online lit — BARRELHOUSE

Happy Thanksgiving

By Jeffrey R. Schrecongost

 

— Matt Perez

 

thanksgiving.jpg

“He’s the wolf screaming lonely in the night.
He’s the blood stain on the stage.”

-- Motley Crue, “Shout at the Devil”

Thanksgiving night, 1997.


     “Happy Thanksgiving,” Carl said.
     “Speak for yourself, scumbag,” a burly, bearded man in the front row replied.
     Carl winced, and the band began to play. Their typical set list was comprised of original, upbeat, power pop tunes and extended, often psychedelic, improvisational jams extolling the virtues of peace, love, tolerance, and non-narcotic drug abuse. Betty demanded rage, but Carl wanted to maintain the band’s artistic vision. He wasn’t going to fold without a fight:


1. “Let Me Be Your Joy Pill”
The band’s opening tune, “Pill” combined funk beats and melodic bass grooves with racy lyrics and swirling guitar riffs. The line, “Put me in your mouth and let me dissolve,” was a tidy summary of the band’s philosophy of sexual intimacy.


2. “Smile For No Reason”
This unapologetically optimistic song spoke to the emotional benefits of smiling at all times. An eight minute jazz-rock workout, its zenith was the line, “At your boss’ bad breath or in the face of death, smile for no reason.”


3. “The Upside of Home Invasion”
An effort to encourage understanding and sympathy for those less fortunate, “Invasion” tackled economic injustice from a Marxist perspective. It lurched forward with a good time, reggae feel. Most memorable line: “You might get tied up, you might get beaten, but how long has it been since your attacker has eaten?”


* * *


     Carl Jung and the Restless was a four-piece band, with twenty-six-year-old Carl Young on tambourine and lead vocals. Tall, thin, with long, curly, black hair and a handlebar moustache, he had a fluid, breathy singing voice and an effeminate manner on stage that would catch and hold the lustful attention of every woman in the audience. When performing, he donned beaded necklaces, tiny, unbuttoned women’s blouses, skin-tight blue jeans, and cowboy boots. For added effect Carl would, minutes before each gig, strategically position in his jeans a cucumber and two small, red potatoes. This ploy could backfire at times, for if his jeans were not tight enough, one or both of his potatoes would shift to anatomically impossible locations, infuriating the women in the audience (“How could you?” they’d scream).
     Jon “Machine Gun” Dunn, twenty-four, played drums. His stocky frame and imposing, red afro mirrored his powerful, percussive style. Skilled in jazz and Latin rhythms, he could glide from soft and subtle to freight train intensity. Jon didn’t place much importance on his stage look. He pounded the skins and cymbals of his fifteen piece set in nothing but baggy, white, Fruit of the Loom briefs.
     Harry “Rock the Room” Bloome, thirty, was the bass player. Perhaps the grooviest man in Clarkton, Harry looked like Ricardo Montalbon. He was acutely aware of the resemblance and wore a white suit and shirt with a black tie and black, patent leather shoes on stage. He plucked his bass with an authority and funky ferocity that made the other Clarkton-area bass players sound like struggling beginners.
     Finally, there was “Daring” Darren Corvalis, twenty-eight, on guitar. A child prodigy, Darren could play any style, any song, flawlessly. His solos, picked with fierce, mathematical precision, pulled audiences into aural fantasy lands. In contrast to Harry, he was completely bald and sported a black suit and shirt with a white tie and white, patent leather shoes, fueling rumors he’d sold his soul to Satan in return for guitar prowess. Darren did not deny this rumor.
     Carl Jung and the Restless had never played Betty’s Lounge, or any place like it, before. Gigging professionally together for only just over a year, they stuck to the college bar circuit, peaceful, outdoor music festivals, and the occasional wedding reception. But when Wink Pike and the Bullshitters cancelled at the last minute (Wink claimed he’d damaged his left testicle in a “hunting accident”), Betty’s niece, Lana, a Carl Jung and the Restless groupie, suggested Betty book the band.


* * *

     Despite a thirty-degrees-below-zero wind chill factor, Betty’s Lounge was filled to capacity. Not unusual, for the Thanksgiving night show at Betty’s had been a Clarkton tradition for fifteen years. 
     The place was small, with a bar on the left stretching from the entrance to the restrooms in the back. Fourteen battered, aluminum tables with four rickety chairs at each table filled the space in front of the half-circle stage. 
     Framed photographs of past PBA bowling champions and outlaw artists like Johnny Cash, Hunter S. Thompson, and Ken Kesey covered much of the pink and black-striped walls. Large glass jars of hard-boiled eggs drowning in rotgut whiskey and fist-sized sausages cemented in a gelatinous goo were lined up along the scratched, wooden bar top. Soupy clouds of cigarette smoke hung just below the ceiling, nudged back and forth by the exhalations of boozy-breathed patrons.
     Everyone was a regular, and they were an angry lot – a bat shit anger usually misplaced and stemming from a sharp hatred of their physically demanding, low-paying, and uninspiring jobs at the Grimes Hot Dogs plant across the highway. They resented those with white-collar careers, much money, and few problems, reclining joy-stoned before big, fancy fireplaces with their joy-stoned spouses and joy-stoned children.
     Betty’s clientele had little money, many problems, and nothing much to be thankful for, and, for them, Thanksgiving was almost as foul as Christmas.
     Several times a night patrons would step outside Betty’s, round the corner, light a cigarette, lean back against the gray, cinder block wall, and glower at the lights above the plant. Their sloshy, clamorous voices competing with the screaming highway, they cursed the pork-grinding behemoth until it got too cold to light up another smoke.
     Betty’s Lounge was an outlet for their collective rage, and they preferred a style of live music that reflected this rage. Cover bands at Betty’s were encouraged to play bitter, gutbucket blues numbers and provocative, heavy rock songs like Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Gimme Back My Bullets,” AC/DC’s “Highway To Hell,” The Rolling Stones’ “Bitch,” and The Kinks’ “Destroyer.” And anything by Motley Crue would drive the unstable crowd into a blissful, street fighting frenzy.
     Betty, a tall cornstalk in her late-fifties with thinning, jet-black hair, no eyelashes, and no eyebrows, served only four, rage-fueling drinks: whiskey and Coke, whiskey on the rocks, whiskey straight up, and, for those with pesky stomach problems, whiskey and whole milk. Because she didn’t have eyelashes or eyebrows, she was as angry as her customers, often spewing a hell-broth of profane insults and serious threats from her perch behind the bar.
     After the band’s audition on Thanksgiving eve, Betty shook her head in disgust and said, “You pansies suck ass-cheese, but it’s too late to book anyone else. There’s no cover charge on Thanksgiving, so I’ll pay you a percentage of the bar revenue. Remember, these people are pissed off, and they’ll want to get more pissed off. The more pissed off they get, the more whiskey they drink. The more whiskey they drink, the more money you’ll make. Choose your fucking songs wisely, and be here at five tomorrow night to set up. Show starts at nine.”
     “But we don’t have any anger songs,” Carl said. “I mean, we all used to be in rage-metal bands before we formed Carl Jung and the Restless, but we quit those bands because we wanted a sound more Brian Wilson, less Phil Spector.” 
     “That’s your problem, fruitcake,” Betty said as she hurried back to her office.
     Carl stuck out his tongue and menacingly shook his tambourine in her direction.
     “Okay, guys,” he said, “Just in case we need them, everybody pick a few tunes from the rage-metal days, and we’ll run through them tonight.”


* * *
 

     When the band finished their third tune, they were met with silence. They soldiered on:


4. “Be Patient At The Post Office”
An elegant, slow-moving tune pleading for empathy when in line at the Post Office. A riveting tambourine solo, followed by the line, “They work so hard, north, south, and coastal. Don’t make ’em mad, don’t make ’em go postal,” gave this song an unexpected boost.


5. “Beloved Sunshine, Part One”
Perhaps the band’s most poignant song, “Sunshine” faded in with a classical guitar clinic, then exploded with breathtaking, four-part, lyric-less, a cappella harmony. The vocal high-wire act then dissolved into more classical guitar, followed by more a cappella harmony. The band repeated this pattern eleven times, with the climax being the “Oooooooooaaaaaaaaaoooooooooaaaaaaaaa” section of the bridge.


* * *


      “It’s not working,” Harry whispered, leaning over toward Carl. “Nobody’s drinking anything. We’re not gonna get paid, man.”
     “We’ve gotta finish the set,” Carl said. “We believe in our music. It’s about the love, man.”
     Harry shrugged, Carl snapped his fingers, and the band plunged into the last half of the first set:


6. “I Had A Dirty Dream About You Last Night”
A steamy number addressing the psychology of erotic, nocturnal fantasy, it began with a primal, Native American, ceremonial-style drum sequence, then drifted into a nearly plagiarized, “The Way We Were”-like opus. Best line: “I tried to make love in ways never tried. Some requests were granted, some requests denied.”


7. “Help Me Make It Across The Damned Bridge”
An unusual track delving into bridge-crossing anxiety. The band started off with a manic bass and drum flurry, followed by an in-and-out, hard-driving rock groove that mirrored the I’m-about-to-pass-out panic all four band members suffered when crossing bridges. The setting? The bridge to Arlington National Cemetery. The line, “Airplanes overhead, Potomac below, never should’ve left the Lincoln Memorial, you know?” nicely summed up The Fear.


8. “Beloved Sunshine, Part Two”
See song five.


9. “Good Lookin’ Woman In A Baseball Cap”
This tune explored Young’s affinity for attractive women in baseball caps. A simple, straightforward, country-rock song, “Cap” combined Spanish guitar with subtle percussion and understated vocals. Best line: “When you wear your baseball cap, I feel a tingle in my lap.”


10. “You Wanna Break Up, But I Don’t”
The last song of the band’s set - and their masterpiece - “Don’t” was a fourteen minute meditation on how breaking up is difficult if one person doesn’t want to break up and the other person does. The band really came together on this ballad, with the drums, bass, guitar, and vocals working together in unison to paint a musical picture of despair and confusion. Last line of the song: “I admit I’ve slept around and stole some money from your purse. But, babe, don’t let me down. After all, it could be worse.”


* * *


     Again, silence. Not even the tinkling of ice in glasses.
     “Thank you,” Carl said. “We’re gonna take a short break. We’ll be back in about twenty minutes.” 
     “Fuckin’ A, Nikki!” said a woman in the back standing on a table.
     “Who’s Nikki?” Darren said.
     Carl shrugged, and the band walked off the stage, past the restrooms, and out the back door into the icy air. Betty leapt over the bar and followed at their heels.
     “What the hell do you think you’re doing?” she said. “I haven’t sold shit all night but whiskey and Coke with no whiskey. And glasses of ice! You’re putting people to sleep. This peace, love, and understanding crap ain’t gonna pay the bills, you twerps.”
     The band members looked down at their feet, then Jon said, “We’ve got a set of songs that might piss people off. From our rage-metal days. We sort of reinterpreted them last night. Gave them a Carl Jung and the Restless edge. We think they’re sufficiently vile.”
     “Now that’s the spirit,” Betty said, then she stormed back into the lounge, slamming the door behind her.
     Carl puckered his lips and shook his tambourine at the door.
     “Sorry guys,” he said. “I hate to compromise our ideals.”
     “We need the bread, man,” Darren said. “I need a new black suit. No one who’s sold his soul to Satan walks around with missing cuff buttons.”
     “I heard that,” Harry said. “I could use some new ties. I mean, Mr. Rourke probably had, like, fifty of ’em.”
     “And I need some new underwear,” Jon said.
     “Okay, okay,” Carl said. “Let’s do it.”


* * *


     Carl stepped up to his microphone and gazed through the smoke at the not-all-that-pissed-off audience. 
     “We hope you like these songs. We want you to be as angry as possible.”
     “Fuckin’ A, Nikki!” the burly man in front said.
     “You know, he’s right?” Carl said. “Fuckin’ A, Nikki!” then snapped his fingers four times, and the band began their “Hate and Rage” set:

 

1. “I Never Really Liked You”
In stark contrast to “Let Me Be Your Joy Pill,” this bitter little opening number explored the moment when one reveals to another that, for all these years, any hint of affection was nothing more than cold, calculated manipulation. An aggressive rocker, the bass and drums provided the thunder, while the guitar lines wept in betrayal. Best line: “You thought it was all Christmas mornings and motherhumpin’ honey, but, you beast, you swine, I was only after your money.”


2. “Bliss Sucks”
An ironic piece, with a delicate, bucolic acoustic guitar melody floating behind lyrics like, “We hold hands, laugh, and very gently kiss, but to tell you the truth, I hate your bliss.”
3. “Your Butt Looks Fat In That Dress”


A commentary on the perplexing, damned-if-you-do-damned-if-you-don’t, “Does my butt look fat in this dress?” phenomenon, this tune was a funk-fest. Heavy slap bass and wah-wah guitar licks joined lines like, “I’ve been lying for years, but I’ll tell you tonight, it’s your butt in that dress that makes it look tight.”


* * *


     The band finished their third song. 
     Silence. 
     Carl looked at Harry. Harry shrugged. Jon twirled his drum stick. Darren fiddled with his amplifier. 
     Then the burly man said, “That shit pisses me off. Yeah!”
     There was a mad rush to the bar. Loud applause. A fight broke out near the restrooms. Betty looked at the band and grinned, giving them a thumbs-up.
     The band ventured into the middle of the set list:

4. “Kill The Whales And The Dolphins, Too”
A call to hunt and kill defenseless sea creatures, this ugly tune included guitar licks that mimicked whale and dolphin calls. Memorable line: “Let’s eat her blubber, if she complains, just club her.”


5. “Smelling Like Hot Dogs”
A shot at the heart of the crowd’s anger, “Dogs” reminded the audience of their miserable work environment at the plant. Punctuated by a brief, wicked drum solo, the tune exponentially upped the tension in the lounge. Best line: “The odor of pork seems always to linger. Is that a hot dog or my co-worker’s finger?”


6. “Pollute The World”
Here, the band again sang a cappella, four-part harmony. Borrowing the melody of “We Are The World,” the soaring vocal blend peaked with the line, “Pollute the world, pollute the future, together we can make life hell for humanity.”


* * *

     Pandemonium. Shouting. Huge applause. Five deep at the bar. More fights. Chairs flying. Tables tipped over. The band went into their last two songs:


7. “Hold A Grudge”
“Grudge” criticized the concept of forgiveness as an exercise in futility. Imploring the crowd to stay angry, the aggressive rocker pulsated with a repetitive, nasty-sounding rhythm. Of particular interest was the line, “Turning the other cheek means you’re a gutless wimp. On revenge don’t skimp.”


8. “Punch Your Buddy”
The band concluded the show with this warhorse rocker. A nine minute, in-your-face jam celebrating assault and battery, the tune began and ended with primal scream vocals. No musical accompaniment. Just vocal chord-shredding screams.


* * *


     The crowd was uncontrollable. Never in Betty’s Lounge had so much anger been felt so deeply by so many.  
     The burly man jumped on stage, took a swing at Carl, missed badly, and said, “I just wanted to thank you, man. I haven’t been this angry in a long, long time.”
     “Thanks, buddy,” Carl said. “We did our best.”
     An hour later, patrons were still demanding whiskey, still fighting, still destroying property. From behind the bar Betty grabbed a battery-powered bullhorn and warned the rabid crowd she’d track them down one by one and ruin their lives if they didn’t leave at once. No one doubted her, and they exited the lounge long-faced but in an orderly fashion. She locked the doors and jogged over to the stage as the band was packing up their gear.
     “You girls made me proud tonight. You really showed me something. I’d kiss you if I weren’t so pissed off,” she said. “I thought I was gonna run out of whiskey.”
     “Thanks,” the band said simultaneously.
     “Here,” she said, handing Carl a manila envelope. “There’s three grand in there.”
     The bandmates looked at each other, eyes wide.
     Betty stepped backward toward the bar.
     “You come up with more songs like the ones you did in your second set,” she said, “and I’ll book you for Christmas Eve. Talk about a pissed off crowd. Fuckin’ A, Nikki!”
     Harry, Jon, and Darren looked at Carl.
     “Why not,” Carl said, shaking his tambourine. “To hell with peace and love. Rage is where it’s at. Rage never left. Plus, I could use a few new blouses.”


* * *


     Carl Jung and the Restless changed their name to Bitter Scowle and the Despicables and played the Christmas Eve gig at Betty’s Lounge. The show was a tremendous success - fourteen patrons were injured and the men’s room toilet was blown to pieces by a small pipe bomb concealed under the rim. Every ounce of the bar’s whiskey was consumed. The band made eight thousand dollars, by far their biggest payday to date. 
     Betty booked the band every weekend for the next three years. Bitter Scowle and the Despicables were the most in-demand group in Clarkton. Then came offers for out-of-town gigs. Even a few in the big city. After a gig at a violent barn dance in Doddsville a greasy talent scout from Dillydally Records offered the band a recording contract, and they accepted, signing the papers on the hood of a beat-up DeLorean.
     The band’s first album with Dillydally, Hate Thy Neighbor, peaked at number ninety-nine on the Billboard Top 100 list, then tumbled off the charts. Dillydally, disgusted with the band’s embarrassing sales figures, soon dropped Bitter Scowle and the Despicables from the label, leaving the band with a $100,000 debt to the record company. Album sales covered neither the promotion nor the outrageous tour expenses ($15,000 for whiskey, $10,000 for room service, $18,000 for blouses, ties, black suits, Fruit of the Loom underwear, drugs, etc.).
     The song was over. The circus left town. The band broke up.
     What are they doing now?


Jon “Machine Gun” Dunn sold his drum set and is now an underwear model for JC Penney. He lives in Malibu, California, with his wife, soap opera star Eileen Marsh.


Harry “Rock the Room” Bloome plays bass guitar for The Chandeliers, Carnival Cruise Lines’ Ocean Princess house band. His home the sea, he forever drifts on a melancholy quest for a thing he cannot name.


“Daring” Darren Corvalis is the lead guitarist for punk-rock-turned-New-Age-band, The Dirty Ashtrays. He lives on an imposing estate near Paris with his wife, French actress Claudette Mouliere. Last year he was voted Guitarist of the Decade in a Rolling Stone poll.


Carl Young, now a supervisor-in-training at Grimes Hot Dogs, married Betty in August, 2003. The pissed off couple live happily in an apartment atop Betty’s Lounge. Carl gave up singing because, well, Fuckin’ A, Nikki!   


Jeffrey R. Schrecongost received his M.F.A. from Converse College and currently teaches English at Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana and Spartanburg Community College. His work has appeared in South85 Journal, Blood Lotus, BlazeVOX, and Gadfly. He lives in Muncie, IN, with his loyal Golden Retriever, Molly. 

My Community Service Journal by Paris Hilton

By Ali Ruth

 

— Dave Housley

 

paris-hilton.jpg

Day 1:

Soooo I'm stuck here at Dancing Dolphin Indoor Waterpark for, like, a million hours until my probation officer says I'm done.  I'm missing all of spring fashion season because I have to sit at this shitty sign-in desk all day, talking to parents and their bratty little orphans and giving them orange plastic wristbands and keys to the locker room.  It sucks.  

Booooo journals.  Journals are for weird little brunette girls who wear glasses and have no friends.  I have a lot of friends, and one of them is even Lil Wayne.  

What I learned today:
Journals suck

Day 3: 

My probation officer says that my "What I learned today" section needs to be longer.  Which is stupid but also fine, because today I actually learned a lot.   

Zach (the lifeguard manager) came by the sign-in desk today.  Zach is a 2, but he could maaaaybe be a 3 if he were wearing sunglasses big enough to cover his weird eyebrows.

"Zaaaaaach," I said.  "Can I sit in the throne-chair?"
    
"You can't sit in that chair, Paris.  It's only for lifeguards."

"But it looks like the most important chair.  I wanna sit in it."

"No."
    
I pouted at Zach.  He didn't look at me. I pouted more.  He kept not looking. 
    
"What if I buy the throne-chair?  Then can I sit in it?"

"No."

Nevermind - Zach is definitely a 2.  He could never be a 3 because of his shitty personality.
    
What I learned today:
Zach has weird eyebrows and a shitty personality


Day 4:

My probation officer says that instead of writing about Zach's weird eyebrows, I should be writing about how I'm helping people.  Today I totally helped someone learn about friendship.  It was so special that I almost cried, and she actually did.  

This girl came up to the sign-in desk dripping wet, wearing an adorable little ruffled toddler bikini.  She was probably, like, three days old. She had a total model walk - a fashionista-in-training.  I decided that she might be a cool friend for me to have, so I gave her a friendship test:
    
"Hey," I said, "What's your name?"
    
She smiled at me.  She was missing tons of teeth. She was an orphan, for sure.
    
"MY NAME IS ASHLYN!"
    
"I like your bikini top, Ashlyn.  Can I have it?"
    
She yanked off her bikini top and handed it to me, still smiling.  But I didn't take it.  
    
"That was a friendship test, Ashlyn.  You failed.  Real friends don't steal each other's clothes.  That is, like, the main rule of friendship."
    
Ashlyn started crying.  I gave her more real talk -   
    
"See, now you have no friends and you're just topless and crying and wet.  I mean, I've been there.  But seriously, learn how to make friends."  

What I learned today:
Orphans are bad at making friends

Day 5:

My probation officer says I need to "connect more" with people.  Today I think I really connected.  Like, I connected so hard.

This dad came in with his four kids and was super friendly.  He told me that he had saved up for a year to take all his kids on vacation.  My face can't show that many emotions, but I tried to make an understanding face.  
    
"Hey - I know what it's like to struggle.  Ever since I got my eyelid enhancement surgery, my eyes get stuck sometimes when I'm trying to blink and I have to manually lift them back up. I even had to hire someone to open my eyes for me in the morning.  It's exhausterating."
    
He just stared at me, eyes wide open, like he was trying to rub it in that his eyelids worked perfectly.  Asshole. 
    
Later, I saw the dad and his sons in the hot tub through the glass window behind the sign-in desk.  It was so sad seeing them in there, splashing and laughing in all that hot water, like a poor person stew.  I told Zach how sad it made me feel and he just ignored me.  

What I learned today: 
Zach still sucks

Day 6: 

Today I asked Zach another important question.

"Zaaaaaaach," I said. "What do lifeguards even do, anyway?" 
    
"They save people from drowning."

"Drowning in debt?  Like if their brand goes under?"

"No, like if they are literally drowning.  In water."

It didn't sound that hard.  I could definitely do lifeguarding.
    
"Zach, I'm very comfortable in water.  I'd be a good lifeguard."
"Do you even know how to swim?"

I squished my boobs together and tilted my head at a cute angle.  I feel like one day I might get so bored here that I'll want to hook up with Zach, so I'm trying to keep my options open.

"I don't swim actually, mostly I just ride in boats.  Where's the waterpark for people who ride in boats?"

"The lake? It's a couple miles from here. And you definitely cannot be a lifeguard there."

I looked out the window but I couldn’t see the lake.

"I want to go to the lake."

"Well, you can't."

What I learned today:
You know who should actually be arrested for a DUI?  Zach.  Because he sucks.


Day 8:

Today I gave this amazing advice to a little girl whose mom was yelling at her.

The mom was dragging her kid towards the parking lot.  The girl was crying and saying "NOOOO!  I wanna stay, mommy!"

The mom shook her head and whispered really loud to me, "We had to leave because Jasmine couldn't stop chasing Dylan and trying to pull down his swimsuit, even though Dylan asked her to stop."  Then she turned to Jasmine and said in this annoying voice, "We need to spend more time listening to what people want and less time chasing boys, don't we?"

Jasmine glared at her mom.  I knew that look, but I also knew in my heart that Jasmine's mom was right.   

“She’s right, Jasmine.  At your age, what you should really be focusing on is your personal brand. Personal brand first, hot guys second. Once you've monetized your personal brand, you won’t even need to chase hot guys – you can just pay them to sleep with you.”
    
I should honestly be getting paid for community service.  I am doing good work.

What I learned today:
New business idea: Community service - how to monetize it as a brand?

Day 9:

The worst thing about community service is that it's boring.  The second worst thing is that I hate the people.  The third worst thing is that there aren't even any cameras around when I have a fight with someone.

Like, today this little girl recognized me.  She came up to the sign-in desk and said - 

“Pawis Hilton?  Fwom the TV?”

"Yeah, that's me. Hey, I like your goggles.  Can I have them?"

I didn't like her goggles - they were hideous.  But I was giving her a friendship test, and she passed.  The girl squinted at me and said,
    
"NO!  Mine."
    
Then a few seconds later, she said - 

"My name is Kayla!  Do you want to be my fwiend?"

"Sure, Kayla.  Why not.  It's not like I've found anyone cooler here."

Kayla smiled and said, "You have ve-wy pwetty hair."

"Oh, this?"  I said. "Yeah, I was worried 'cause it got so dried out when I was in prison, but it's gorgeous again now.  You should never go to prison, Kayla.  It's gross and everyone has to wear, like, the exact same outfit." 

Kayla nodded super fast.  

"I know, I know!  My stepbwother went to pwison once!"   

Hmmm, I thought.  I decided to let Kayla in on my newest business venture, since it seemed like she'd get it.

“Kayla, most people only know me for my hotness, but I’m not just a pretty face..."
    
I flipped my golden hair and paused so I could let the next words sink in:

"I’m also a freelance DJ.”
        
 Kayla smiled again and started jumping up and down.

"My stepbwother is a DJ!  He lives in the basement and watches TV.  Sometimes he comes up the stairs to ask Mommy for money."

I spit out my vodka-spiked Tazo.

"OMG, you have a beggar literally living in your house?! That is so gross."
I tried to make a grossed-out face.

"Ewww.  Anyway, my house has six basements."

Kayla stared at me for a while.  Then she said,  "You...you do not make a good fwiend."

I tried to throw my spiked Tazo in her face, but instead it just soaked the sign-in sheet.

"That's a falsery!  But you know what?  Whatever, Kayla. If you don't want to be my friend, fine.  Be that way.  You can’t come to my birthday party.  And Lil Wayne is going to be there, so that really sucks for you."
    
I paused so the cameras could film my "You just got burned!" expression.  Then I remembered that there weren't any cameras.

Kayla looked mad.  "You can't come to MY birthday party, either! And it's got a clown!"  

What I learned today:
If there are no cameras then what is the point even? 

Day 10: 

My probation officer says that I'm still not done with my hours - I won't be done until I "demonstrate a learned, lasting generosity of spirit."  She said blow jobs don't count.  So today I tried to honestly be giving.

I saw this old man in a bathing suit looking through the contents of a trashcan.  He was so old - probably a grandpa's grandpa.  I figured he was looking for food, so I left the sign-in desk to help him.  I walked over to the trashcan and handed him a Tic Tac on a paper plate.

"Here," I said.  "You should have this.  It's my favorite dinner.  It's totally filling, plus you don't even have to use Listerine before you go clubbing later."

He didn't take it, probably because he was embarrassed.  So I said - 

"It's ok - you don't have to be ashamed." I winked at him, but my eye got stuck.

"I'm - I'm looking for my son's goggles," he said.

"You mean your grandson?"

"No, my son.  Excuse me - what's wrong with your eye?"

I tried to lift my eyelid back up, but it wouldn't budge.  The man backed away from me and said - 

"You should see an eye doctor."

"Ummm, I can't, dummy - my octologist is on a yoga retreat."  

"Octologist?..."
    
 What I learned today:
 Need to hire a backup octologist


Day 12:

Today I had a major breakthrough.  I was sitting at the sign-in desk, bored as usual, when suddenly everything came together: I realized that my new crème foundation only looked shitty because the lighting at the sign-in desk was weird, not because my skin is blotchy.

"Zach," I said, "I just had a major breakthrough."

Zach wasn't listening - he was distracted by the voices on his dorky walkie-talkie thing.

"Zaaaaaach," I said again.

Zach turned around and yelled at me, his weird eyebrows jumping around - 

"What, Paris?!  What is it?  It better be important, because I'm kind of busy right now! Some kid just pooped in the baby pool, so unless you wanna come help me clean poop out of the baby pool, I don't wanna talk to you."

"Baby pool?  Is that, like, a pool for babies?"

"Yes."

"Is everyone at the baby pool a baby?  Like, even the lifeguard is a baby?"

Zach must not have heard me, because he just walked away.  But then, a mom came running up to the sign-in desk - 

"My daughter Madison is missing!  I have no idea where she is! What if she's been kidnapped?!"

I looked at her sad, wrinkly face.  She was holding a ratty little Louis Vitton bag from a million seasons ago.  She looked so poor - she probably couldn't even afford Ray Bans for her children.  I calmed her down with comforting words - 
    
"I doubt that she got kidnapped.  Her ransom would only be, like, five dollars."

The mom started crying.  

"Madison was just playing with Kayla, and then I looked away for a few seconds and suddenly Madison wasn't there!  I've searched the whole pool!"

Kayla!  That bitch.  Now I was interested. 

"Oh, Kayla's super bitchy.  I bet Kayla just said something mean, or tried to wear Madison's clothes or steal Madison's boyfriend.  That would be so Kayla."

The mom was still sniffling, but she looked at me with a wrinkly face full of hope.

"Would you help me look for Madison?"

I tried to think of where I hid the last time I was sad.  Then I had an idea.

"This one time, my friend Nicole and I got drunk on a kid's playground and then we got in a fight and the next thing I knew I woke up curled up in a ball inside of a spiral slide because I went in there to hide and cry because Nicole was being such a bitch."

The mom blinked through her tears and ran off to the water slide.  I watched through the glass window - there was a super long line of kids waiting at the slide.  The mom climbed up the little plastic stairs, squeezed her way into the slide and wriggled down. Eventually she slid out, holding Madison and hugging her and crying.  I saw the mom yell at Zach, who was walking by in rubber gloves.

Later, Zach came by the sign-in desk, not looking at me.

"You know, Zach," I said, .  "Even though that mom is poor, she is just like me.  Only one of us is hot, but we are both just people trying to get by.  And I'm pretty sure that both of us spiked our Tazo with vodka."

"PARIS, OH MY GOD.  You can not drink alcohol here!"

"Well, you shouldn't be letting parents lose their kids."

Burn!  Zach was quiet for a while.

"Zach - I'm a hero."

"All right."

"I saved a life today."

"Not really."

I flipped my hair at him, and tried one more time - 

"Now can I sit in the throne-chair?"

"No."

What I learned today:
I would be an amazing lifeguard, Zach.

Ali Ruth has written for The Rumpus and Reductress.  

A Brief Discussion About the Stupid Idea

This story was submitted through our Stupid Idea Junk Drawer, where our editors post their own stupid ideas for stories, poems, essays, or weird literary thingamagigs, and then review and either accept or reject stories, poems, essays, or weird literary thingamagigs based on the original stupid ideas. Following is a brief discussion with stupid idea generator Dave Housley and writer Ali Ruth. 

Dave Housley: This was a more fully formed idea than most of them and I really like where you took it. What was your initial thought when you saw the prompts? What was it that made you think you might want to devote some hours of your life to pursuing this stupid idea? 

Ali Ruth: What really intrigued me about this prompt was the very last bit - "preferably story is from her POV." I wrote a piece a while back for The Rumpus that satirized Susan Sontag, also in first person form.  The piece came together pretty quickly because her main medium is writing to begin with, so I'd just jump start my brain by reading her writing and her diaries and the voice came pretty easily after that.

Not so with Paris Hilton.  She primarily exists as a reality TV and media being, so it was obviously going to be much tougher to capture her persona in a text-only form.  I realized that this presented an utterly unique sort of challenge, and I just had to try it.

It helped that both of my sisters have been lifeguards - one even worked at an actual indoor water park, with slides and fountains and everything - so I've seen the visuals and heard the workday woes associated with that environment.

DH: I thought you did an amazing job with the Paris Hilton POV and that's mostly why I wanted to publish this piece. Things like calling the lifeguard chair the "throne chair" and asking "Where's the waterpark for people who ride in boats?" just seemed spot-on to me. It's like she's an alien who lives among the people at the waterpark but her existence has been so different that it really does feel like she's from another planet. How did you come to that voice, other than, you know, it may be fairly accurate of what it would be like for Paris Hilton to have to be in a place with normal people? 

AR: Ah, I'm so glad that came across! So in one episode of "The World According to Paris," Paris refers to incarcerated persons as "prison-people" and a police siren as a "light-thingy." She frequently uses wacky turns of phrase, and that is exactly what I was trying to mimic with phrases like "throne chair."

DH: This is the first round of Stupid Idea Junk Drawer prompts (more coming soon -- stupid ideas are a renewable resource at Barrelhouse) and to be honest I wasn't sure anybody would actually write to one of these things. Were you worried at all about spending some time writing a story based on a stupid idea of mine? 

AR:  I think the stupid idea junk drawer gets at something cool about the earliest part of the writing process - just the sheer mass of ideas that get thrown around.  Sometimes I have an idea that I think I might not be able to pull off or might not have time for, but I'm left wondering how it would have turned out if someone else had tried it. 

Also, I was thrilled by the opportunity to write a funny piece involving a totally unique process, and a process other than just submitting a random piece to Mcsweeneys and nowhere else.  The pop culture-ey creative/humor writing market feels really small and resistant to change sometimes, and I was just so excited to discover Barrelhouse and this feature. I hope it becomes a regular one. Even the ideas themselves made me laugh. The freshness was exciting, similar to how I felt when I started writing for Reductress.

Susie Rides a Bird, or Flights of Passage

By Jennifer Dane Clements

ORIGINAL PROMPT FROM THE STUPID IDEA JUNK DRAWER
Susie rides a bird.

— Matt Perez

susie-bird.jpg

HER 17TH BIRTHDAY
It should come as no surprise that my permit picture is horrid. My hair looks too candyfloss and my eyes have gone pistachio and I can’t imagine anyone will take seriously my status as a newly minted adult. Adults are sewn together so the stitches don’t show, and in this picture I am nothing but knotted twine--can this be true? I suppose the man who inked my likeness onto the permit was tired. It was late in the day and his knuckles creaked like bedsprings whenever he shifted his pen; it would have been unkind to ask for a revision. Instead I am alone in the bathroom, crouching on the ledge beside the sink and maneuvering to rearrange my features. My hair, at least, I can color with berries or chop off with my penknife. But how does one change her eyes? Someday I will be old enough not to feel things so intensely and my stitches will melt into subtle seams. 

A RIDE OF HER OWN
I step onto the sales lot expecting to be approached by a three-foot mustache and olive plaid blazer, both less than clean and attached to a roundish man with a name like Karl or Herb. A disproportionately high number of Herbs sell vehicles, I’ve noticed. Someone should have told their mothers this before they signed off on personal nomenclature. 

ON DECISIONS
Who knows what they want at my age? Everyone and no one. I am certain of my voice and my taste for cocoa-dusted trifles, but from one hour to the next I find these certainties spring holes and stain the floor in the shape and memory of something once believed. I am certain I must drive something. I’ve obtained my permit, after all. Soon I will shed my child-legs and need an alternate means of movement. Every choice signifies something larger, but I am still too new to know what exactly might be signified. I am certain I smell of ranunculus blossoms today, but I cannot fathom what meaning others might extract from this but flowers, girl, or clean.  
 
PROBLEM SOLVING
My friend Anise rides a Gabali rabbit, but its leaping makes her queasy. It’s a vintage style, handed down to her after her mother died, all long fur and russet coloring and an impeccable navigational sensibility, even though it sometimes is prone to distraction. It seats three: the driver straddles the neck, and two passengers settle in along the row of spine. She takes me and Raia with her sometimes to the malt shop across town and we review our notes from class. When a girl called Hannah began to study with us after school, Anise overfed the Gabali for days and days, hoping for the surface area to seat one more friend. 

PRECONCEIVED NOTIONS
The man tending to this sales lot has the posture and silhouette of a reed and no visible hair anyplace. Instead of olive plaid, he wears a woven tunic with a hem that flutters at his hipbone when he walks. His name, he tells me, is Constantine. I don’t think his name is abrupt enough for this job. But then, maybe all I thought I knew of used vehicle lots was myth. Or maybe the salesman’s friends all call him Stan. 

ON DISAPPOINTMENT
The first girl in our class to get her permit brought acorn tea and iced clovercakes for everyone when it happened. Her parents had arranged in advance for her ride--a tortoise of all things! Sure, it has state-of-the-art safety features, but nothing could have been further from her taste. I’d seen her cut out pictures of foxlings from all the trade magazines and tape them to her cubby. She wanted the long-eared kind, the racing style with the sleek lines. How does one mount a tortoise? Against the seat’s lacquer and bone, she slid right off. Eventually she upholstered the upper shell. Now the cotton keeps her aboard, but the thing will never race. 

PROBLEM SOLVING, II
I’ve been saving up for months, ordering nothing but lakewater when we go with friends downtown, mending my own school shirts on the sewing machine I found in our attic. The sum is too small to buy anything new, so whatever I drive won’t have grown to fit my form. I like this. I like that it will have a story independent of me. I am still too new myself to justify raising another anything, it is all I can do to raise myself.  

ON FAMILIARITY
Constantine bristles when I call him Stan. He’s wearing a mustard tunic today. I know I’ll have to return at least once more between committing. He walks me around the lot, gesturing at the hedgehog (quick movement but uncomfortable seating), the opossum (handles well at night but may freeze when spooked), the mighty rooster (somewhat noisy, not aerodynamic). He asks what sort of terrain I expect to travel and what movement style I prefer. I consider what my answers might reveal about me. 

STATES OF REPAIR
The difference between a dove and a pigeon is all in context and connotation. They begin as doves--yes, all of them, even those who dwell in city streets--and only after life crashes into them and rust-mottled scuffs in its wake do they abandon hopes of loveliness and take the pigeon title. I do not know whether the model I select is a dove or refurbished pigeon, but it doesn’t matter to me: either way, it can both walk and fly. 

SUSIE RIDES A BIRD
My hair looks too candyfloss and my eyes have gone all pistachio and I’m sitting side-saddle but there’s a wing in my way. I have my permit and have given the down payment to Constantine and scheduled my monthly fees. I chose the bird because it says about me the things I hope might one day prove true. I chose the bird because someday I will fret over safety features and maximum seating capacity and whether it runs on leaf fuel or seeds. Today I am young, and it’s enough just to touch this cloud.


Jennifer Dane Clements writes prose, poetry, and plays. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Intentional, Luna Luna, WordRiot, Psychopomp Magazine, The Transnational, and elsewhere. Jennifer has received fellowships from the Fulbright Program and the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, the Best of the Net Award, and other honors. She holds an MFA from George Mason University and serves as a prose editor for ink&coda. Visit her at www.jennifer-dane-clements.com.