Showing posts sorted by relevance for query "ask lobo". Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query "ask lobo". Sort by date Show all posts

Monday

Tar Baby

Predator Press

[Mr. I]

I hand the clipboard back through the sliding glass window, and the nurse scrutinizes it with great interest through thick, black-framed Buddy Holly glasses you associate with the nerdy.

"Hm," she began. "No drugs or alcohol? Really?"

"No ma'am," I says. "He says he doesn't like sharing the credit."

That's when I start feeling my first pangs of guilt. At least when LOBO did drugs, he would tend to be a little more reclusive. And cautious. Manageable. But drug-free status only emboldened him. In his eyes, I think, he was just finally taking his rightful spot in the world with the rest of us clean lunatics.

Still, this was a kind of half-truth. LOBO and I have blown some occasional weed. But I don't feel like explaining to some nosy puritanical asshole how they should mind their own fucking business about people's private recreational pursuits. We're adults. And we're not robbing liquor stores and crashing cars.

It's commerce really. Dolly Madison and XBox should send us fruit baskets.

Fuck off.

"Are you the next of kin?" she asks without looking at me.

"No," I says. "Well, I'm not sure-"

Shit.

"No," I reply flatly.

"Your relationship with the patient?"

The official title, the one I put on my taxes, is "Assistant". But that doesn't really cover it, does it Ethan?

"Handler, I suppose."

"Really?" she says again.

Somebody get this woman a Thesaurus.

"Yeah. We work for Hawly Enterprises. Publishing. My guess is that the CEO is sort of David's benefactor. Like Jerry's Kids or something. Probably a public relations thing."

"Maybe he figures Mister Curr is safer where an eye can be kept on him."

"Yeah. Or maybe everyone else is safer that way."

"And he's insured by-" she squints at the scribbly clipboard. "Hawly Enterprises?"

"Yeah."

"Well, bless this Mr Hawly. He sounds like a wonderful and noble fellow, what with looking out for the handicapped and all."

And his tax exemptions.

"Yeah, I'd fuck him," I says dryly.

She glares at me, a little stunned. "Please have a seat," she says, grabbing the sliding window. "The doctor will be with you shortly."

Thud.


***


I hear her voice over the PA system as I'm flipping through archaic issues of Sports Illustrated and Time Magazine. "Doctor Keller, please report to ... "

Selecting an antiquated Sports Illustrated, I try not to make eye contact with anyone else in the waiting room.

Sitting, I notice I've unbuttoned my suit jacket completely on 'autopilot'. My belly -clear evidence of my new-found success- rolls out and swallows my belt whole.

I've grown pretty used to all this money.

I imagine how I'll be gingerly explaining to Ethan that while he was on vacation, my "charge" -and his best friend- was recently committed. This is serious. Even more serious than when LOBO took a shower at Phoebe's place and left hairs stuck in the soap, sink and bathtub, and she burned her own house down in utter revulsion.

No matter how much arson I've covered up, no matter how much insurance fraud I've committed, the addition of 'Handler' on my new resume won't seem very potent.

Goodbye salary, goodbye expense accounts.

I wonder if Ethan will let me keep my clothes, my car.

I'm the Predator Press whore.

It should be me in here.


***


Doctor Keller arrives, rescuing me from excruciating speculation over who is going to win the 2004 World Series.

I stand, and we shake hands.

"Thank you for coming," he says.

I was expecting a white lab coat. A stethoscope. A pager.

Doctor icons for people who watch too much television.

Doctor Keller is in khakis, a button-up checkered shirt, expensive preppie-leather shoes and a matching thin belt. He looks more like somebody who orders baked potato skins and a diet Coke at TGIF, and then stiffs the waitress on a tip. But the more I think about it, the more it made sense, really. In his line of work, it probably pays to not appear so clinical and imposing.

"How is he?" I ask as we walk past through the door. From the waiting room, it looks like a door anyway; once inside, the facade drops abruptly, revealing a massive cage.

I think of tiger traps you see in cartoons, the big hole covered with palm tree branches.

Long halls of white gloss, antiseptic smells, and steel mesh are the Feng Shui of Crackerland today.

You must be this nuts to take this ride.

I'm expecting something more like Arkham from Batman comics. Still, where good Doctor Keller let me down, the tidy innards of Bertram Asylum did not disappoint.

"He's, well ... " the doctor begins. Keller is walking really fast. I don't think visitors see this wing often. "Comfortable."

"Comfortable" is doctor-speak for sedated.

"Keeping him good and stoned, eh?" I ask, smiling. "Doc, I've spent the last year with that crazy bastard. You can drop the clinical euphemisms."

"No, I'm afraid you don't understand," he says.

Jesus Christ this guy walks fast. We stop at a massive steel door, and he slides his keycard through a protruding slot.

"See for yourself."


***


Through a large, thick, one-way glass window, we can see LOBO. In white pajamas and a straight jacket, he's sitting cross legged in the middle of an empty room.

He looks peaceful. Like he's meditating. You could easily imagine little glowing butterflies circling his empty head.

"Wow," I says. "I was expecting him to be really upset. You must've given him some really great shit!

"We don't have him on any medication," replies the doctor.

"Huh?"

"He's been a model patient. He's healthy, and no danger to himself or others."

"So why is he here?" I ask cautiously. I can already tell I don't like where this is going.

"Well, frankly, it seems he doesn't want to leave."

My fuckin jaw must've been on the floor. "Doc. I thought you brought me here to clear up some paperwork. Maybe even visit--!"

"No. We've been trying to release him for several hours now."

Covering my eyes, I fall back into a convenient viewing chair.

I forgot to unbutton my jacket, and the button cracks loudly against the glass.

LOBO stirs to the sound.

The doctor continues. "We were hoping you would help us make his departure, well," the doc thought for a moment, "voluntary."

I open my eyes, and watch LOBO struggle to his feet. He squints into the glass.

"But he's fucking crazy!" I insist.

"Yes. He has a lot of emotional and psychological problems, true. But nothing that warrants him staying here."

"But he's fucking crazy!" I repeat, pointing at the glass, dumbfounded. "Are you sure you're not a patient here? Where's your goddamned stethoscope? I need to see some fucking credentials, mister--"

"With the proper medication and counseling, he can be handled on an outpatient basis."

"Oh!" I chuckle, digging for my wallet. "Now I've gotcha. Listen, if you're angling for a bribe, boy are you barking up the right tree." I spread it open and break out the greenbacks. "I've got about three hundred and eight bucks here-"

"Sir," Doctor Keller says calmly. "Please put away your money."

I pull out a Master Card. "How about a thousand? You got a bank machine here somewhere?"

"Sir, it's illegal to keep him here unnecessarily."

Fuck.


***


The orderlies none-too-gently drag LOBO into the small room where Doctor Keller and I waited.

And the second he sees me, Judas, his eyes light up.

"Hey buddy!" he beams. "I'm glad you're here. This is absolutely the best fucking resort I've ever been in!"

"Can I have a sedative?" I ask the doctor.

"The food kicks ass," LOBO continues, "and you don't have to wash dishes, do laundry, shave, bathe yourself or anything."

"No," says Doctor Keller.

"They even cushion all the walls and floors so space isn't wasted on furniture!"

"C'mon, doc," I says. "Look how happy he is. You're gonna kick this guy out into the street?"

"-Legless Jim is here! And you'll never guess who else ... "

"Napoleon?" I says, faking enthusiasm.

LOBO is dumbstruck. "How the fuck did you know? I thought that was classified ... !"

"It's in the brochure," I says.

Doctor Keller nods to the orderlies. "I don't think there's any need for the restraints."

But as they reach for the buckle on the back of the straight jacket, LOBO flinches away.

"Hey, hey!" he says, leaning forward. "Back off, buddy. It's chilly in here."

"Mister Curr," says Doctor Keller. "We're all here to once again ask you to please vacate the premisses."

"But this place is great!" LOBO insists. "Ethan would absolutely love it-"

Doctor Keller sighed. "Mister Curr. David. This isn't a resort. It's a mental health facility."

LOBO looks at the doc, puzzled. "So?"

"So we would like you to please leave."

I can tell by his voice LOBO was wearing Doctor Keller down.

An opportunity.

Maybe there's still some hope here.

"Losing your 'patients,' Doc?" LOBO grins.

"Very clever," he says.

"Let me get this straight," I says finally. "You found this guy sane?"

"Yeah," says LOBO. "What the fuck kind of doctor are you? Where's your stethoscope?"

"I never said 'sane'. I said I want him out."

Between LOBO and I, we can sense the professional veneer cracking.

"Haven't you read my blog?" asks LOBO. "It's full of fairies and dragons and zombies and robots-"

"A creative endeavor of healthy expression," the doc counters.

"You are aware that he just signed a deal with the Fox Network, right?" I ask.

The doc had no answer for that one.

"How about for just a couple of months?" LOBO begs.

That did it. Doctor Keller abruptly stands and hurls his plastic clipboard violently against the wall, causing the orderlies to duck from the rather impressive makeshift shrapnel. Whirling on us wild-eyed, he tears off his expensive-looking glasses and crushes them in his hand.

Still squeezing the mangled wire frames tightly in his clenched bleeding fist, he screams "WOULD YOU TWO JUST GET THE FUCK OUT OF HERE!?!


***


I press the button on my keychain, and the Mercedes' alarm chirps in the distance.

"They wouldn't even let me keep the jacket," LOBO whines dejectedly.

"They needed it for the doctor," I reply.

"Hey," says LOBO, grabbing my arm, stopping me. "Thanks for pulling for me in there."

"Don't mention it," I grumble.

Sulky and resigned, we start heading for the car again.

"Just lay off the craziness for a while, okay? Don't go running for President or anyth-"

I smack my hand over my mouth, even as LOBO's eyes light up.

Wednesday

Crazy People with Cameras

Predator Press

[Mr. I]

I was drunk enough to get in my car with LOBO driving.

I'm not proud.

The only car I've seen LOBO drive more than once is his rusty, primered 1980 Plymouth Horizon. The vanity plate reads "WWID". But hammered as I am, I notice immediately that there's something odd about the little vehicle.

The interior is immaculate. Leather. Corinthian, I think. The stereo is amazing.

And this thing flies.

Gripping the luxurious back seat upholstery to compensate for the incredible inertia, I ask "What kind of engine do you have in this thing?"

"I dunno," he says, shrugging. "Whatever comes stock in a Porsche 911 GT3, I guess." "You put a Porsche engine in a beater Plymouth Horizon?"

"No, actually Ethan put a Plymouth Horizon body on a Porsche. He said he was sick of me being late for everything, and an actual Porsche might theoretically get me laid." LOBO shrugs, "Hell, insurance is cheaper, it draws less attention from cops, and I can pretty much park it anywhere. I don't even lock it most of the time."

Suddenly, at like 3:15 in the morning, the night sky lit up like it was day.

The Predator Press Distress Signal covered the whole damn thing.

"What the fuck is that?" says LOBO, pointing at the gargantuan Helvetica "PP" in the sky.

"That's the Predator Press distress signal" I slur from the back seat.

"Well, it's blinding me," says LOBO, looking straight up, nowhere near the road, both hands making small spots of artificial shade over his eyes. "Someone's going to have an accident, and we're going to get sued."

"We're contractually bound to respond," I says.

"And I am responding," says LOBO. "We're gonna get sued."

"No," I says, leaning forwards. "I mean we have to meet Ethan at the Press Room. Now. The deployment of that signal means it's a fucking bona-fide 'I don't care if you're naked-and-sleeping' crisis."

"Did we pay for that?"

"No, turd warmer. The fucking Marines paid for it."

Edward looks at LOBO. "Okay, so where is the Press Room?"

Through the mirror, LOBO looks at me.

"Oh come on!", I says to LOBO. "You don't know where the Press Room is?"

"Dude," says LOBO. "I want to know why the Marines are pissed!"

Edward looks at me. "Do you know where the 'Press Room' is?"

Angry and defensive, I bark "They've never published anything!"


***

"You better put your foot in it," says Edward, after phoning for directions.

"Yeah," agrees LOBO. Edward, who, despite being stone sober, is completely calm. "The big secret about Chicago is that it's totally traffic anarchy. Nobody gets pulled over for traffic violations anymore."

"Really," says Edward in his strange serene cool.

"Yeah. It's a big myth. Like 'Bigfoot' and the 'female orgasm'." He pulls his bangs away, lighting a cigarette. "Just crazy people with cameras."

... And here was LOBO ramping up to 115 on I-94.

After three funerals, and all the freakin tux rental bills that implies.

You explain it.

Earlier, LOBO had jazz music playing. I protested, but LOBO insists that this plinkety-plink, hoot-toot plink shit somehow suits the "ambiance" of the Chicago skyline at night.

Edward concurs and I'm outvoted.

But now, ratcheted up, it's the driving, machine-gun pulse of Pantera, Cowboys from Hell. Shooting out from that tunnel by Ohio street like a bullet from a gun, the high-performance, fuel-injected, duel-clutched, 480 horsepower turbo 1980 Plymouth Horizon roars through the city, narrowly zig-zagging around cars left and right. On the left rear bumper, there's an aged, dangling sticker flapping wildly in the wind that reads "My Other Car is a Piece of Shit Too".

I struggle against g-forces I can't anticipate, straining to secure my seat belt.

"I always figure this is how I'll die," LOBO continues, cigarette dangling. "Hitting a brick wall of traffic around a blind curve, consisting mostly of other people only recently enjoying some high-velocity anarchy. Just a huge sudden fiery molten mass of flesh and steel and bones, blood ... It'll just be wham, splat, fwoosh ... And the worst part is, I'll probably have a carload of people with me."

I heave bile into my own mouth. "You're going over a hundred miles an hour in a forty-five" I manage.

"I don't believe in the metric system," he says. "It's Goddamn unpatriotic."

"So what do you do for fun?" LOBO asks Edward.

"Nothing really," says Edward in that cool voice. "I spend most of my time studying and in classes."

"No shit?" says LOBO.

"Yeah, I'm studying Orthotics."

"Well you're a better man than I," he replies. "The thought of spendin my life elbow-deep down someone else's throat is pretty depressing."

Edward looks at me, and I shake my head: Let it go.

"Yeah, uh" Edward continues. "I graduate this year." Edward pauses. "Then those Student Loans kick in."

There it is, I'm thinking.

This cat's lookin for a job.

I'm simultaneously suspicious of Edward, and far too drunk to care really. Ethan, once he heard I beat LOBO with golf clubs until a freak accident actually killed the prick, hired me back on to the Predator Press staff. With back pay, and a substantial raise.

"Yeah," LOBO agrees "Christ, nothin is worse than a hard-core philistine."

Edward looks at me again. And this time I'm shaking my head even harder: Definitely let it go. "Orthotics, eh? Good money in that?"

"Well, I'm sure not going to do it out of the goodness of my heart," Edward replies.

"Some doctors are more interested in helping people than they are in money," I says, a little facetiously.

"No they aren't," Edward says. "My brother John is poor, and when his wife had her baby they had to do some routine gynecological test at Halifax Hospital in Daytona, Florida. My wife's doctor happened to be filling in at the hospital that day. This Doc, the sweetest guy in the world, he leads a group of interns into the hospital room. John protests of course; 'Hey,' he says, 'Are all these people really necessary?' And then that same noble, wonderful doctor, who kissed my ass through the birth of both my kids, he doesn't know John's my brother. He pushes John aside, not even looking at him, and right in front of the six or eight interns says, 'Maybe you should've thought of this before you decided to have babies on welfare'."

"Jesus Christ!" I says, hot breath filling the car. I need to eat something. Or maybe barf. "Did you brother complain?"

"No," Edward replies. "My brother ain't like that. I think he was just grateful for the medical care."

"Nice lesson for the interns too," LOBO growls. "Doctors and cops," he ads. "The whole world weeps for 'em when shit goes south, when the reality is they can be even bigger dicks than you can guess."

To Edward, I says "So, in your opinion, nobody does anything except out of self interest?"

Edward looks back at me, studying. "Yeah," he says. "That's it."

"What about Mother Theresa?"

LOBO and Edward exchange looks, laughing. "Look," says Edward. "God Bless her. I mean, the world is a better place because of her, fine. But don't you think she wanted to go to heaven?"

"Probably," I says, leaning back in my seat.

"And you don't call that self interest?"

I'm not comfortable with this conversation anymore.

The sky spinning doesn't help. I need food. Coffee. Something to sober up; the Predator Press building was still a half an hour out, but I'm getting cold sweats, and my vision is blurring. I roll down the window and stick my head into the maelstrom.

"How about people that are afraid of Hell?" Edward continues. "Coercion is still self interest if you really think about it. Unfortunately, the truth is that virtually any religion is primarily made up of whores. You want to find a decent human being? I would look someplace else."

I lean into the car for a second. "LOBO, do you know where you're going?"

"You mean during the Cosmic Dirtnap?"

"No, I mean right now," I says, 'now' containing about six 'h's. "As in responding to the distress signal." Nonchalantly, I add "But I need to stop someplace to pee."

"There's a Burgermania at this next exit," he says.

"Fine." My slurring is now out of control, and I decide to stick my head out the window again and shut up for a while.

Switching lanes, LOBO continues. He flicks his cigarette out the window, and it pings off of my forehead splashing fantastic arcs of light, landing in my lap. "Edward's right. Everybody's got some kind of monkey. Toys, money, sex, power ... "



"Fuck!" I says. Seeing double, I'm really having a hard time finding that cigarette butt.

"What's yours?" asks Edward.

"Oh, sex. Definitely more sex," states LOBO flatly.

"That's funny," says Edward. "I would've bet a thousand bucks you were a virgin."

"Well, that makes it a goal easy to attain," he says. "Baby steps. People set these high-pressure impossible goals and disappoint themselves constantly. I set goals like, 'Someday I will make a list of goals'."

"That would actually make you're primary 'interest' sloth," I point out, digging the hot embers out of my lap. The state of alarm seems to have sobered me a bit. "I guess mine would be comfort." I pause. "Southern Comfort!" I guffaw, slapping Edward's shoulder.

"That's such a chick answer," LOBO laughs. "Security, money ... where's your sense of adventure? Any pussy can throw money around to dilute life's little traumas."

"I would've thought it fair to say that mine was money, too," admits Edward. "But now that you mention it, it is really just a conduit to more sex and influence."

"That's pre-programmed Alpha-Male jackoff bullshit," says LOBO, shaking his head. "I sincerely doubt I'm going to be on my deathbed weeping that I didn't work enough."

"You don't want to be an 'Alpha Male'?"

"Fuck no," says LOBO. "I wanna be a Zeta. If there is such a thing. Alphas beat each other up, compete, have ambition ... that's too much pressure. We Zetas don't give a crap. We wake up, and the new Alpha has just eaten the old Alpha. Again. 'Oooo!' we say, 'a new Alpha. How original.' And then, odds are, by the time we've memorized the fucks name, he's been eaten by the next 'Alpha'. It's very boring."

What about Mister Hawly?" asks Edward. "He's a pretty wealthy guy. What makes him tick?"

"Justice," says LOBO, almost without thinking. "He's the slickest 'Alpha', period. He's a smart one, but maybe more importantly, he's a patient one. Rather than being a typical abrasive loudmouth, he lays low and pulls subtle little strings. Usually, when you see two idiots slugging it out, odds are he owns one or both of them. They just don't know it yet."

Curious. Dumb as LOBO is, he's smart enough to know who and when to defer.

Zeta mastery.

Measuring the distance to where the signal touched the ground over the horizon, Edward sighs. "Well, we've got some time to kill. And you guys have heard my story already. Let's here one that hasn't been told yet."

I take a deep breath and muster all the sobriety I can.

"Go ahead LOBO," he says, deflating me.

"What, you mean my life story?"

"Yeah. And how you met Ethan, got into publishing."

This should be interesting, I'm thinking. "Yeah LOBO. Why doncha enlighten us how you was whisked away from Plutonian space pirates by fuzz-fairies and blasted pastel goblins and stuff?"

LOBO frowns, eyeing me suspiciously through the rearview mirror. "I don't remember any goblins."


***


The really early stuff is excruciatingly dull, and it gives me time to sober a bit. With heavy paper sacks emblazoned 'Burgermania' in tow, he's still going on and on when I get back to the car.

"Ethan and I met in Junior High school, where he and his friends used to beat up me and my friends. He didn't stop until one day I warned him that if he didn't sell his Faberge Egg collection before spring of that year, he was going to be stuck with a whole lot of worthless crap that wouldn't even make a decent tacky jewel-encrusted omelet."

"Did he sell them?" asked Edward.

"No," replied LOBO. "And sure enough, a few months later, he took a bath in those things too. But by that time, I was long gone."

"Gone? What happened?"

"Well, firstly, my band took off. Vaginal Slide didn't really get much local traction, but we were huge in the Galapagos Islands. Monsters in Guatemala. Heard of us? 'Red Hot Chocolate' was our big one:


'Don't play like it's no sacrilege
that I got a rolls of toilet paper in my freezer, my fridge,
Farting, sharting stuff from Hell,
I oughta sue the balls offa Taco Bell
It's searing through my anus like an acid blowtorch
You can smell burnin flesh even on the front porch!
Red Hot Chocolate, screamin in the night
If Ida been a second later, Ida arc-welded my tailpipe
Red Hot Chocolate, five gallons deep,
If Ida been a second later I woulda melted my Jeep-'


"Is that the one that Pat Boone remade?" asks Edward.

"No. He remade our song 'The Ayatollah of Areola'. And ballads and love songs were huge that year, so he made a bundle. He later stiffed us on the royalties and the writing credit."

"Did you sue?"

"Couldn't." replies LOBO. "By that time the band had split up; dead musicians are notoriously unreliable. I think it's cuz we never could seem to get any airplay. And then the music industry changed. It wasn't like today where you ride a $1,000 bicycle to Barnes and Nobles, drinking $6 coffees and then stiff the store on the $10 book." LOBO pounds his hand on the dash. "We had suicide doors, steel dashboards and Vietnam to weed them fucks out. Now all we got is Metallica." He fishes around for the radio knob, and switches it to 'off'. "You know what sucks about the Porsche 911 GT3?"

We both shake our heads.

"Just try and get one with an 8-track player," he says. "The dealers just look at you like you're completely crackers." He lights another cigarette. "So where was I? Oh yeah ... I was complaining about my life story. Nowadays it's all seat belts and warning labels and lawsuits. Hell, I remember waitresses on roller skates with big-ass hair and no helmet, bringing Thalidomide-flavored fries out to your car in an asbestos crate, all the while stabbing Jets and Sharks left and right with her switchblade during the musical number 'cuz her numb chucks were confiscated."

"So what happened with the band?" asks Edward, trying to get him back on track.

"Vaginal Slide was on tour for our Fists of Furry record in Escuintla, and President Alfonso Portillo -big fan-flew us out to do some live recording at his palace. Who would have thought he would pick then to decide to have our lyrics translated? Turns out he gets so offended for some reason, he orders us all rounded up and executed. With phony papers and disguised as Nelson Mandela's brother, I narrowly escaped."

"Nelson Mandela's brother," I says incredulously.

"Yeah. Frank Mandela. You know, the one that drives the Camaro?"

"Go on," says Edward.

"Well, I only got partway back. My band slain, I had to start my life all over in the Communist Republic of Cuba. I got a job at Havana Bowling Alley, and kinda skulked around for a few months, all depressed. One day, while I was fantasizing about the pins hurdling the balls back at all these bald drunken assholes in funny shoes, I dreamed up this game where you throw a ball at a guy and he tries to hit it with a stick-"

"Oh, let me guess,," I says. "And then the guy who hit the ball runs around a big diamond."

"That's a bastardized variation on my game concept. Originally it was a square."

"So," I says, skeptical. "You're saying that you invented the game of baseball."

"Well, we didn't call it 'baseball' back then. We called it 'Hit the Ball with a Stick and Run Like Hell'."

"Oh brother," I says.

"Anyways, I gotta get back to the US from Cuba. So I stitch 834,993 Breton Corojo Vintage Lancero cigars together to make a raft, and set sail for Montreal where I found Ethan selling magazines. He remembers me. Asks me how I knew about the Faberge Egg market collapse, and I tell him I don't know. Now he's fully invested in this quarry, doing research and developing improvements on this new concept: the 'Pet Rock'."

"Ethan was behind the Pet Rock craze?" I ask.

"Indirectly," LOBO replies. "See, overall, the Pet Rock was a pretty mediocre pet when compared to dogs, for instance. While easily housebroken, the only command they ever seemed to learn was 'stay'. I mean even the Pet Sponge could learn to soak. But where the Pet Rock lacked the staying power of, say, the cat or the fish or the sponge, it did have a certain undeniable appeal to American culture. I recommended that he stay 'in' until DNA mapping began to evolve."

"DNA mapping?" asks Edward.

"Yeah. See, the Pet Rock had a lot of breeding issues. Fertility problems. Down in the quarry, you could put two rocks together, and months later you would still have only two rocks. In fact, you could put fifty rocks together, dim the lights, and play Barry White records over a megaphone until the cows came home and you would still have fifty rocks. A rock is a solitary and mysterious creature, whose reproductive habits are as yet still a mystery."

"What does that have to do with DNA mapping?"

"Well, we never got any rocks breeding in that quarry unless we had a lot of bulldozers and jackhammers and crap. Something about all that noise, I suppose. But when the Human Genome Project came along we started being able to clone stuff, and it was either give up or use .. Now, the market is totally saturated with rocks. Shit. Look around; they're everywhere. You can't throw a rock without hitting a rock now."

"So Ethan keeps you around as some kind of investment consultant?" I asks.

"'Social Barometer' is probably more accurate. But, from bell-bottom jeans to the internet stock boom to Tickle-Me-Elmo, we've been there on the ground floor."

"If all this is true, why aren't you rich?" Edward asks.

"Well, if you think about it, I don't pick the winning ponies, I just point out a good time to turn them to glue. Besides, I think affluence would kinda water down the experience and dull the edge. Keep in mind that rich people don't buy the bulk of stuff, the middle-class do. Rich people manufacture their own supply-and-demand problems, and there's plenty of sycophants to cater to that stuff already. Tiny foreign nations hand-crafting coats made of rare exotic fur with dinosaur eggs dipped in gold for buttons isn't particularly brilliant or exciting."

"It just so happens," I interrupt, "that dinosaur egg buttons are much better that conventional flat ones."

Edward looks back at me "You've got one of those?"

"Three of them." I says. "Very high quality stuff. Complete with the eagle feather inlay."

"Worn them lately?" asks LOBO, into the rearview.

"Well, no."

"See?" says LOBO. "There's no rationale behind it. Coats should keep you warm, not stuff your closet. You've created an artificial demand for something completely impractical for the sole purpose of easily recognizing the other stupid people with too much money. Then you mislabeled it 'Status' hoping nobody would notice. And let me guess ... just in case someone does notice, you increasingly insulate yourself in 'exclusive' activities, surrounded by only other like-minded people."

"You you've never been preoccupied with image, fashion, style--?"

"Sure I have. The difference is you buy yours. It's overly-elaborate, and more importantly, it's somebody else's." LOBO paused. "When Ethan and I met you, you were in jeans and a t-shirt. I'll bet what you're wearing now cost more than your rent was that month."

"What's your point?" I demand. "That I should be some broke loser-slash-philosopher? I don't see you curing cancer. You couldn't find your asshole with a flashlight and a funnel."

Edward laughs.

"I don't really know what I'm saying," LOBO confesses. "I think I'm a little disappointed, I guess. When you got fired and moved into that trailer, you just seemed more real. You got passionate. Angry. And not because you were told to be. I think Ethan and I were impressed with the fact that you embraced the whole thing with such totality. We were seeing glimpses of you minus all the distracting glitz and shiny objects again, and we realized we missed you." LOBO inspected the diminishing skyline in the mirror. "I guess I'm saying 'don't become the sum of your possessions'. It's beneath you."

"So I'm some corporate thrall?" Is that what Ethan thinks?"

"Take it easy, man," says Edward. "I don't think that's what he's saying at all. In fact, I think he's saying the opposite."

"But this asshole is a goddamn certified retarded lunatic!" I offer, pointing at the back of LOBO's head. "And he's in charge."

"Look," grins LOBO. "I went through the whole hip and image-conscious thing a long time ago. It was a goddamn disaster."

"Well, I'm shocked to hear it." I says.

"Yep. Believe it or not, I've made a few social blunders of my own."

"No," I gasp sardonically.

"Yes, really!" says LOBO all serious. "Remember the seventies? I used to troll around women's strip bars when they close-"

Edward interrupts "You're shitting me. You used to be waiting when a bar, full of drunken horny chicks poured out of a club at weird hours? My God man ... that's brilliant. A little pathetic, but brilliant ..."

"Yep," LOBO continues. "There I'd be in my immaculate white suit, wide open collar with my gold zodiac symbol chain, the works. My elevator shoes were so tall I'd get nosebleeds."

Edward and I laugh hysterically. "Oh my God," I manage. "I can totally see it. LOBO leaning on his car, tryin to look all 'cool'--"

"What?" LOBO asks, puzzled, looking back and forth between us.

Edward composes himself. "So did this 'Master Plan' ever culminate into any real action?"

"It might have. But to be honest, when it came 'time to strike' I was a little preoccupied. My elevator shoes had goldfish in them, and I couldn't figure out how you feed them. So there's my beloved little Simon and Garfunkle, floating belly-up in their little metatarsal tombs-"

Edward and I are laughing so hard, we're crying.

"And then I get approached by this chick, Lindsay Merigold. She says she's the editor for a big national magazine, and she'll give me $1,000 a week to write articles for her magazine about 'love and courtship in the 70's'. Up until now, I'm working in the bowling alley, a talentless hack musician. How hard could it be to become a talentless hack writer? Besides, I would get to kill a lot of trees this way. So I agree to the deal."

"So ..." says Edward, still fighting down laughter.

"Well, it didn't occur to me to ask why she wanted me to write this article. It turns out, that her finding me in a white suit and elevator shoes in the parking lot of a women's strip club was significant. The magazine I was to write for was named Gay Love."

"Oh God dude please stop." I have never laughed so hard in my life. "You're killing me!" After about twenty minutes, I finally choke out, "So did you take the job?"

"For $1000 a week? Hell yes!" he says. "The office was kinda creepy, but once you got used to wiping everything down you wanted to use or sit on, everything was fine."

"How long did this go on?" I ask between teary cackles.

"About a year," says LOBO.

"Wait a minute," giggles Edward. "You wrote for a gay magazine for a year?"

"No, I didn't says that. See, my first deadline was four days after I got my office. And for four days, I just stared at the blank paper. Nothing. The deadline passed, and nobody said anything. And I got a check for $1,000."

"No shit?" says Edward. "What did you do?"

"I started putting in for more assignments. Shit, before long deadlines were flying by me left and right."

"And you never got caught?" I ask.

"Yeah, I did finally. Lindsay Merigold called me in her office and demanded a story be on her desk by eight o'clock the next morning, or I was going to be prosecuted."

"Did you do it?"

"Of course I did! I titled it "Butt Sex: I'll Bet it Hurts-"

Edward and I, by this point, are both begging LOBO to stop. My stomach hurts, and Edward is threatening to piss his pants.

Noticing the searchlights closely and off to our left, LOBO slows the car.

"We're here."

Tuesday

One Man Flash Mob

Predator Press

The guard completed a complex-seeming series of transactions with a set of keys, and the heavy doors slid back open; the armored elevator seemed to have moved at all, but the dungeon-like quality of the new floor was immediate and palpable.

Flandsa Ha’asasanba -familiar somewhat with the cellblock for his own reasons- proceeded to cellblock 'I' -ironically the location of LOBO's 'POD'- without an expected direction request.

In the center of a checkerboarded lancing of light, LOBO, in an orange jumpsuit, sat on a cot facing the opposite wall. He was not the pensive animal Flandsa was expecting. He seemed, well, serene.

“Flandsa Ha’asasanba,” said LOBO in a cool voice that unnerved Flandsa. Rubbing his wooly, unkempt facial growth in thought, LOBO didn’t turn to address him, but as Flandsa grew closer, he could see LOBO’s face -it was covered in a macabre splash of dripping red.

Flandsa stopped at the sliding cell door and steeled himself for anything. “I don’t know why I would be surprised to see you in here,” he joked.

“Yes,” LOBO replied coolly. He rose, slightly wobbly from the crutch, and made his way to his visitor. “I’m a con now. A hardened, dangerous man. Did you know I converted to Islam? I‘m also a Crip and a Blood.”

“You’ve only been in here two hours.”

“Two hours is plenty of time to get yourself killed when you’re on this side of the law,” whispered LOBO with authority. "Respect is everything in here. And do you know the best way to get the respect you need to survive when doing Hard Time?"

Flandsa shrugged patiently. LOBO was moving poorly, and only now arriving to lean on the cellbars.

“You have to make a name for yourself," said LOBO, squinting painfully. Fully in the sharp wedge of light, his eyes dialated wildly. "You have to pick out the biggest, meanest, toughest, ugliest guy in your POD and rape him.”

“You mean fight him,” Flandsa corrected helpfully.

“Fight him? Shit. Have you seen the biggest, meanest, toughest, ugliest guy in my POD? He’d kill me.”

“Well then how would you-?”

“I was thinking roofies or something. I don’t know. It’s complicated,” LOBO admitted. “Not to mention I don’t think I’ve ever even been drunk enough to rape a guy. I mean I guess I just close my eyes and pretend it’s Sarah Palin.”

Brief shuffles of movement. From various directions just out of the stale, flickering overhead lights over Flandsa. The loneliness of this conversation is wholly illusion.

“What happened to your face?” Flandsa asked, changing the subject.

“It’s these fucking ketchup packets. They’re complicated enough as it is, but the lighting in here is terrible.”

“Why didn't you bail out?” Flandsa inquired. “It’s only six dollars.”

-Nervous, illusive titters spring like lightning bolts. LOBO, noticing, starts seeking them out. Speaking unnecessarily loudly, he asks, “So my boy, did you bring me the Viagra and rolls of duct tape I asked for?”

Silence.

“Yeah well, it’s been long enough. Post Cereal has agreed to drop all charges if you promise to-”

"Only now, too late, does Big Cereal realize it has wakened a sleeping giant," LOBO snarled. “I don’t negotiate with Big Cereal. Especially now that the juggernaut has rumbled to life. Their oppresive rule is coming to an end.”

The pause that ensued was punctuated dramatically by a fart from someone sleeping to Flandsa's left.

“But you have a broken ankle and boken wrist," Flandsa implored. "Don’t you want some medical attention? Some painkillers?”

“The pain merely helps burn in the memory,” LOBO scoffed proudly. “The memory of the beginning of the overthrow of Big Cereal. And we won‘t need painkillers in a post-Post world. With real food, our bones will be nigh indestructible.”

“You think Post Cereal is poisoning you?”

“Ever had Grape Nuts?

“Well-” Flandsa stammered. “Yeah."

“I have no idea what that crap is either,” LOBO explained. “But I can tell you you would be hard pressed to find a grape or a nut in it. And it tastes like the spackle for holes in Noah’s Ark.”

“I think you’re supposed to add sugar and stuff-”

“Add stuff? Isn’t it pretty much a box of added stuff already?” LOBO is incredulous. “What is this, the Middle Ages? Well the Middle Ages are over buddy. I‘m ending this Middle Age just like Paul Revere ended the last one.”

“LOBO, the Sheriff has asked me to ask you to leave. They can’t keep you without some kind of reason.”

“Participate in a cover up? And end the Revolution? Never!” But after a thoughtful surveillance of his cell, LOBO relented.

“Only if they let me redo my mug shot.”

Thursday

One Man Flash Mob

Predator Press

The guard completed a complex-seeming series of transactions with a set of keys, and the heavy doors slid back open; the armored elevator seemed to have moved at all, but the dungeon-like quality of the new floor was immediate and palpable.

Flandsa Ha’asasanba -familiar somewhat with the cellblock for his own reasons- proceeded to cellblock 'I' -ironically the location of LOBO's 'POD'- without an expected direction request.

In the center of a checkerboarded lancing of light, LOBO, in an orange jumpsuit, sat on a cot facing the opposite wall. He was not the pensive animal Flandsa was expecting. He seemed, well, serene.

“Flandsa Ha’asasanba,” said LOBO in a cool voice that unnerved Flandsa. Rubbing his wooly, unkempt facial growth in thought, LOBO didn’t turn to address him, but as Flandsa grew closer, he could see LOBO’s face -it was covered in a macabre splash of dripping red.

Flandsa stopped at the sliding cell door and steeled himself for anything. “I don’t know why I would be surprised to see you in here,” he joked.

“Yes,” LOBO replied coolly. He rose, slightly wobbly from the crutch, and made his way to his visitor. “I’m a con now. A hardened, dangerous man. Did you know I converted to Islam? I‘m also a Crip and a Blood.”

“You’ve only been in here two hours.”

“Two hours is plenty of time to get yourself killed when you’re on this side of the law,” whispered LOBO with authority. "Respect is everything in here. And do you know the best way to get the respect you need to survive when doing Hard Time?"

Flandsa shrugged patiently. LOBO was moving poorly, and only now arriving to lean on the cellbars.

“You have to make a name for yourself," said LOBO, squinting painfully. Fully in the sharp wedge of light, his eyes dilated wildly. "You have to pick out the biggest, meanest, toughest, ugliest guy in your POD and rape him.”

“You mean fight him,” Flandsa corrected helpfully.

“Fight him? Shit. Have you seen the biggest, meanest, toughest, ugliest guy in my POD? He’d kill me.”

“Well then how would you-?”

“I was thinking roofies or something. I don’t know. It’s complicated,” LOBO admitted. “Not to mention I don’t think I’ve ever even been drunk enough to rape a guy. I mean I guess I just close my eyes and pretend it’s only Sarah Palin.”

Brief shuffles of movement. From various directions just out of the stale, flickering overhead lights over Flandsa. The loneliness of this conversation is wholly illusion.

“What happened to your face?” Flandsa asked, changing the subject.

“It’s these fucking ketchup packets. They’re complicated enough as it is, but the lighting in here is terrible.”

“Why didn't you bail out?” Flandsa inquired. “It’s only six dollars.”

-Nervous, illusive titters spring like lightning bolts. LOBO, noticing, starts seeking them out. Speaking unnecessarily loudly, he asks, “So my boy, did you bring me the Viagra and rolls of duct tape I asked for?”

Silence.

“Yeah well, it’s been long enough. Post Cereal has agreed to drop all charges if you promise to-”

"Only now, too late, does Big Cereal realize it has wakened a sleeping giant," LOBO snarled. “I don’t negotiate with Big Cereal. Especially now that the juggernaut has rumbled to life. Their oppresive rule is coming to an end.”

The pause that ensued was punctuated dramatically by a fart from someone sleeping to Flandsa's left.

“But you have a broken ankle and boken wrist," Flandsa implored. "Don’t you want some medical attention? Some painkillers?”

“The pain merely helps burn in the memory,” LOBO scoffed proudly. “The memory of the beginning of the overthrow of Big Cereal. And we won‘t need painkillers in a post-Post world. With real food, our bones will be nigh indestructible.”

“You think Post Cereal is poisoning you?”

“Ever had Grape Nuts?

“Well-” Flandsa stammered. “Yeah."

“I have no idea what that crap is either,” LOBO explained. “But I can tell you you would be hard pressed to find a grape or a nut in it. And it tastes like the spackle for holes in Noah’s Ark.”

“I think you’re supposed to add sugar and stuff-”

“Add stuff? Isn’t it pretty much a box of added stuff already?” LOBO is incredulous. “What is this, the Middle Ages? Well the Middle Ages are over buddy. I‘m ending this Middle Age just like Paul Revere ended the last one.”

“LOBO, the Sheriff has asked me to ask you to leave. They can’t keep you without some kind of reason.”

“Participate in a cover up? And end the Revolution? Never!” But after a thoughtful surveillance of his cell, LOBO relented.

“Only if they let me redo my mug shot.”

Sunday

Afterglow

Predator Press

[Mr. I]

"Cancel ... my ... subscription ... to ... Highlights!" LOBO wheezed.

An then he fell over dead.



***


"'Highlights', huh?" I says. "Doesn't he subscribe to The Economist, U.S News, Scientific American, and World Report too?"

"He probably forgot," says Ethan, lighting his pipe. "He just gets those to make the mailman think he's smart."

I added them to my list. "And what about 'PETA' magazine?"

"Already cancelled. Did it when he found out that steel wool doesn't come from robot sheep."

I crossed off 'PETA subscription'.

"How’s the eulogy coming?"

The eulogy was a sore spot. "You know, Ethan? I don't appreciate you risking me getting brain damage by pulling me prematurely out of a coma because none of you jerks wanted to wax enthusiastic about that asshole ."

"We figured brain damage could only help."



***


The funeral plans were overly-complex.

For starters, we hadda find a tuxedo for a guy that never wore anything beyond Reeboks, jeans, and T-shirts bearing bumper-sticker humor. LOBO thought that "I'm With Stupid" was both a prolific literary insight to contemporary American genius, and a credit to the fashion world.

"It won't look natural at all," complained Phoebe.

"We could add some audio of him snoring," I suggested sarcastically.



***


Fortuitously, Ethan had bought shit-tons of life insurance, and were all going to the funeral in limos.

Solid gold limos.

I got sidetracked from writing the eulogy because I was just too busy coming out of a coma: everyone else, it seems, was too busy shopping. So even as I was groggily wheelchaired out of the hospital, I was already 'behind the eight ball' so to speak.

I drew out the scribbled Wal-Mart receipt, and rehearsed what I had so far.

"Brethren, we are gathered here today to celebrate the death of a habeas-corpus, as thyith frolicked with Hebrew Psalm found in The Hebrew Top 40 with hip Psalm-spinmeister Luke ‘97, yadda, yadda, yadda, Thank you for shopping at Wal-mart, Amen."

They just stared at me.

"Any questions?" I asked.

Long, awkward, dead silence.

"That's terrible," Phoebe says finally, grabbing the receipt.

"I know. But Kmart wanted four bucks for the same light bulbs."

"I mean this eulogy!" she glared.

"Yeah," says Ethan. "Jesus Christ! Can’t you ‘punch it up’ a little? You're writing an idiot's eulogy, not a Kevin Costner vehicle."

"C'mon," I says, annoyed. "The only reason we're even here making this spectacle is 'cuz you made us 1.3 million apiece with that crafty life insurance scam."

"Life Insurance Plan," Ethan corrected.

"Well," I says, taking the receipt back from Phoebe. "Any ideas?" Pencil tip to the paper, I stood alertly ready to jot all the profound new suggestions they would be completely unable to supply.

"He's probably never kicked a puppy," piped Sapphire after a long pause.

"... kicked ... a ... puppy ..." I wrote.

Phoebe was mortified. "This is what you call 'honoring the dead'?"

Ethan took Phoebe's hand in a comforting manner. "Honey," he says soothingly. "It's LOBO. No stripper in her right mind would do a funeral. It's completely tasteless--"

"This goddamn limo is huge!" yelled Beautiful White Stallion.

"--so we're doing the next-best thing by pretending to honor him," Ethan finished, scowling a the asshole horse.

"We're getting the insurance checks at the service?" I asked.

Ethan nodded. "I figured that was the only way I could get you guys to go."

An they all did the Sign of the Cross --belly, forehead, left shoulder, right shoulder-- with any nearby appendage available; the Twister game was in double-overtime.

"You think he's in Hell?" asks Sapphire.

"Jesus, lets hope so." Ethan says. Seeing the suddenly long faces, he tried to brighten things up a bit. "So you're rich now, people. What are you gonna do with all that dough?"

"Well, I'm totally sick of workin' for crazies," I breathe. "I've got an application in as a producer for Phil Specter."

"Good move," he says.

"What about you?" I ask, kinda reflexively

He frowned in serious thought, shrugging. "Well, me an Dayle got this beachfront property in Rio we've been looking at. I think I'm ready to lay out on a beach for a while. What about you, Sapphire?"

"Well, I'm getting a boob job from Ferrari for starters."

"Italy is really beautiful this time of year," Ethan approved. Everyone 'splitting the country' for a while was probably a good idea.

Phoebe was pissed. "Goddamn it people!" she demanded. "LOBO is dead. Can't we be serious for a day to pay our respects to the deceased?"

Ethan laughed. "Pay our respects to a guy who refused to send a fax on anything but bond paper?

"Or the self-proclaimed veteran of World Wars One, Two, Five, L, and pi?" I added.

"Or the only man ever arrested for wanton and reckless abuse of the Dewey Decimal System?" asked Sapphire.

"Is that a true story?" asked Phoebe.

"Supposedly," says Ethan. "I heard his mom tell it once."

"I thought LOBO was an orphan," inquired Sapphire.

"Well, that's what his parents tell everyone."

"Alright," Beautiful White Stallion demanded. "Who shit on the floor?"



***


Phil, new mother of nine, was finally up and about. Hungry, she cautiously wandered out of the fireplace, following human voices.

She was disappointed to find only a radio.

But a little more "snooping" revealed something else entirely.

Stomach growling, she followed her nose to a rather large pile of headless animal crackers under the foot of a small human bed.

And just beyond that, white sneakers, tapping non-rhythmically to the radio music.

She investigated further. There was another smell about.

Familiar.

When LOBO finally spotted Phil, he gently snatched her under the bed with him.

"Jesus Christ Phil, are you trying to get us all killed!?"

Phil purred.



***


LOBO, Phil, and all of Phil's progeny sat under the bed eating animal crackers and Cheetos as LOBO watched vigilantly from under the bed.

"Didn't you hear all that shooting, Phil?" he asked finally.

Drowsy, Phil yawned contentedly, revealing a bright orange tongue.

"Well, maybe it was fireworks. Was it July Fourth already?" He peeked at the door. "Have the French surrendered again recently?".

His eye's locked with Phil's, searching deeply in vain for Frenchitudinal Probability in the world's newest deadbeat dad.

"No matter really," he says finaly in reassurance. "Four million drunken assholes with explosives can't be wrong."

LOBO watched as a kitten --LOBO named her 'Bob'--cuddled up on Phil's belly to start nursing, pulling at her fur with tiny little paws.

"God Phil," LOBO shook his head. "You don't know shit about fatherhood, do you?"



***


When the supply of animal cracker heads ran out, it was another three days before LOBO got hungry enough to sneak into the kitchen and steal Mr. I's Cheetos.

The operation went off flawlessly; he darted back, zigzagging to avoid being an easy target for the multitude of assassins --probably ninjas-- who seemed to possess limitless ammunition.

It took six hours to come up with the plan, and about sixteen seconds to execute. Despite the seemingly deafening crackle of the Cheeto bag, no shots were fired; LOBO figured maybe he caught them all just napping. Or maybe he was just too fast and agile for them to aim at; he was after all, wearing some really expensive athletic shoes that were endorsed by some Irish guy named Shack-Eel-O'neil.

LOBO's free throws plummeted, an he got kicked out of the NBA.

But he definitely liked the shoes.

After some brief self-congratulation, he stuck to a strict ration of four Cheetos a day.

At that pace, he figured, he could stay under the bed for fifty-six days.

So after arranging fifty-six small piles of Cheetos, he returned to his silent vigil, patiently listening for the S.W.A.T. team to show up and rescue him.

Unfortunately, the smell of decapitated animal crackers and fifty-six small piles of Cheetos turns out to be irresistible to the average hungry and blind newborn kitten, and one by one they wandered in. Cats --instinctual carnivorous hunters-- prefer live prey, and had little interest in already-decapitated animal crackers. LOBO found himself alternately grabbing kittens from wandering out into the gunfire and trying to prevent them from scarfing up his meager stash of the felis domesticus' natural enemy: the Cheeto.

In a pinch, he supposed, he could always eat the cats if he had to.

But he figured the odds of Mr. Insanity having chop sticks around to be fairly slim.



***


And LOBO may have never come out were it not for that radio.

But when he heard the news story about a bibliophile purchasing a complete 17th-century collection Shakespeare’s works, he absolutely flipped.

"What the fuck?!" he says, alarming the cats as he climbed out from under the bed. "I've never even heard of this guy's blog!" Dusting himself off, he scolded Phil. "Goddamn liberals! See what happens when you have bibliophiles roamin free in the streets?"

Streaming obscenities, he steeled himself to search for the grizzly, rotting, bullet-riddled remains of Mr. Insanity: perhaps some gloating over the dead would cheer him up.

While not finding any bodies, he was wholly unprepared for what he found on the kitchen table.

On top of a stack of life insurance policies was a folded newspaper.

And inside a penciled circle, he found the obituary of David Curr.

"You bastards!" he cried, falling to his knees, sobbing. "He was so young! And so good-looking ... !"



***


Robot LOBO stood in line at the Pearly Gates, confused.

Eons of processing mortals had provided that the procedure was fairly efficient, and Saint Peter had grown pretty blasé to the whole thing.

"No, Agnes," he said into his headset, looking into a small white box on his desk. "I got a spinach pie from Trader Joe's."

He tapped his pen on the desk. "Yes, spinach," he replied after a pause.

He leaned back in the chair, rolling his eyes. "No Agnes, I do not wish them smoten for putting spinach in my pie. It's how I wanted it."

Another pause. "Yes Agnes, I've heard of cherries and blueberries. It just so happens that Trader Joe's makes a pretty darn decent spinach pie," he replied into the air. "The chicken pot pie is good too--"

Biting his lip, he glanced at his appointment list, and then up at the clock. "Agnes, you guys go ahead and order Panazzo's. I've got a full itinerary today what with the World Cup and all."

Rubbing between his closed eyes with two fingers, he motioned with a pen in his other hand. "Next," he sighed, looking up.

It took Robot LOBO a few seconds to realize he was being addressed. He approached the desk with a nervous reverence.

"Please have a seat," said Saint Peter rather automatically.

"Thank you sir," said Robot LOBO.

"Name?"

"LOBO."

Saint Peter's eyebrows furrowed. "Odd. You're not on the list." Turning slightly, he tapped some keys on the keyboard. "Hm. Nothing." He eyed Robot LOBO closely. "How did you die?" he asked finally.

"I have no idea, sir."

"Did Phoebe wax you? I bet Gabriel fifty bucks Phoebe would wax you."

"I don't know sir," Robot LOBO repeated.

"Hang on a second, okay?" In his chair, he swiveled his back to Robot LOBO. "Agnes?" he asked, pressing the headset into his ear. "I've got LOBO here, and he's not on my list. I've got his account up, but it's still beeping like he was still sinning ...."

A pause.

"No Agnes, he can't be streaming obscenities right now. He's sitting right in front of me, not saying a word."

"Uh, sir," Robot LOBO interjected timidly. "I'm an android based on LOBO."

Another pause. "No, Agnes, I really don't think Trader Joe's would have 'pork chop pies'." He scratches his head. "I doubt there's any such thing, actually--"

Saint Peter spun in his chair, and started clocking Robot LOBO.

"You're an android," he says, all serious as he removes his headset.

Now, this android, upgraded to V2.1, has seen some freakin’ creepy Christopher Walken movies, and Holy Freakin' Jesus, Robot LOBO was losing hydraulic fluid into his main recycling capacitor.

["Losin' hydraulic fluid into his main recycling capacitor" is a rather rare Predator Press Technical Term: the Main Recycling Capacitor is sci-fi technology as yet incomprehensible to our feeble human minds; losin hydraulic fluid in it is the equivalent of needing to change your shorts after gettin glared at by Christopher Walken if you were a robot. It's all scientific.]

Saint Peter's eyebrows furrowed. He leaned back in the chair, and interlocked his fingers behind his head.

He had the look of 'being onto someone's bullshit'.

"So," begins Saint Peter. "You're essentially a clone of someone that never had a soul in the first place." He grinned. Jesus Christ, he thought, This could get me a few thousand years of vacation!

"Actually," interjected Robot LOBO, "It took a lot of programming to come up with and develop a robot completely devoid of a soul. Bill Gates invested eight million dollars in it, in a collaborative venture with RDO." He paused politely. "In fact, I'm one of the prototypes."

"Bill Gates," Saint Peter laughed. "What a dumb ass." He spun the monitor at Robot LOBO, and Robot LOBO saw the Apple trademark.

Oh my God I am so screwed, he thought.

Tuesday

Phil

Predator Press

[Mr. I]

I awoke to dogs barking.

It’s the middle of the day, and I can sleep off a typical lawn mowing or weed whacking; I work second shift.

But “dogs barking” was fairly a-typical ambient noise.

I wake on the couch, and LOBO is riveted by an infomercial broadcast from the channel I fell asleep watching. Fitness equipment. Scripted “Human Interest” stories, fully feted with testimonials.

What could be less interesting than a ‘Human Interest’ story?

It’s hot … late June. I stumble to my feet and walk to the screen door.

Two huge dogs, a gray one and a black one, are horse-playing free in the yard across the street.

The phone rings.

“You see this shit?” says Cobe.

“Yeah,” I says into the phone. I’m a little distracted; I can’t see the street from here, and I think I can distinctly hear a mournful howl.

“Man, I think the small one is a hundred-and-ten pounds!”

Cobe has two small kids.

“Call the Pound,” I says, intrigued by the howling. “I gotta go.”

I go up to the screen door, where the two dogs are still bounding and playing in plain view.

And I’m fascinated. It’s the kinda play that a human being can envy.

And then these two little antennae stick up in the center of the botCobe of the screen door.

And then the fuckin thing went MEOW.


***


Both dogs zeroed in on the sound like sharks, and came blazing for the door.

“You slick little asshole!” laughs LOBO as he inches the door open. The cat slinks in and BANG, a dog crashes against the screen door as it closes behind.

Safe inside, the fuckin cat just stood there an howled at us.

LOBO, inexplicably, decided on the spot to call it “Phil”.

“Phil’s kinda chubby”, I says.

Phil meowed again.

“And needy, ” says LOBO.

Bang! goes another dog on the door.

LOBO dutifully scoops Phil up so he can hurl it out the back door before it pisses all over my trailer. But something in Phil’s sCobeach moved, and it freaked out LOBO completely.

“Phil, you whore!” he says. “You’re pregnant!?”

‘Phil’ was giving birth.

Now.


***


LOBO was gathering towels and boiling water as Phil settled into the fireplace, several months unused. It was a curious choice of location, but it was somewhat dark, secluded and removed.

The phone rang.

It was Cobe again.

“Hey, it’s me,” he says.

“Hey buddy,” I says distractedly. “Did you call the Pound?”

“No,” he says. His cell phone is cutting in and out, and there’s a lot of noise on the line. Traffic, maybe.

There’s a long, inordinate pause.

“What do you want Cobe?” I finally ask. “I’m a little busy right now.”

“Well, I’ve been contracted to kill you,” he says coolly.

“Really?” I says, eyebrows raised.

“Yeah,” he replies. “Actually, contracted is a pretty piss-poor way to describe it. The Fat Man’s been blackmailing me since that whole cheerleader debacle … “

“Oh my fuckin God!” says LOBO. “Phil’s first baby is comin out!”

Ignoring LOBO, I focus on Cobe. “So what are you gonna do about it?”

“Well, I’m not killing you, am I?” says Cobe.

Suddenly there’s a loud crash.

“What the fuck was that?” asks Cobe.

“Nothing,” I says. “LOBO just fainted.”

“Oh.”

“So what exactly are you telling me, Cobe?”

“I’m telling you that you’re on the Fat Man’s shit list. Big time. He’s bad news since the divorce, and I can’t control him anymore.”

“So you’re running?”

Long pause.

“Well, it’s better than the alternative,” he says finally. I think for a minute. ‘From the hip’, I’m thinking Cobe is just a chicken-shit.

... But he really didn’t have to warn me either.

“Hey Cobe,” I says.

“What?”

“Thanks, man. Really. And good luck.”

“You too kid.”

I hung up and tossed the phone aside. With Phil pumpin out kitten number three, LOBO had fainted dead away, spilling towels and boiling water everywhere.


***


“Wake up!” I said, smacking him. There’s something about smacking LOBO that’s very therapeutic.

Pasty and pale, LOBO staggered to his feet.

“Phil’s gonna need cat food and kitty litter and all kinds of stuff, stat” I says, handing him my VISA.

LOBO, still woozy, looked a little relieved. “Okay. Kitty litter, food … “

We spent a few minutes going over a phony shopping list, and LOBO shot out to the car, narrowly avoiding the now-angry hounds. Hearing the car start, I bent down to the fireplace. ‘Phil’ was pushing out kitten number six.

And then there was a bright flash.

Like a camera flash going off, but physically hot.

I’m disoriented, and I back out of the fireplace. What the fuck was that?

I’m kinda blind. I stumble back against a counter, and work my way to my feet.

I feel sunburned.

Everything in my blinded, wayward path fell to the ground with hideous noise. Through a thick white haze, I find the front door. Fumbling with the doorknob, I throw the door wide only to find excruciating daylight. I cover my eyes completely, and follow the sounds of the car engine.

“LOBO!” I says.

No answer.

My right hand finds the hood of the car, and winds it’s way to the driver’s side door handle almost on autopilot. Forcing my eyes open briefly, I can see clear ashen silhouettes of two large dogs on the ground.

LOBO is a charred husk, staring up at me with blind, white eyes, flailing at the car’s interior.

And trying in vain to say something.

Predator Press Interviews: Chris Wood

Predator Press

Already a fan of Chris Wood's Blog, I'm not suprised to find his books only further underline his remarkable writing talent.

Thus, the urgency of his, eh, "early retirement."

See, I can’t find a publisher for my stuff; everybody keeps saying things like, ‘I’ve never seen such bad spelling,’ and, ‘How did you get a typo in crayon?’

With all the serenity I can muster, I find myself repeatedly explaining how it’s a children’s book, and kids -inherently dumb by nature- would never know the goddamn difference. But those know-it-all fucktarded shit sticks at the Wall Street Journal wouldn‘t know a decent children's book writer's talent if it popped a zit on their dork.

I set all these fires for nothing.

So Chris Wood must die.

DIE!

I mean, who needs this kind of competition? And who put talented writers in charge of everything anyway? Hm? I'm just supposed to sit here while fancy-pants British author Chris Wood -just oozing talent- is hoggin’ up all that paper? It’s not like paper grows on trees you know.

This 'Chris Wood' probably counts his stacks of gold while saying 'pip pip' at random intervals, smoking a big curvy pipe in front of a fireplace. You call this a level playing field? Shit, anybody can get published with cheesy gimmicks like talent, a big curvy pipe and a fireplace! And where the hell do you even get a big curvy pipe and a fireplace here in the Twentieth Centurion?

I'm the victim here if you think about it.

Dyin's too good for him.

-He should die with extreme predjudice.

I‘ll choke that sonofabitch with his own monocle chain.

CW: Why are you in my house?

LOBO: I‘m not in your house pal. I‘m in Chris Wood‘s house. Have you seen him? He looks just like you, but he's British. You know, monocle, khaki shorts ... possibly a pith helmet.

CW: Chris Wood is my twin brother. There must be some kind of mix up here.

LOBO: Really? The cops told me he lives here.

CW: Cops?

LOBO: Yeah. I rode an international flight here in a ghillie suit made of almond tree branches. Despite the brilliant camouflage, some Air Marshalls came to my row insisting they could see me. I called them filthy liars, and, well, long story short, they kicked the crap out of me until I made bail.

CW: Well, it‘s a good thing they couldn‘t see you then, wasn‘t it?

LOBO: Yes. I hate filthy liars. Experiences like that is why I totally hate foreigners.

CW: Me too.

LOBO: My name is LOBO.

CW Hello LOBO. I‘m Chris Wood.

LOBO: You and your twin brother are both named Chris Wood? Isn‘t that confusing?

CW: I'm hassled by idiots over it constantly.

LOBO: It sounds like life will be simpler for both of us if he was dead.

CW: Indeed. He’s very evil. You know The Ingredients of a Good Thriller? I wrote that. And Sherlock Holmes and the Underpants of Death too! But he stole all the credit.

LOBO: That bastard. Listen, help me out with some surveillance-type questions. We can pool our information, put a homing beacon on his car, and track him via satellite. After a few weeks of that, we'll analyze the data and determine the best place to kill him with cinderblocks and pointy sticks.

CW: Pointy sticks are illegal here -and cinderblocks tend to be cost-prohibitive.

LOBO: Really? Man this place is weird. I mean we’re on the opposite side of the world from the US, yet gravity is not reversed. Unlike anarchists, Americans obey the laws of physics! The custom travel pants Predator Press scienticians designed for me -the ones with inverted pockets- have somehow malfunctioned, and I have lost my wallet and passport as a result. Can I sleep in your car for the duration? I see your steering wheel is on the wrong side. I can fix that.

The Ingredients of a Good Thriller Reviews

CW: My car does have a steering wheel, but it doesn’t work. My car’s direction is actually controlled by a rudder, which means ploughing through concrete every time I drive, but there you go.

Personally, I try to ignore the laws of physics. This does take some willpower, but stick with it. You just have to be strict with them, and then you can float about, let your molecules wander off, even turn kinetic energy into pizza – it’s fantastic.

LOBO: Judging from your music collection, your favorite music appears to be the blues. But that crap is depressing! Where the hell is the ABBA? Are you hiding it? I don’t see any copies of Max Payne in your DVD collection either.

CW: I don’t find the blues depressing, or at least not all of it. “I’m getting my dick sucked as I sing this” by Big Smile Chesterton, for example, is a happy tune. So is “I ran over the taxman (and I stole his wallet too)” by Goodforhim Lemonzest.

Also, anyone who doesn’t feel laid back while listening to BB King is a bollock faced imbecile. I have that on good authority.

LOBO: I disagree. That 'laid back' thing only ensures his show will never be as widely-enjoyed by the masses like the rampantly successful Predator Press juggernaut is.

-All King's interviews are chocked full of softball questions, and the resulting lack of journalistic 'edge' makes his show a real snoozer. Worse, you don't want to fall asleep around him ... once sufficiently lulled, he marries you.

CW: Well you can’t trust British culture either. It will break into your house and completely screw with your mind, by putting your CDs in the wrong cases and slightly adjusting the settings on your TV.

LOBO: The Beatles and The Rolling Stones Chris? That’s total Rock ‘N Roll overkill. Don’t you think farming out the Sex Pistols to France would have been at least, well, sporting?

CW: We tried, but the trouble was European Union legislation stating that all foreign rock bands had to be pasturised before entering France. Johnny Rotten and co weren’t fond of the idea of being boiled en route, so the whole thing fell through. I call it a lack of initiative.

Hey, have you been slightly adjusting the settings on my TV? I thought BB King was black. This guy looks like he swapped Frodo's ring for bulletproof eyewear. And does that shade of blue really occur in nature?

LOBO: You once wrote “English mustard is the envy of the civilized world. If you don't envy it, you aren't civilized.” If the Germans find out you dissed Heinz Ketchup like that, it could start World Wars III, IV and π. In the future, can you please refrain from this scathing and incendiary commentary on condiments for the sake of world peace? There’s only so many times we should be expected to rescue the French … and their mustard sucks.

CW: No, fuck world peace. I must have my say on condiments. If we all have to become little piles of radioactive soot just because I don’t like your choice of dressing, tough shit.

I agree French’s Mustard is tasteless, underspiced cack, but it does have one useful application. It can be put on roast beef to torture British men, should that be necessary. Much better than wiring their balls up to the mains, quite frankly, because while it naturally hurts like a bastard to ruin a good slice of roast cow, it’s better than frazzling somebody’s knadgers. Probably. I mean, less bad karma and all, which can’t be a bad thing.

For somebody who just said ‘Fuck world peace,’ I should worry.

LOBO: The UK should feel indebted to the United States. If not for us, just think of how many nukes would be pointed at you instead. Jesus. What is the Defense Budget for soccer?

CW: Despite living in Manchester, I’m still leery of British culture. It once sold me an Oasis album which turned out to be full of rancid warbling and vague guitar scratching. It’s not all Benny Hill and James Bond, you know. That’s only the good stuff.

The worst thing about British culture is that it forced Benny Hill off the air. This was during the Thatcher years, when the only other thing to laugh at was people in government getting buggered by dwarves.

LOBO: Do you like documentaries? Researching British history on Wikipedia, I found out Margaret Thatcher and William Shakespeare were having a torrid affair, and David Bowie killed Shakespeare in a fit of jealous rage. Thatcher escaped by choking Tony Blair with her thong, and Sir Isaac Newtron rescued her on his hovercycle. Shit that’s AWESOME -all we Americans got is a guy with a lantern yelling “one if by land, two if by sea” from some freakin lighthouse.

CW: Yes, it’s true about Bowie and the Bard. I gather they argued about the royalties for Cat People. Christopher Marlowe met his end in the same way, although I heard that was about his royalties from the first Bat Out Of Hell album. Or so I’m told. Thatcher was actually having an affair with Samuel Johnson, who wrote the first dictionary. He was so fat he needed a crane to keep his gut out of the way while they were getting down to business.

Sir Isaac Newton never used a hovercycle, that’s just ridiculous. He did invent luminous toothpaste, though, so that night joggers could bare their pearly whites as a means of lighting the way ahead. It’s from this idea that headlamps grew from. True story.

Sherlock Holmes and the Underpants of Death Reviews

LOBO: Having just cracked my copy of Sherlock Holmes and the Underpants of Death, I must say I’m enjoying it immensely. I say we team up and write a new mystery series: “Sherlock ‘Iron Man’ Holmes.” It’s where Sherlock Holmes and Thomas Edison team up and build a suit that can fight crime. Morton Downey Jr is a shoe-in for the movie.

CW: That sounds like a great idea, but I must warn you of my exacting working style. I have to be completely in the zone, and this requires surrounding myself with naked women, who must cover at least 90% of my eyeline as I work. It’s better that way.

I also need several escape routes, at least four (4). This is in case the authorities come crashing through the door, trying to interfere. Of course, the authorities couldn’t care less what I’m up to, but it’s an essential part of my creative process, as are the former Special Forces bodyguards, fuelled motor bike and small inflatable chicken.

LOBO: Americans are extremely tolerant of foreigners no matter how crazy weird their culture is, and the British are no exception. But why do you people insist on butchering our fine American language with that strange accent?

CW: I know, it’s unforgiveable! We’ve even renamed it ‘English.’ Very bad of us. I love the fact that you Americans are tolerant of foreign cultures, especially showing interest in other country’s histories. Every American I’ve met (in the UK) takes the same approach. We English, though, prefer to assert ourselves overseas by loudly demanding egg and chips everywhere we go, even if it’s a church, the dentist or what have you. It’s a cultural thing, and a crap one.

LOBO: Watching Simon Cowell pitbull on American Idol contestants, I am often reminded of what you guys did to William Wallace at the end of Braveheart. Honestly, I kinda get the American Idol thing. But why were you people so mean to William Wallace?

CW: The British authorities of the day didn’t like Mel Gibson, I’m afraid. It’s a shame – I’m a fan, particularly of the first Lethal Weapon film, but there you are. Bloody red tape.

LOBO: The US and UK, are considered “Western Civilization,” The UK is pretty far east of the US. China is currently west of the United States. China should move back where it is on the Risk board, because this is just confusing.

CW: There were plans to position the UK north of the US, so that we could keep an eye on Canada for you and also fart on it. As far as I know, this has yet to happen. I did hear a rumour that the British Isles were actually mounted on a gigantic remote control roller skate, and that we could move about quite easily. The government has kept quiet on the issue, which is suspicious.

Chris Wood does not currently have leukemia. And if you buy
10 copies of his book, you may personally ensure he never does.

Please help Chris continue to fight leukemia!

LOBO: I noticed the taxi driving me here was driving on the wrong side of the road. But the British are so polite they all started driving in the exact same manner -and the cops didn’t bust them for it! In the US, they woulda clubbed us like baby sea lions for something like that. Suspecting a link, I'm thinking maybe cops without guns is a good idea. Do you know John Cleese?

CW: The entire British police force is admirably polite. If you commit a murder, just say, “I say, old chap, I’m terribly sorry,” and they doff their helmets and allow you to continue. Slitty McGraw of Ipswich clocked up over 400 corpses this way, all through good manners and homicidal instincts. It’s a great display of class, I always thought.

John Cleese and I go way back. I call him JC and he calls me the Woodster.

LOBO: I have always admired the UK for it’s role in the Seven Years War. But wouldn’t it have been smarter to have named it the Seven Minute War? It seems to me that would have made it a lot cheaper, and it’s really hard to kill a lot of people in seven minutes. Don't you have egg timers here?

CW: The Seven Years War should only have lasted five years, but they insisted on tea breaks and regular games of cricket. It’s bizarre, I know, but even amidst death and maiming the English love of cricket continues. It’s very bizarre.

LOBO: Cricket, Croquet, Polo … you people sure like blunt objects. Were these sports developed in bad neighborhoods or something?

CW: We do enjoy clubbing people with blunt instruments, true. It stems from our ancient culture of violent games, like face stamping and heading the shot.

LOBO: Again citing Wikipedia, the ancient British went through all the trouble of building the Roman Coliseum. Why isn’t Wimbledon held there? I gotta tell you, a squad of hungry lions would significantly increase the watchability of tennis.

CW: The Ancient Britons were basically travelling builders, and gave the Romans a good quote on the job, even throwing in a patio set for Caesar. Mind, I gather they overran on the job due to tea breaks and were eaten by the lions.

I just found out Chris wants
leukemia. For his collection.

You screwed up.

You mercilessly crushed his leukemia hopes and dreams.
And how dare you play God like that? To avoid suffering
any future intense feelings of guilt swift and lethal karmic
payback, I suggest buying 10 copies of this book too.

Please help Chris get leukemia!

LOBO: Couldn’t the excitement of modern tennis be vastly improved by simply replacing the ball with small stray cats? That would be cheaper, too.

CW: Tennis is an incredibly dull game, and for a reason. It was invented to test the stamina of wannabe kings. If they could stay awake during a whole game, they got the crown. If not, they were fed to hungry badgers. We’re cost conscious in the UK and lions are expensive. Christians aren’t cheap, you know, and they don’t like Winalot.

LOBO: Wikipedia says Buckingham Palace is 108 meters by 120 meters, being 24 meters high and containing 77,000 square meters of floorspace. Predator Press scienticians studied this for months, and concluded this is, like, a million square feet in real measurements. Why is Buckingham Palace so big? Is this guy Buckingham, like, really fat or something?

CW: The Duke of Buckingham was reputed to have a massive cock, at least 114 feet long, and he claimed he needed a big palace so he could walk around with a boner without flopping it into the walls.

LOBO: Did he know any important people? Lord Likely perhaps?

CW: Well, he was only a duke after all.

LOBO: That's too bad. But isn't it weird that the Duke of Buckingham ultimately became the Duke of Buckingham? It's kinda eerie if you think about it. Was his mom psychic?

CW: The Duke of Buckingham was destined to be a great leader, perhaps the one man who kept unified all Europe at the time. Unfortunately, listening to him speak was like hearing a muppet fart, so his career as an orator was limited.

He did have one dubious claim to fame, however, which did not make him popular with his servants. He used to insist on them kneeling down in front of the gentry and opening their mouths, thus inventing the first urinal. History has been overly kind to him by forgetting this foul deed.

LOBO: So we have him to thank for American beer?

CW: Precisely.
Seriously. Buy this book!

LOBO: The British still stubbornly refer to Saint Paul’s Cathedral as Saint Paul’s, despite the fact that -according to Wikipedia- Saint Francis of Assisi orchestrated a successful hostile takeover bid in 1996. England has historically been lockstep with Catholics, and -not generally known for rebellious acts against the church- you guys are uncharacteristically risking pissing off the Pope.

Is it problem with Saint Francis of Assisi? Whatever Saint Francis of Assisi has done, consider the alternative ... the Pope sending Jesus to pound a bunch of pagans into a thick chalky paste, and pouring what remains over Satan's hibachi for all Eternity. Personally? I think you should reconsider.

Besides, I’ve seen the new St. Francis Cathedral sign he wants to erect and it’s got all sparkly neon letters!

CW: It’s actually St Filbert’s. St Paul won it in a card game (Deuteronomy 12:12,903,218,407).

LOBO: But I thought St. Francis of Assisi quit gambling and had to go to those meetings and stuff. Wait. Am I thinking of Bob Wilson of Galilee? ... No, Bob Wilson of Galilee is the guy that can do that cool trick where he pulls his thumb off and put it back on.

-Ah! You mean Joe Francis of Assisi, right?

CW: No. That’s a common mistake … Joe Francis is the patron saint of something that almost rhymes with Assisi. As to Saint Francis, he is one of the few saints I know of to be mobbed up. He used to be called Frankie of the Birds, or Frank the Holy. He and his crew used to chill there in the small hours, smoking cigars and saying “Fuck you” a lot. I went to St Paul’s last year. Nothing’s changed.

In the old days, the Popes were super-pissy, and if they didn’t like anything, they’d send round a couple of cardinals to smash all your windows and insult your drapes. The English are super-sensitive to things like that, and its dread power kept us in thrall for quite some time.

LOBO: I see the British Museum is here in Britain. A museum that features British stuff right smack in Britain seems redundant -I mean you didn’t put Scotland Yard in Scotland. And that would have been smart, because then the Scots would had to mow it! I would have gone with an ABBA Museum. Or a casino.

CW: The British Museum is in Britain, which flies in the face of our fine tradition of making no fucking sense at all. (Have you seen our spelling?)

The location of Scotland Yard – London - is intended to confuse criminals. It’s a sneaky move but a successful one, and has been a triumph for over one hundred years. We have really thick criminals over here. Mind, you should see our police.

Oh come on! If you use your VISA, Amazon will practically
mail Sherlock Homes and the Underpants of Death to you!
You barely have to get off the couch for God's sake. Think
your snooty librarian will mail you books? Those people are lazy!

LOBO: You claimed to have written The Ingredients of a Good Thriller in the span of a few months. I don’t think I could manage a dozen heartbeats over that short a span of time. Were you on steroids or something?

CW: No, I wasn’t on steroids, although I did have a constant supply of merest whims being brought to me by my especially compliant Personal Needs Department. These trained experts are so dedicated, they make the SAS look like half-arsed delinquents.

It was also necessary to neglect a great many personal matters for this period, so for six and a half months I did without food, sleep, and going to the toilet. I began in late December, and I can tell you, I had one hell of a messy June.

Totally worth it, even if I did have to move house afterwards and am still being sued for the effects of subsidence caused by my rocket-like flow of piss.

LOBO: I think I'm 'connecting the dots' here. America's Founding fathers replaced all those prototype British cities with newer versions that are closer for Americans to visit. But once we got lots of guns to shoot each other with, we forgot we were having wars with you guys and started working on domestic issues.

Eventually we forgot what the Founding Fathers found in the first place, which subsequently resulted in the Founding Fathers' unjust demotion to mere Finding Fathers. And just try to pay a Founding Father's Child Support on a Finding Father's pay. It's impossible.

CW: So I assume you shot them?

LOBO: Probably. But no one knows with 100% certainty. With no Founding Fathers to get the deadbeat Finding Fathers found, we soon ran out of ideas and bought televisions.

-But let's get back to why you guys kept those old, worn-out cities like Hampshire, York, Jersey when ours were perfectly new? Is this part of a sinister British plan to hog all the history?

CW: I like the fact that America has used a lot of our place names. There’s a Manchester in Texas, for example, which is great because when I ask for directions home, I can end up in a different continent. Not very convenient, but it adds a certain spice to life.

To be honest, I think the American Manchester might be in Washington. I’ve no idea. Your country is too big. Make it smaller, please. Can’t you throw a few of the crappy states out of the union? Just keep the good stuff, like where they make Fender guitars and gangster films, and get shut of the knuckle draggers that just pull down your national average.

LOBO: Ooooh I’m with you there! There’s like fifteen or twenty states that are totally worthless.

CW: Yes. I mean, would you really miss some places? I keep saying we should throw Yorkshire out of England, and the whole of the UK is only 27 square inches. Surely you have surplus crap you can do without? It would make it easier on the place names, and frankly, more cash and leisure time for the rest of you. Do you really need a North and South Carolina?

LOBO: Hell no! Those lazy slobs didn’t even bother to come up with separate names! Cripes … now that I think about it, we could get down to six or seven states. Tops. I say we just create a whole new continism -like 'Englerica' or 'Ameringland.'

CW: Think of all the postage we would save. And who wants to have to remember all these area and zip codes?

LOBO: So what happens with all those old, passé city names then?

CW: Joe Francis is naming cities?

LOBO: No. I said ‘passé.’

CW: Oh. We were planning to sell them off in a big yard sale, but I think we just grew attached to them. There are plans to update parts of England - Chichester now has electricity, for example (although I doubt it’ll catch on).

LOBO: Chickchester? Did British feminists found that place in response to Man-chester? Jesus, this whole ‘let’s pretend women are as important as men’ thing is getting out of hand.

Well, I wouldn’t force the feminists to get electricity … if they want to operate ovens barefoot and pregnant via Gilligan’s Island pedal-power, who are we to argue? I have a strict ‘hands off’ policy when it comes to wanton abominations against science and nature like that.

CW: Personally, I enjoy the old fashioned and quaint. I was burnt at the stake yesterday, for example, and I’ve never felt better.

Limited Time Offer!
Buy The Ingredients of a Good Thriller
now, and we will make this post shorter!

LOBO: I got this picture from your blogger profile. Don't you think you are losing too much weight?

CW: Yes. I’m one salad away from not reflecting light at all, I’m that thin. It’s one of those things. It’s the curse of size zero, I reckon.

LOBO: So want to give a heads up on what you’re working on next?

CW: I have two books in the pipeline. One is a sequel, called Sherlock Holmes and the Flying Zombie Death Monkeys, which is a poignant biography of Duke Ellington. The other is a political novel called Judas Cow, which I began in 2004 and so far has seen me just about lose my marbles.

The Holmes / Ellington book should be out later this year. Judas Cow may never be ready, as it’s one of those serious (ish) novel type novels which make the author dress up as Napoleon and mutter darkly about his plans for Russia. Not to worry. Luckily I’m a teacher, and a certain measure of insanity is considered a positive bonus.

Did we mention the free porn?