“Is she real, Mama?”
Timmy was looking up at her, his eyes wide and watering. The boy wasn’t deaf… he had heard the stories, he had heard the sirens. He wasn’t blind… he had seen the worried faces of the neighborhood men as they gathered in the cul-de-sac beneath the slow summer twilight, sitting on the hoods of their cars and making plans… drawing strategies. And the boy wasn’t dumb… but at nine he was still young enough to be fooled. And that’s why Mama pulled him close and kissed his forehead and lied to his face.
“No, baby, she isn’t real.”
Neither of them spoke as she held her son close to her chest. Anna, the baby, gurgled and cooed in her high chair, and outside the wind chimes jangled in the still wind.
The soothing sound was drowned out by the violent screech of a cat. It came from the backyard, an inhuman howl that sent shivers up Timmy’s spine. “Pepper!”
The tortured squealing continued, streaming in the kitchen through the screen door, Mama wincing at the sound. And then, suddenly, there was silence.
“Papa!” He stuck his head in the door before Mama had finished calling his name. He was wearing his camouflage hat and carrying his shotgun. His well-groomed mustache was twitching on his upper lip.
“I heard it.”
He grabbed five pounds of hamburger meat from the fridge and opened the back door, listening.
There was no sound.
Papa waved Mama away, and she lifted Anna, leading Timmy into the den.
Papa stepped out onto the backyard, and there beside the kiddie’s pool was Pepper’s skin and bones. She’d been eaten alive, and there was no meat left to speak of. “Poor bitch,” said Papa, shaking his head.
He leaned his gun against his shoulder and popped the plastic wrap bubble 'round the hamburger. He took a hunk of chuck and formed it into a grapefruit-size ball, holding it out as he stepped toward the bushes.
“Here, Kirstie, Kirstie…” He knew she could smell it, knew she was crouched behind the shrubs, and he held the-
Kirstie Alley pounced from beneath the porch, going for the meat, gulping it down in one massive bite of her jaws that took Papa’s right hand along with it.
She was chewing, her highlighted hair filthy and matted, wearing only a massive housecoat and nothing underneath. Her stout legs were hairy and her feet encrusted in brown dirt. Her nostrils were flared and her enormous frame shook as she lapped up the chop meat.
Papa looked down at the bloody stump at the end of his arm and snapped. He started running in place, his knees reaching high, and as he fumbled for his gun he fired accidentally into the air. Kirstie didn’t like this.
She ran at Papa with all her might, knocking him to the ground and cracking his spine against the cement-grounded tether pole. This had a two-prong effect on Papa: it paralyzed him from the waist down and killed him instantly.
Mama held Anna and Timmy close behind the sofa, afraid to take a breath or make a sound. They knew Papa was gone but now they had to save themselves. That was when they heard Kirstie in the kitchen.
She had made her way into the house and gained access to the refrigerator. She stood with the door open, her head inside and devouring every item she could get in her mouth: moldy pizza, jars of pickle juice, an entire carton of expired sour cream. She gobbled pasta salad and deviled eggs, heads of cabbage and mystery beef. The beast let out with a bellow that shook the house to its very foundation.
Kirstie kept eating. It seemed like fifteen minutes had passed and the sounds of her gnawing and swallowing hadn’t stopped: The girl gobbled good.
Mama couldn’t wait any longer- she decided to make her move. She jumped up from behind the couch and grabbed the spray bottle of bleach, running into the kitchen, hoping to surprise the creature. Kirstie slammed the refrigerator door shut, a stick of butter in her mouth, and turned to face Mama just as Mama sprayed. She spritzed seven straight blasts of bleach into Kirstie’s eyes, which went red and teared up.
Mama grabbed the phone to call 911, but that’s when Kirstie dislocated her own jaw and bit off Mama’s head in a single, noisy chomp. The cordless fell to the floor but Mama’s headless torso didn’t go down right away… she danced like a lunatic, spinning around the kitchen with her arms flailing… she picked up a rag and wiped the crumbs off the counter. Kirstie watched her, popping open a jug of extra-virgin olive oil.
“Cheers,” she said, raising the bottle to her lips and chugging. Headless Mama- through humiliating herself- finally collapsed to the linoleum in a heap.
When Kirstie had relieved her thirst she squeezed through the door frame and made her way into the den, where Anna sat on the sofa, smiling sweetly and sucking her fist, completely unaware of the bloodbath before her. Kirstie spotted the pudgy infant and licked her lips. Dessert…
She advanced on the oblivious newborn, lifting her up and smiling. “There is nothing like the smell of fresh-baked ba-”
“Leave her alone, you bitch.” Timmy stood in the doorway behind her, his late Father’s shotgun trained on the obese behemoth. Kirstie laughed, all five of her chins jiggling in rhythm to the menacing cackle. She squinted at the boy, her lips snarled.
“You wouldn’t dare.”
Timmy fired, putting two bullets into her immense backside and nearly sending himself to the ground from the force of the blast. Kirstie dropped Anna to the sofa and roared in agony, running off through the front door and across the driveway, back into the wild and toward Los Angeles. She left a pile of droppings behind her as she went, and the entire neighborhood could hear her wounded, guttural moan.
Timmy raced to check on Anna, but the baby was unharmed. He picked up the phone and dialed 911, reloading Papa’s shotgun just in case the mammoth returned.
“I’d like to report a Kirstie Alley attack.”
Wonderings...

Is there nothing more romantic than pulverizing a vulva?
Children are not dogs, and yet they seem to enjoy eating from bowls on the floor...
Has science figured out yet what Louie Armstrong was leaking?
The moon landing is the biggest scam since the invention of the Continental Breakfast
The best way to start the day is with a cup of coffee and a phone call from James Earl Jones
Your magic show was fantastic, but I'm gonna need my spleen back

I’ve been six times ‘round the galaxy but I’ve never seen an ugly woman on a sailboat
Marriage is just slavery without the suntan

The world is your oyster, so shut up and start shucking!
.
Old Man Live Alone
Old Man Live Alone was sitting on the toilet, belching, his beard stubble itching his chin, his belt buckle scraping against the tile on the floor, which was yellow from age and bad aim. He was experiencing stomach cramps, and he wondered if he had any Pepto Bismol in the medicine cabinet, or should he just jam a steak knife into his throat.
Old Man Live Alone was an old man, who lived alone, but ironically enough that was not how he got his name. Just trust me on this one… that’s not how it happened. How he got his name, my friend, is a story for another day.
An hour later the plunger- filthy and humiliated- was returned to his home on the pantry floor beside the vacuum and the broom without bristles. The plunger was still dripping with foul, but Old Man closed the door, plunging the poor bastard into darkness.
Old Man Live Alone- wearing a promotional Marlboro polo from 1987- flopped down in his recliner and switched on the television. He liked to look at television, really look at it. His daughter had made him a cable channel guide on an index card so he’d stop calling her at 5 AM and asking, “Where’s TBS?”
She scotch-taped the guide to his end-table, where he kept his pill bottles and glasses case and then she told him how much she despised him, sharing her personal goal of never seeing him again for the rest of her life.
Old Man found the Weather Channel channel and punched it into the remote. He was halfway through the flash flood alert for the Pacific Northwest when his doorbell rang.
“Who is it there?” he called aloud.
The bell rang again.
Old Man got up and crossed the living room floor, stepping on a shard of glass and driving it into the soft flesh of his bare foot. He was too old to curse, but the tears were still happening. He made a mental note to hang himself that afternoon before opening the front door.
A young boy, about eleven years and seven months old, stood on Old Man’s faded welcome mat, a pillowcase in his hands.
“What do you want? Me to do?”
The little boy blinked twice and went into his pitch. “Would you like to buy some candy to send my class on a field trip to Washington, DC?”
“Where is it?” Old Man asked. “The candy?”
The young boy took a deep breath. “Do you have a moment to hear about the adventures of Jesus Christ and The Implausible Paradise?”
“What? What are you talking about?”
“Pennies for Unicef!”
“Listen to me, you little son of a b-”
“Would you play ball with me? And become my de facto grandfather until my real one passes away?”
Old Man grabbed his bottle of Hornet-B-Gone and sprayed the little boy in his eyes. The youngster reeled back, howling in Portugese, and tripped over the porch step, falling neck-first onto an rusty nail that was still Number One on Old Man’s To-Do List. Old Man Live Alone closed the door before the bleeding began, optimistically reasoning that the boy would most likely grow out of the situation.
Old Man felt a sharp pain in his groin. This was the warning of an imminent piddle or the birth of another fatal kidney stone. He decided he would drink that bottle of bleach above the washer/dryer, but before he got a chance he noticed the phone was ringing.
He searched for his cell phone for a good three minutes before he remembered he had lost it six months earlier. That’s when he answered his home phone by picking it up, bringing it to his ear and saying, “Hello?”
Sometimes the classics still work.
“This is Lorena from MalComm Cable… I’d like to ask you a few question about your service experience.”
“I love you,” replied Old Man.
“Excuse me, sir?” countered Lorena in her polite Latin accent, “but I just have some questions for you about your cable experience.”
“Do you? Love me too?”
“How would you rate the quality of the picture on your cable box- Excellent, Very Excellent, Magnificence In G Major, or Dazzle Fantastic?”
“’Dazzle Fantastic?’”
“Thank you, sir, just nineteen more questions for you.”
“You see, Lorena, I’m having a party on Friday night-”
“No, sir, you’re not.”
“How did you know that? And can you be here by six?”
“Sir, I can tell my supervisor that you were unable to complete the survey because you don’t speak English. Would you like me to tell him that, sir?”
“Yes, dammit,” said Old Man Live Alone, genuinely steamed, “speak English!”
Lorena did a dead-on impression of a dial tone, but Old Man hung on the line for a few minutes, just in case she decided to call back.
That was when the smoke alarm started. Old Man noticed the smoke, and remembered the Everything Bagel he had jammed into his filthy toaster oven. Was that this morning or last night?
He ran for the fire extiguisher, remembered he didn’t own one, and ran back toward the blazing appliance, stepping on a thumb tack, which pushed the shard of glass deeper into the pink meat of his footbeef.
“Raspberries,” declared Old Man Live Alone, and he vowed to overdose on sleeping pills the moment he put out the fire.
Old Man Live Alone had long since mastered the oven mitt, but he was so flustered he reached bare-handed into the toaster to retrieve both halves of his flaming bagel. They say fingers don’t burn, but Old Man would beg to differ. He dropped the hot Everything and raised his blazing digits to the heavens, his mouth spouting inspired babble, consonant-free, octaves beyond the human range.
Old Man could only think of one way to put out his barbecued sausages… he ran into the bathroom and dunked his flaming figgies into the cool porcelain waters of his toilet bowl. Like you didn’t see that coming.
It was especially unfortunate that his last bathroom visit had been so furious… the bowl was still filled with lingering marine life, defiant oysters that even the sewer had to refuse. Old Man Live Alone was elbow deep in his own liquid shame. He pulled his hands out slowly, his scorched paws black and ashed, his smoldering palms unrelentingly pungent. Old Man wondered if the Everything Bagel could be salvaged, or maybe just jump in front of a subway car.
The doorbell rang, again, and Old Man washed his hands before he answered. It was the little boy from earlier, duct tape wrapped around his punctured gullet, only this time he was pointing a Slovak semi-automatic pistol directly at Old Man.
“Okay,” Old Man surrendered, “I’ll be your Grandfath-”
The boy fired twice, putting four bullets into Old Man’s belly. Old Man fell to the ground on his welcome mat, clutching his stomach, promising himself he would slit his wrists if he survived this.
“Say hello to Jesus for me,” said the boy, giving the finger to the grote writhing in the doorway.
“Only if you’ll do something for me,” said Old Man Live Alone, dying.
“Tell Lorena I love her.”
Old Man Live Alone was an old man, who lived alone, but ironically enough that was not how he got his name. Just trust me on this one… that’s not how it happened. How he got his name, my friend, is a story for another day.
An hour later the plunger- filthy and humiliated- was returned to his home on the pantry floor beside the vacuum and the broom without bristles. The plunger was still dripping with foul, but Old Man closed the door, plunging the poor bastard into darkness.
Old Man Live Alone- wearing a promotional Marlboro polo from 1987- flopped down in his recliner and switched on the television. He liked to look at television, really look at it. His daughter had made him a cable channel guide on an index card so he’d stop calling her at 5 AM and asking, “Where’s TBS?”
She scotch-taped the guide to his end-table, where he kept his pill bottles and glasses case and then she told him how much she despised him, sharing her personal goal of never seeing him again for the rest of her life.
Old Man found the Weather Channel channel and punched it into the remote. He was halfway through the flash flood alert for the Pacific Northwest when his doorbell rang.
“Who is it there?” he called aloud.
The bell rang again.
Old Man got up and crossed the living room floor, stepping on a shard of glass and driving it into the soft flesh of his bare foot. He was too old to curse, but the tears were still happening. He made a mental note to hang himself that afternoon before opening the front door.
A young boy, about eleven years and seven months old, stood on Old Man’s faded welcome mat, a pillowcase in his hands.
“What do you want? Me to do?”
The little boy blinked twice and went into his pitch. “Would you like to buy some candy to send my class on a field trip to Washington, DC?”
“Where is it?” Old Man asked. “The candy?”
The young boy took a deep breath. “Do you have a moment to hear about the adventures of Jesus Christ and The Implausible Paradise?”
“What? What are you talking about?”
“Pennies for Unicef!”
“Listen to me, you little son of a b-”
“Would you play ball with me? And become my de facto grandfather until my real one passes away?”
Old Man grabbed his bottle of Hornet-B-Gone and sprayed the little boy in his eyes. The youngster reeled back, howling in Portugese, and tripped over the porch step, falling neck-first onto an rusty nail that was still Number One on Old Man’s To-Do List. Old Man Live Alone closed the door before the bleeding began, optimistically reasoning that the boy would most likely grow out of the situation.
Old Man felt a sharp pain in his groin. This was the warning of an imminent piddle or the birth of another fatal kidney stone. He decided he would drink that bottle of bleach above the washer/dryer, but before he got a chance he noticed the phone was ringing.
He searched for his cell phone for a good three minutes before he remembered he had lost it six months earlier. That’s when he answered his home phone by picking it up, bringing it to his ear and saying, “Hello?”
Sometimes the classics still work.
“This is Lorena from MalComm Cable… I’d like to ask you a few question about your service experience.”
“I love you,” replied Old Man.
“Excuse me, sir?” countered Lorena in her polite Latin accent, “but I just have some questions for you about your cable experience.”
“Do you? Love me too?”
“How would you rate the quality of the picture on your cable box- Excellent, Very Excellent, Magnificence In G Major, or Dazzle Fantastic?”
“’Dazzle Fantastic?’”
“Thank you, sir, just nineteen more questions for you.”
“You see, Lorena, I’m having a party on Friday night-”
“No, sir, you’re not.”
“How did you know that? And can you be here by six?”
“Sir, I can tell my supervisor that you were unable to complete the survey because you don’t speak English. Would you like me to tell him that, sir?”
“Yes, dammit,” said Old Man Live Alone, genuinely steamed, “speak English!”
Lorena did a dead-on impression of a dial tone, but Old Man hung on the line for a few minutes, just in case she decided to call back.
That was when the smoke alarm started. Old Man noticed the smoke, and remembered the Everything Bagel he had jammed into his filthy toaster oven. Was that this morning or last night?
He ran for the fire extiguisher, remembered he didn’t own one, and ran back toward the blazing appliance, stepping on a thumb tack, which pushed the shard of glass deeper into the pink meat of his footbeef.
“Raspberries,” declared Old Man Live Alone, and he vowed to overdose on sleeping pills the moment he put out the fire.
Old Man Live Alone had long since mastered the oven mitt, but he was so flustered he reached bare-handed into the toaster to retrieve both halves of his flaming bagel. They say fingers don’t burn, but Old Man would beg to differ. He dropped the hot Everything and raised his blazing digits to the heavens, his mouth spouting inspired babble, consonant-free, octaves beyond the human range.
Old Man could only think of one way to put out his barbecued sausages… he ran into the bathroom and dunked his flaming figgies into the cool porcelain waters of his toilet bowl. Like you didn’t see that coming.
It was especially unfortunate that his last bathroom visit had been so furious… the bowl was still filled with lingering marine life, defiant oysters that even the sewer had to refuse. Old Man Live Alone was elbow deep in his own liquid shame. He pulled his hands out slowly, his scorched paws black and ashed, his smoldering palms unrelentingly pungent. Old Man wondered if the Everything Bagel could be salvaged, or maybe just jump in front of a subway car.
The doorbell rang, again, and Old Man washed his hands before he answered. It was the little boy from earlier, duct tape wrapped around his punctured gullet, only this time he was pointing a Slovak semi-automatic pistol directly at Old Man.
“Okay,” Old Man surrendered, “I’ll be your Grandfath-”
The boy fired twice, putting four bullets into Old Man’s belly. Old Man fell to the ground on his welcome mat, clutching his stomach, promising himself he would slit his wrists if he survived this.
“Say hello to Jesus for me,” said the boy, giving the finger to the grote writhing in the doorway.
“Only if you’ll do something for me,” said Old Man Live Alone, dying.
“Tell Lorena I love her.”
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