John Shore

Archive for the ‘Fiction’ Category

The Trouble With Glass

In Family, Fiction on March 27, 2008 at 5:20 pm

[If you hated my last Fun With Family Fiction thing, you're likely to loathe the story of mine below. It's called  The Trouble With Glass. Remember, friends, this is just a humble attempt to create decent art.]

Young Bennie Horton sat in the cavernous living room of a luxurious high-rise apartment on a round, backless white couch with a giant white button in its middle. It was 1959. Men wore hats. Women had big hair. People wore sunglasses and smiled a lot.

Also in the room was Bennie’s mother. She wore a long, flowing purple gown and a string of gold pearls draped about her neck. She stood gazing at the city below through the room’s great window.

“Ah, the teeming city,” she said. “It is like an organism unto itself.” She spun and regarded her son. “You understand what I’m saying, don’t you, Bennie? About the city living and breathing as a single organic unit?”

“I sure do!” piped up Bennie. “Absolutely! The many is just like one.” He laughed nervously. “I mean, it’s maybe a little bigger than your typical organism – but still! The one is made of the parts! Everything is in everything! All of life is one! Thou art that! Definitely! You bet!”

His mother looked decidedly nonplussed.

“God, you have a lot to learn,” she said, turning back to contemplate the view.

“It’s true,” said Bennie. “I really do. I know it. You’re right.”

His mother did not respond.

“Um, Mom? I was wondering. You know all those cacti you placed in my bedroom, in what I guess was the middle of last night? They’re really nice and everything. What characters! But the thing is, I don’t think –”

“No,” sighed his mother wearily, “You don’t think, Bennie. You’ve never thought. It’s simply not in you. Your opinions are, at best, amusing. You must surrender to the fact that your life will never be a cerebral one, son. The world of the physical is your realm. There is the life the Great Creative Spirit intended for you.

“Tell me, my child. Have you ever had an erection?”

“Jeez, Mom. I hardly feel –”

“No, no you don’t, Bennie. You feel nothing. You are like those cacti I placed in your room as a subtle reminder that the world is full of pricks. The symbolism of this gesture escaped you, of course. Metaphor is, after all, a subtle, delicate thing, not handled well by strictly linear thinkers like you. Now - I’ve asked you once, and I’m asking you again. Have you ever –?”

Just then someone rapped on the apartment door.

“Oh, God,” breathed Bennie’s mother. “It’s ice cream. I know it.”

She crossed to the door, her gown flowing behind her, and swung it open to reveal a white-uniformed Good Humor man holding a small paper bag.

“Ice cream delivery!” said the Good Humor Man. “Did somebody order a half-gallon of Double-Double Triple Quadruple Heart Attack Chocolate?”

Bennie’s mother leaned on the door and ran her hand up along its edge. Feeling the power of her lyre-like hips, she said, “You bring delectable gifts from the fields of Krishna, don’t you, you delightful thing?”

The Good Humor Man looked down into his sack, smiled, and said, “I guess I do!” Then he looked past her to Bennie.

“Hi, ya Bennie!” he said, waving. “How’s it going?”

“Pretty good!” said Bennie, hoping to use this opportunity to further develop his social skills. “But I’m trapped here with my insane mother! Please help me!”

“I hear ya!” rejoined the Good Humor Man. Then he dropped his voice and confided to Bennie’s mother, “He really needs to work on his social skills.”

“I know,” she whispered back. “We’re thinking of having him committed.”

“Don’t do it. I had a cousin who got committed. Those places are hellholes. Better to take him to a vacant lot and shoot him if you have to.”

Bennie’s mom grabbed the Good Humor man by his collar and pulled him forward until their noses almost touched.

“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” she hissed. “It would be good for him. Psychologists are our friends. Are you trying to tell me what’s best for my son, you obviously repressed homosexual neurotic?”

“No ma’am,” said the Good Humor Man, suddenly feeling very sorry for Bennie.

“Not at all. My mistake. Sorry.” He handed her a clipboard. “Sign here, please.”

Bennie’s mom released the man. “What am I signing for?” she asked sweetly, taking the clipboard.

“Ice cream.”

Bennie’s mother penned her name. She handed back the clipboard as if in a daze.

“Suddenly I feel paralyzed,” she said.

“I don’t!” said the man, snatching his clipboard and dashing down the hallway.

“Enjoy your ice cream! Bye! Good luck!”

Bennie’s mom waved feebly. Staring down at the carpet, she did not move. She began to dream about when she was a little girl living in a poor country orphanage. She remembered herself barefoot and crying. She remembered her hair caked with dirt. She remembered insects crawling through a half-eaten pan of cornbread on the floor.

She let the ice cream fall from her hand, though not before noting it was not chocolate at all, but its God damn opposite: strawberry sherbet. Barely aware of her own movement, she walked off down the hallway toward the elevators. She felt like she was gliding, her feet inches off the ground.

Bennie crossed to the door and looked down the hallway.

“Going out to lunch?” he called.

Without turning around she flitted her hand around in the air behind her head. He had been dismissed.

“I said, Are you going to dinner? — you life-sucking monster bitch from hell!” Bennie screamed uncontrollably. His mother stopped in her tracks. She turned, slowly, and faced him. She raised both of her hands.

“Can you see the blood coming from my palms?” she asked.

“No,” said Benny sadly. “No, I can’t. I’m sorry, Mom. I can’t.”

“Well, it’s there,” said his mother. “You know it’s there.” She turned and walked away again, disappearing around a corner. Bennie soon heard the familiar sound of the elevator bell. His mother was going down. He heard the elevator arrive, open, and close.

It was quiet then. Nobody seemed to be home in any of the apartments on his floor. It was hard to be sure, of course. All those doors.

Bennie looked down at his hands, which were hurting. He saw blood there, coming from each palm. He pushed his hands against the front door and moved them around, leaving behind red streaks. He went inside, closed and locked the door behind him, and cleaned his hands. The cuts there were small after all, received most likely from the cacti. He sat down upon the round backless couch. He heard a helicopter flying right outside his building. It went, Whap, whap, whap, whap.

Next he heard a “ffunk!” at the big window. He got up, looked, and saw that a pigeon had flown hard into the pane and was now lying with its neck broken on the ledge just outside the window. The smoke-gray bird closed its eyes. Bennie tried to open the window, but discovered it was painted shut.

Bennie went into his bedroom, lifted a small potted cactus from the floor near his bed, and carried it back into the living room. He placed the plant on the inside ledge of the window, inches from the bird. He got down on his knees, and rested his hands, about chest level, on the sill. He stared at the bird. He would never be able to say positively, but for the rest of his life, Bennie would believe that one of the bird’s eyes had suddenly opened, and that the animal had winked at him.

Hell, it may have even smiled.

Not Involved

In Family, Fiction on March 26, 2008 at 10:11 pm

[Family life. Fiction. It's all part of the same pot, isn't it?]

David looked up from the letter informing him of his mother’s death–and the next thing he knew he was nine years old, floating inches off the ceiling of the dining room in the house in which he grew up.

Directly below him, yellow with layered dust and glowing white hot, were the six flame-shaped bulbs of the room’s faux-brass candelabra, hanging from its faux-brass chain above the family’s sleek faux-walnut dining room table.

Sitting alone at that table was his 12-year-old sister, Carol. She was a plump girl — not obese, not fat, not slovenly: just early-teenager plump.

In front of Carol on the otherwise empty table was a large cereal bowl piled high with shiny malted milk balls. The only other person in the room was David and Carol’s mother. She was screaming at Carol to eat all the malted milk balls.

“Finish them, hog!” she screamed. “Do you hear me? You’re not getting up out of that seat until you finish the whole bowl, you disgusting pig!”

David, quietly floating above it all, felt a pain in his left hand. He looked down, and saw that a little boy who had appeared from nowhere was now standing beside his mother. With her right hand his mother was tightly gripping this boy’s left hand. Oddly, this new little boy looked exactly like him. The boy on the ground was silently watching Carol. He looked sad and anxious.

“Eat them!” Ruth said to her daughter. “Finish them all, fatso!” She looked down at the boy whose hand she was clutching.

“Isn’t that right, honey? Isn’t Carol a little piggy girl? I found her sneaking into the candy, didn’t I? And she’s such a fat little piggy, I’m sure she would have eaten the whole bag if I hadn’t caught her.”

And then, from his position above the faux-candelabra, David cried out, “I know I would have! Who wouldn’t want to eat all the malted milk balls?”

His mom continued talking to the boy at her side, though. “So now she needs to eat the whole bag, just like the hog she is. Isn’t that right?”

Well, screw this noise, thought David: Enough was enough. Turning on his Super Flying Will Power, he swept down from the ceiling like an avenging eagle, landing beside his sister’s chair. He threw his arm around her and pointed at his mother.

“What in God’s name is the matter with you?” he cried. “You need to stop this nonsense! You are seriously in the running for the Absolute Worst Mom Ever award! What you’re doing is wrong! Ever since Dad moved out, everything Carol does is revolting, and everything I do is the greatest thing that’s ever happened! Do you have any idea how wacko that is, Mom? Do you? Do you ever notice the looks the other moms at the PTA meetings give you when you say things like, ‘Well, today my miraculous wonder of a son controlled the weather over Africa and parts of Australia, while my devilish pig-daughter sucked all the goodness out of the universe just by being alive’? Huh, Mom? Ever notice people giving you that panicked, ‘Oh my God, this woman’s a loon’ look, Mom? Do you? Ever notice the people at the store baggin’ your groceries a lotfaster than they do anybody else’s? Notice waiters dropping your food off as they practically run past your table — never, ever to return? Did’ya think it was just bad service, Mom? Did’ya? Cuz I got news for you, you snap-dragon. It wasn’t! It was service for the insane!

“We’re just normal kids, Mom! All kids like malted milk balls, you vain, petty, messed-up, mean-spirited, rotten-to-the-core nightmare!

David said those things to his mother.

With his arm around his sister, whom he loved with a dedication canine in its intensity, he looked straight at his mother, and said those things to her.

He saved his sister Carol.

He saved her! He saved her! He saved her!

Except he didn’t. Throughout his speech and afterwards his mom continued glaring at his sister. His sister, seemingly unaware of the hero at her side, continued staring down at the bowl of malted milk balls, her mouth a flat smear of wretchedness.

David felt another pang in his left hand, the one around Carol’s shoulder.

He looked at his mom. He looked at Carol. He looked at the kid who looked so much like him, the kid whose hand was hurting him because of how much his mom was squeezing it.

It was like none of them had seen or heard him at all. It was like David had done nothing whatsoever to defend his sister against their mother. It’s like he had just stood there, with that kid, and watched her suffer.

Okay, I’m Back! But Just For This One!

In Fiction on September 28, 2007 at 5:09 pm

Here’s a short story I’ve lately been goofing around with. It’s called:

Fathers, Sons

Once upon a time there was a little boy named Oscy McGee. Oscy thought his parents were geeks. He didn’t want to think that –but there it was.

“Hey, Os!” said his dad, nudging him. “What say you and I go down to the roller skating rink, and watch the babes strappin’ on their skates? Huh? Huh? Whadda’ya say, big guy?”

“Gee, Dad,” said Oscy. “Do you really think that’s an appropriate thing to be asking your eight-year-old son?”

“Oh, Oscy,” said Oscy’s mom, Fatima, setting down some delicious baked goods on the dining room table. “Don’t be such a stick in the mud. Here. Cram a cupcake down your face.”

“But, Mom,” said Oscy. “Mmmmpphhrumph.”

One Sunday morning Oscy woke up in his completely-decorated-in-houndstooth bedroom, and felt a voice inside him saying, “OSCY, IF YOU SPEND ONE MORE NIGHT IN THIS HOUSE, YOU’RE GOING TO GO INSANE. GO LIVE IN THE TREE HOUSE IN YOUR BACKYARD.”

“Wow,” thought Oscy, “I knew I should have made Dad build a better floor in that tree house. Oh, well. I’m outta here.”

At the family breakfast table that morning, Oscy said, “Mom, Dad, sorry, but it looks like I’ll be moving outside into the tree house to live.”

“What?” said Oscy’s mom, plopping a giant scoop of oatmeal into the bowl of Oscy’s dad. “I didn’t hear you, dear.”

“I said I’m gonna be moving out of the house to go live in the tree house in the backyard, Mom.”

“What?” she repeated. “How’s that again?” Her hearing was fine, though.

“Say, son,” said Oscy’s dad, “that’s a grand idea! The tree house! You can live in the tree house! It’s outside! The tree house is outside! If you move out there, that’s where you’ll be! Yep! Pass the sugar and those little fried things, will ya’, Fatty?” (That was his nickname for his wife.)

It didn’t take Oscy long to pack: A pair of shoes, a navy blue bandana or two, a box of delicious Juicy Fruit gum.

“Well, bye, Mom,” he said.

“Huh? What?”

“See ya’ around, Dad.”

“Adios, son,” said his dad. “And listen: If ya’ ever get into any trouble or anythin, you’re gonna need your old man to bail ya’ out, aren’t ya?”

“Yeah, Dad.”

Oscy’s dad put his arm around his shoulder. “Aren’t ya’, boy?” he said, squeezing.

“Yeah, Dad.”

“Aren’t ya’?”

“Yeah, Dad.”

He squeezed harder. “Aren’t ya?”

“Yeah, Dad.”

His dad released Oscy. “And don’t you forget it, either, ya’ little knucklehead.”

“I won’t, Dad. Good-bye, now.”

Oscy loved living in the tree house among the branches, leaves, birds, and ants, whose regimental approach to life caused him such wonder. At night he would crawl under a stack of old blankets and look up through the leaves at the stars. When he slept, he usually dreamed he was a giant iceman living in a crystal palace in the side of a mountain in the North Pole. Whenever Giant Ice Oscy wanted something, he had merely to point and will it, and it was done.

Early one Saturday morning, while lying on his back in his tree house watching a flittering finch in the braches above, Oscy heard the front door of his ex-house slam shut. He rolled on his stomach to look out over the edge of his tree house, and saw his father walking from the house to the garage. Dressed in his “weekend grubbies,” as he called them, his dad was clearly planning to do some yard work. He hauled open the garage door and began gathering the tools for the job: hedge clippers, power mower, electric grass trimmer, branch pulverizer. He set them all on the driveway.

Then he stood with his hands on his hips, contentedly surveying the grounds around him. “Yep,” he said. “Yard work. That’ll do ‘er.”

The problem, though, was that there wasn’t any yard to work on at all. Except for Oscy’s tree, the entire McGee “yard” consisted of nothing but spray-painted green cement.

Which, of course, explained why the McGee yard care equipment was in such pristine condition.

“Yep,” said Oscy’s dad again. “Time to trim the ol’ yard up.” He rocked back on his heels, happy to think of getting some of that good soil under his nails, of shaping and perfecting the yard around his house. He never moved from that spot, though. He just stood there, rocking back and forth, patting his stomach and saying, “Yep. Yard work. That’ll do ‘er.”

Oscy wiggled closer to the edge of the tree house. He thought he might call something out, like-”Hey, Dad! It’s me! Oscy! I’m still out here! Remember how I moved out here to live and everything? Remember that?”

He tried to say that, or something like it. But when he opened his mouth, the only thing that came out was a weird little wheezing noise. Nothing. Still, though, his father cocked an ear, as if he’d actually heard something.

“What?” he said, peering off into the distance. “How’zat?”

Oscy tried once more to say something, but he knew it would be useless; like his mother, his father sometimes just couldn’t hear him. He slowly rolled onto his back again, and rested his clasped hands upon his chest. The rapid flickering of the sunlight through the leaves made him feel like he was in a silent movie, starring one of those Oldye Timey guys who was always supposed to be so funny. It was like he was in a movie that had begun to play a very, very long time ago, and that wouldn’t stop playing for a very long time to come.

Walter the Clown

In Fiction on June 30, 2007 at 4:10 pm

Wanna read one of my short stories? Great! Here it is!

 

Walter the Clown

by John Shore

 

Once upon a time there lived a little boy named Walter Hobnob. Walter was eight years old. His mom and dad were named, appropriately enough, Mom and Dad. They’d had their regular names—Spiff and Windy—changed just as soon as they’d had their little bouncing baby boy.

Those Hobnobs. They sure took life seriously.

Their son didn’t, though. Why, that boy was just a regular clown.

“Hey,” says Walter, “anybody seen my big red floppy rubber shoes?”

“Now, come on, Walt,” said his dad, Dad. “I want you to take off that silly fright wig and that ridiculous red nose right this very instant. I’m serious. I want you to start acting normal, young man—and I mean right now.”

“I’ll sure try, Dad,” said Walter sincerely. Almost immediately, though, he turned into a clown again. “But first, how about a nice big sniff of this flower I have buttoned to my lapel?”

No matter what his parents did, or how they threatened and cajoled, for the life of them they couldn’t get their little Walter to stop behaving—and dressing—like a circus clown.

“Where does he get it?” moaned his dad.

“Maybe one of us has clowns in our family tree,” suggested Mom. “You know: maybe Walter inherited the clown gene.”

“Hmmm,” said Dad. “Any clowns in your family that you know of?”
            Mom thought about it for a minute, and then said, “No. Yours?”

            “No,” said Dad resolutely. “Never.”

            So, that wasn’t it.

 

            Walter’s acting like a clown all the time wore pretty thin pretty quickly on the powers-that-be at Walter’s public school, the Play Along Elementary Drill House.

            The principle of the school called up his parents.

            “He hit another boy in the face today with a cream pie!”

            His teacher called, too.

            “He pulled on his big polka-dot tie today, and his pants flew up and down his suspenders like a window blind! And that underwear!”

            “Sorry,” said Dad.

            “Sorry,” said Mom.

            They went to Walter.

            “Son,” they said, “what’s the matter with you? Don’t you know how you hurt and disappoint us when you insist on wearing that orange wig and those huge red shoes? I mean, look at us. We’re normal people. Normal people have normal children. But what happened to you?”

            Walter made the saddest face imaginable, with his red painted frown, and slowly blinked his big, heavily mascaraed eyes a few times.

            “Sorry,” he said, looking up at them.

            And he was sorry, too, when about a year later his parents finally kicked him out of the house. He had just come home from school, and when his mom and dad saw that he was wearing a brand new bright blue fright wig, apparently the same thing in both of them snapped.

            “All right!” they said, throwing him out the door. “That’s it!” Hurling behind him his favorite red and white checkered pants and his big red shoes and his spare round nose, they said, “We just can’t take being Bozo’s parents another day! Bye! Write us when you get normal!”

            “But, Mom!” cried Walter. “Dad! You can’t kick me out this way! How will I survive?”

            “You’ll do fine,” they said. “Everybody loves a clown. But remember, Walter: Nobody wants to live with one!”

            They slammed the door; and that was that.

            Walter was so crestfallen that he plopped down onto the lawn, right there in front of this ex-house. Pretty soon a little dog came by, a mutt. When it saw Walter, it ran right over to him and started jumping around and trying to lick his face, the way some dogs do.

            “Hey, big fella,” said Walter. “Sit.”

            The dog sat.

            “Speak,” said Walter.

            The dog arfed.

            “Roll over,” said Walter. The dog flipped onto his back and happily pawed the air.

            “Close enough!”” said Walter. “You’re some dog. Mind if I call you Spot, since you have that great spot? Want me to do some tricks for you, Spot? Watch this.” He pulled three colored balls out of his coat pocket and started juggling them. “Pretty cool, ‘eh?” he said. “Can you believe I got kicked out of my house?”

            Right down the block from Walther’s house was a school bus stop. As Walter was juggling, a bunch of kids was just piling off the bus after a hard day spent adding numbers and spelling and trying to figure out maps and so on.

            “Hey, look!” yelled one of the kids. “It’s Walter! He’s juggling! And who’s that ugly little kid with him? C’mon, you guys!” They all came over to see Walter and the kid who turned out to be a dog.

            All the kids loved Walter. They always had. Walter was their kind of guy.

            “Hey, Walt!” they said. “What’re all yer clothes doin’ outside?”

            Walter stood up and pantomimed the whole story of how his parents had thrown him out of the house.

            Once the kids understood what happened, they were outraged.

            “That’s ridiculous!” said one particularly hearty kid, chubby Andy Watkins.

            “Sure is!” everyone agreed. Then somebody said, “C’mon! Let’s go build our pal Walter his own circus, so that he can have a place where he’ll always belong!”

            All the kids roared their approval—and in about a week, way on the outskirts of town in the middle of a big empty field, those industrious little dreamers had finished building “Walter’s Circus,” complete with a big-top and sawdust rings and wooden bleachers, and everything.

            Almost immediately, people started pouring in from miles around to see the new circus.

            And all of the kids in the neighborhood moved out of their houses and came to work in the circus with Walter.

            There was Mikey, The Boy Who Does About a Million Summersaults And Then Walks Like He’s Drunk!

            There was Sharon, The Girl Who Can Spit A Watermelon Seed Practically 15 Feet!    

There was Ruthie and Angela Ronzo, Twins Who Can Dress So Alike You Can Barely Tell Them Apart!

            There was Andy, The Kid Who Can Eat Almost A Whole Pie If It’s Cherry!

            Admission to the circus, all acts included, was fifty cents—except for all the parents in Walter’s town. They had to pay a thousand dollars a piece to get in. And even then, they were only allowed to see the permanent, boring displays, like the papier-mache animals and the lame wax sculptures. And they had to look at those through a small, low, narrow window, which the kids encouraged Spot to keep nice and smudgy.

 

 

The Story of My Life

In Autobiography, Fiction, Humor on May 1, 2007 at 5:43 am

Here’s the first piece of fiction I ever published. It appeared in a little literary magazine called Amaranth, out of … Phoenix, I believe.

The Story of My Life

Once upon a time there lived a man named Dewey Watkins, and his wife Bipsy. Dewey and Bipsy lived in a pretty pink house on a big broad street in a whole neighborhood of pretty houses. The roof on their home was painted a happy kelly green. Sometimes, especially in lovely weather, their roof would hover just a few inches above their house.

Dewey and Bipsy would be at home, watching television or dusting, and they’d notice a thin strip of blue sky lining the top of their living room.

“Look!” says Bipsy. “Roof’s up again!”

“Isn’t that the absolute darndest thing?” says Dewey. 

Dewey worked at the Spongee Bread factory. His job was to make sure that each and every loaf that made it into the red-checkered Spongee Bread bag was suitably soft and pliant. He sat on a stool before a conveyor belt that slowly moved past him a never-ending train of Spongee bread loaves. With an expert touch, Dewey would reach out and prod each one. If his little poke mark hadn’t disappeared in about two seconds, well then, that loaf of bread just didn’t have what it took to be a Spongee loaf. 

“Too bad,” says Dewey, tossing the loaf over his shoulder.

When Dewey came home after work, there was nothing he enjoyed better than to have his humongous black dog Slicko gnaw on his toes. As soon as Slicko heard that door latch give, he would stop whatever he was doing and come lumbering right over, dead anxious to wrap his gums around the toes of Dewey’s wedgies. (And gums it was, for Slicko had no teeth. Something happened to them.) 

Every day Dewey would stand just inside the doorway, holding his lunch pail, while ol’ Slicko gummed his toes. 

“Hi, honey!” he’s say, waving to Bipsy. “I’m home!” 

One night, after a heart-warming dinner of cubed avocados and mutton, Bipsy slowly put down her fork, a sparkle dancing in her eye. 

“Oh, pipsy-poo,” she said coyly. 

“Yes, honey-wunny?” 

“I’ve got a surprise for you.” 

Dewey, his face the picture of wide-eyed wonder, said, “What a ‘surprise,’ Bipsy?” 

“A surprise, Dewey, is something that you could never, ever imagine, no matter how hard you tried, not in a million, trillion years.” 

“Oh,” said Dewey. 

“You’ll never guess what it is.” 

“I guess not!” said Dewey happily. 

“It’s a baby!” said Bipsy. She jumped up from the table and walked proudly over to the kitchen pantry. She reached inside, and slowly pulled out a little burbling baby boy, all wrapped up in blue and pink blankets. She held it in her arms so that Dewey could see its little face. 

Dewey quickly pushed back his chair a few feet. 

“Oh, that’s a white one!” he said. Then, watching the baby, a smile came over his face. He held out his arms. “Toss it to me.” 

Bipsy said, “Now, Dewey, you big sinister idiot, this is a little baby boy, not a Frisbee. It just came today.” She gazed lovingly at the baby. “Someday, this baby will make us happy.” 

“Great!” said Dewey. “When?” 

“Someday,” said Bipsy. “I just know it. Why, it’ll wear little red and white striped hats, and eat delicious marshmallows and sweet Hostess Twinkies, and call to us sometimes.” 

“It will?” asked Dewey. “Why?” 

“Well, like if it got stuck up in a tree. Or maybe it will try to swim, but then sink like a rock. Who do you think our baby will call to, if not to us?” 

“Nobody,” said Dewey earnestly. 

“That’s right. Nobody. Just to us. And if this baby ever needs us, why, we’ll just come a’ runnin’, because that’s what babies are for. And that what we’re for now, Dewey: To live and breathe and spend every moment of our lives now just trying to be of service to this little critter.” 

Dewey swallowed a bit of avocado. “Can I still go to work?” he asked. 

“Yes. And I will, too, whenever I want to. But at first I won’t want to. I’ll just want to stay with this baby, and cuddle it all the time, and tickle it, and clean out its ears with a wet cloth. Oh, won’t it be wonderful, Dewey? Won’t we just be the most wonderful little family ever assembled under one roof?” 

“You bet we will!” exclaimed Dewey. He held out his arms again. “C’mon, Bipsy. Let me hold the little son of a gun.” Bipsy gently handed the baby to Dewey, who cradled it lovingly in his arms. 

“Gee,” said Dewey, “It barely looks human.” 

“Yes it does,” said Bipsy. “It looks like you.” 

They both stared at the baby for a moment, and then Bipsy remembered that she still had a ton of laundry to do. 

“I’ve got to go do laundry, honey schnookums,” she said. As she disappeared through the kitchen side door out in to the garage, she wiggled her fingers good-bye. 

Dewey continued to look at the baby, who was staring intently at the light above the dining room table. 

Suddenly, Dewey felt an itch on the top of his left foot. Bending forward to give it a good scratching, he accidentally knocked the side of the baby’s head against the table. Although it was only a light rap, it left a slightly sunken spot on the baby’s head. Dewey watched that spot, expecting it to quickly pop back into shape. The impression stayed just where it was, however. 

“Too bad,” said Dewey, tossing the baby over his shoulder. 

The End. 

Hi. John here again.

So. That’s … that … story. 

Art. There’s just explaining it, is there?