.  I only referred people to the back that were supposed to go there thanks to a list of names the boss left for me.  At about 3, this kid comes in and begins walking around the shop with something heavy in his pocket.  I take no notice because I don’t care if he steals something.  Hey, before I got a job, that’s what I did.  Eventually, though, he comes up to the counter, puts a candybar down, and pulls out the gun.

   “Give me all your money!”

   I stood there staring down the barrel cool as ever.  It’s not the first time I was threatened by a man with a gun, and it certainly wouldn’t be the last.  He yelled at me again, adding the threat to blow my ****ing head off.

   “You’re doing it wrong,” I said.  Just as he was about to wonder at that statement, I snatched the gun from his hand.  The kid stood there stunned, still holding up his hand like the gun was in it.  I even think I saw him pull the imaginary trigger.

   “Listen, if you’re gonna rob stores, at least do it the right way.”  And I began to explain the finer points of armed robbery.  Not that I’ve ever done it before, I just have a lot of friends that do.  I explained how to hold the gun, why he should wear a mask and gloves, and why he should consider not putting bullets in the gun (It’s not armed robbery if the gun isn’t loaded).  He listened intently, like I was the only person in the world that took time out of my pathetic life to make his less so.  After about twenty minutes, I emptied the cash out of the register into a small bag and handed it to him.

   “Remember what I taught you,” I said.  “You’ll last longer that way.”

   He thanked me and left.  A few minutes later, my boss comes out and asked if that was a customer.  I explained that we had been robbed, and the thief was long gone.

   “Is that a fact,” he said.  Nothing else.  No police, no nothing.  He simply didn’t seem to care.  Which is good considering I had already pocketed about fifty bucks for my first job celebration that night.  He simply put more money in the drawer, and we went back to the normal grind, me sitting there, directing the select to the room in the back.  The next day, a small group of kids come in along with the one from the previous day, and they asked if I could teach them other things.  I agreed.

   So now I have two jobs, for which I’m very well paid.  Firstly, I direct a select group of people to a back room where my boss takes care of them, and then I teach the local gangbangers how to rule the town.  I also occasionally sell things from the shelves, but this is rare, so its not really a job.  Currently, I still owe over $13,000.00 on my hospital bill, but with what I’m bringing in, I’ll have that paid off in a couple of months.  God, this job stuff is easy.
Warpstorm  Bringing Disorder to Chaos, And Eventually We'll Get It Right.

---------

I know there is a method, but all I see is madness.

 

Offline Corsair

  • Gull Wings Rule
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So There I Was. . . Anthology
:lol::lol::lol::lol:
OMG SO ****ING FUNNY! ROFL LMAO!
teaching armed robbery...except its not armed :lol:
need more of these! (You should get a gallery all to youself just for these!)
Wash: This landing's gonna get pretty interesting.
Mal: Define "interesting".
Wash: *shrug* "Oh God, oh God, we're all gonna die"?
Mal: This is the captain. We have a little problem with our entry sequence, so we may experience some slight turbulence and then... explode.

 

Offline Galemp

  • Actual father of Samus
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So There I Was. . . Anthology
:drevil: This is getting better.... Let's start rating this thread!
"Anyone can do any amount of work, provided it isn't the work he's supposed to be doing at that moment." -- Robert Benchley

Members I've personally met: RedStreblo, Goober5000, Sandwich, Splinter, Su-tehp, Hippo, CP5670, Terran Emperor, Karajorma, Dekker, McCall, Admiral Wolf, mxlm, RedSniper, Stealth, Black Wolf...

 

Offline CP5670

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LOL!!:D:D That stuff was great...:D

 

Offline LtNarol

  • Biased Banshee
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So There I Was. . . Anthology
question: is that nonloaded gun=not armed robbery thing true or did you make that up?  Very funny btw

 

Offline Setekh

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So There I Was. . . Anthology
Heh. Keep it coming. ;)
- Eddie Kent Woo, Setekh, Steak (of Steaks), AWACS. Seriously, just pick one.
HARD LIGHT PRODUCTIONS, now V3.0. Bringing Modders Together since January 2001.
THE HARD LIGHT ARRAY. Always makes you say wow.