400 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
400 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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=========================================
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True Stories from Pathological Liars III
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=========================================
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March.1995
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Another questionable collection from (swain@cybernetx.net)
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Semanticism has never been so redundant.
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==
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Table of contents:
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1] Harkus' Urbane Day
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2] The Alarm
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3] Ben's Two Minutes
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4] Deeth and its offerings
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==
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1] Harkus's Urbane Day
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----------------------
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Like a quick Tango with a French woman, like a sip of strong
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Espresso in your waking hour. Like a piece of wrapped candy on the
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frozen concrete. For Harkus today was working out just fine.
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"Whats this I hear about the men in pressed suits taking over my
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future..." Harkus scratched his head, long and hard. He folded
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the newspaper in half to facilitate reading the monstrous entity.
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It was a warm Sunday in Cincinnati, and in-between occasional
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glances at stale reading, he casually sipped his homebrewed
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espresso, naturally wincing at every swallow. A warm breeze blew
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through the cracked window, bringing in the scent of char-broiled
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burgers from the grease-shop across the street. The scent afforded
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him the memories of his youth, throwing lawn darts as his sister
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during the weekly family bar-be-que. Harkus rose and felt a slight
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disorder of things in his brain. A slight chill approached him as
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he swayed to the headrush. He made his way to the window and
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peered out. His boxers hung low and uneven. His face was unshaven
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and sweaty like a wet fish. The heat poured into the kitchen like
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an open oven. A man was peddling cheap jewelry with a finish
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of flaked gold paint. Harkus examined a piece of this jewelry as
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it hung from his wrist. The electroplated copper reminded him of
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its actual value, and with a spontaneous feeling of worthlessness,
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Harkus tugged the meager chain from his wrist and pitched it onto
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the street, landing several feet before the salesman.
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Unnoticed, the man continued to puff on a large-sized cheap cigar,
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the kind that is sold raw next to the candy section at your
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neighborhood convenience store. The old Greek man caught a glimpse
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of the broken chain as a reflection from the sun temporarily
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blinded him. The man, appearing as though he might have struck
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gold, no pun intended, scurried over to the chain and picked it up
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with his fat thumb and forefinger. He muttered to himself as he
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examined the broken link, and began repairing it. Meanwhile,
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Harkus began seeing the day in a more awake manner.
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He opened the refrigerator for a temporary cool-down from the
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blast-furnace day, only to find that it had succumbed to the heat
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and no longer was operational. Infact, upon reaching for the milk
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and swishing it around, the sheer solid-feeling of the contents led
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Harkus to believe that infact the refrigerator gave up a long time
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ago. Bothered, but not completely surprised, Harkus felt somewhat
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sympathetic with the deceased Frigidaire. At least, he
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conjectured, HE was still alive.
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A wave of sickness passed over him, the heat was taking its toll.
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He always theorized that his rent was less not because his
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apartment was structually unsafe, but because his apartment on the
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top floor had a roof covered with black tar paper, the only one not
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surfaced with aluminum. As a result, his apartment was always
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twenty degrees warmer. One would think this might come in handy
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during the winter months, but alas, the landlord always set up
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solar panels on his section of roof to minimize costs for heating
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water. Not surprisingly, Harkus knew this only too well as a
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reaffirmation of his nature to live in a perpetual catch-22,
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something he likened to Hell.
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Harkus caught a slight wiff of his odor, causing him to nearly
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retch. He maintained always that when ones own smell bothers them,
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its time to do something about it. But as a second thought, he
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realized this odor was a sexual smell, the smell of hours of hot
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sex in a hot apartment on a hot, humid evening. And with that
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thought he slowly made his way to the bathroom, stepping on a young
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cockroach that left his foot moisturized with cold fluidous
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remains. This occurrence remained unnoticed to him as he crossed
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the hallway to the bathroom. He stepped in front of the
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condensating mirror and examined his mug. He ran his hand through
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his jet-black hair, feeling the grease absorb into his hand. He
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reached his arm into the shower, pulling the old shower lever back
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and to the right; COLD. The pipes rattled and well over ten
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seconds later a sputter of brown water ejected from the faucet
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head, collecting on top of the hair that clogged the drain. He
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dropped his boxers, letting them fall to his ankles and proceeded
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back into his bedroom where a sweaty figure lay asleep. The sheets
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stuck to her body and outlined her figure. Harkus noticed her
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erect nipples from an exhilirating dream; or was it the heat...
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The room reaked of sex. The windows were wide open and the
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occasional breeze blew the mini-blinds stray. Harkus lay beside
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her and awed at her beauty. A sense of urgency struck him as he
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realized the shower was still running. He figured he could buy a
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few minutes and placed his hand under the sheets, freely caressing
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her body.
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She awoke.
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Harkus was amazed at her breath. For he has never known a human
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being to have fresh, minty breath after sleep. He approached
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closer to her mouth as she opened her eyes, exposing a beautiful
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dark green. "Hey.." she whispered in a choked, congested tone.
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She lifted the damp sheet off her body and rubbed her eyes,
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removing the Sandman's remains. Harkus was infact so stumped at
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her lack of bad breath that he pondered for a moment. "How do you
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keep your breath so minty fresh?" he inquired. "Harkus, I use
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Scope. It leaves my breath fresh and minty all day long and it
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prevents gingivitis." Harkus felt an odd understanding of her, and
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didn't question this seemingly commercialized response. She sat up
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in bed, and from underneath the covers she produced a family-sized
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bottle of Scope. "You should try some, it'll really hit the spot."
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Harkus gladly accepted, although somewhat confused as to what was
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going on. He chased a shot of Scope and spit the mouthwash onto
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the hardwood floor.
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The shower was still running, getting louder and more prominent.
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The even spray began sounding more like sheets of water, dripping
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and splashing all over the whole apartment. This time he knew he
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must get up to take his shower. Sonya continued her commercial
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dialog, propped up naked in bed grasping the bottle of mouthwash,
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speaking generally to an empty room. "Honey, you should try Scope,
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it makes your breath minty fresh." Harkus was confused.
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The water flowed smoothly along his body. It was cold and hit the
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spot. He felt himself wake up, beating this awful heatwave. The
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small transistor radio clicked on and a radio personality continued
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to rattle on about today's weather... "Well people, today is our
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day. Currently we have grey and rainy skies with a chance of a
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thunderstorm later this morning. Don't forget to bring an umbrella
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before you leave the house today." The personality paused, sighed,
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and resumed. "Its been hot out there this summmer hasn't it?
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Today we have a high of 74, a nice let-up from the heatwave of '95,
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destined to go into New York history.."
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The shampoo entered his eye as he quickly scrambled to wash it out.
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A painful sting entered his body and urked him. Harkus again was
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confused. He opened his one pain-free eye and glanced out the
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bathroom window. Through the condensation he saw a hazy sun steam
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the scenery. He had now taken particular consideration to the last
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few minutes and these odd events. "Why is my girlfriend
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advertising Scope?" "Why was her breath so minty fresh?" and
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lastly, "Why does the radio say its raining when its hot and humid
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just like every other day?". He scratched his head, accidentally
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allowing more soap into his previously stinging eye.
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Maybe I'm dreami...
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Reflexively he slammed his hand down on the alarm clock stifling
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the radio. The pitter-patter of rain made rumbling sounds on the
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roof. A cool breeze blew in through the window as the television
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spewed a Scope commerical. Markus awoke quickly and surveyed his
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situation. Stunned, he quickly felt next to him for a body.
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Nothing was there. He caught the last few seconds of the
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commercial.
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"For fresh, minty breath, always use Scope."
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2] The Alarm
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------------
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My daycare center was this huge warehouse-looking place on the top
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floor of an oversized administration building. It was one huge
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room with several partitions and a stainless steel slide that must
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have been 25 feet high. There were special areas marked out for
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certain activities and there were places that were just open
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because not even every piece of furniture in Ann Arbor could have
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filled it. The teachers were very tall, maybe fifteen feet in
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height, and there was a stage that I always wanted to climb up on
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and play on but that too must have been ten feet tall.
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Even though I was three years old, seemingly unable to respond a
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whole lot to anything, I had already obtained a number of fears
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that still haunt me today. Inside this huge castle that I spent 5
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days a week in for a year and a half was one solitary fire alarm,
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about a foot squared and containing a grill on the front with one
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really loud alarm behind it. It really stuck out in the place
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everytime I passed it en route to the bathroom I would stare at it.
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I had no idea what it was, and after a year of nothing interesting
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about it, I dismissed it as just another one of those ornaments
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that adults like.
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We all napped in the same room, a comparitively small room set off
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from the huge one. Every day at noon the teachers would rustle us
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all up and take us to this room. We would sit there watching as
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they produced these weird long cast aluminum stretchers with
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synthetic tops. Later I would learn these were called "Cots", but
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still today don't know why. Then the teachers would administer
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each one of us one (1) whole graham cracker (perforated) and a
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container of milk which probably held about 5 ounces. We were then
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instructed to eat the cracker and drink the milk after every bite.
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The craftiest of us would break the cracker in half, thus doubling
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our treat. Some of us had no interest in eating the cracker at
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all. This particular crew would take the two halves and proceed to
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saw shapes into the crackers, eventually leaving a sugary brown
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dust on the floor. After what was named "snack", we were all
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escorted to our "cots" and left to sleep. Most of us, myself not
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excluded, would cry the duration of our nap-time and periodically
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cry out for "mommy" or "ma". The others that didn't follow suit
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always seemed odd to me.
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After nap-time we then went onto the roof to play. A dangerous
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thought to any parent seeing that we were no less than twenty
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stories from the street (in 3-year old terms atleast). Because of
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this, there were very high chain-link fences encasing the roof.
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Nothing much had been done to make this a roaming ground for
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children. A few sandboxes were allocated to the roof, and maybe a
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few balls, a jumprope, and a few Big-Wheels. The roof floor was
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exactly what it should have been, nailed pieces of white tar-like
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shingles that were joined by gobs of gooey black tar and small
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pebbles. The roof was always hot, even during the fall. Me and
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several toddlers would pick a spot somewhere on the roof and focus
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on the tar, rubbing our fingers in it and then rubbing it deeply
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into each others faces. Alot of us sucked our thumbs, myself
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excluded, and would suck the tar right off. On several occasions
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I watched my playmates throw up a mushy paste, not unlike a milk
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and graham cracker blend. Nothing would happen. Well, not until
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one of us began crying, either from actually being the victim, or
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from being the spectator. Big, tall teachers would encircle us and
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take ahold of our mouths and physically clean them with their huge
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hands. It was a weird experience to say the least. That was
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probably my first memory of trial and error, and I successfully
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learned to stay away from ingesting tar in the future.
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Lunch-time was the greatest. And even at the non-competing age of
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three, I recall vividly wondering why most of my friends got that
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flat, square, light yellow cheese on their sandwiches when I got
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this blocky, hand-cut dark cheese. Another qualm I learned to have
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was that of how the bread was cut on the sandwich. My playmates
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seemed to generally have a diagonal cut and mine was always
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straight through the middle. We were all in the same group when it
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came to vegetables. We all had to eat them and we all hated them.
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That sort of unity was what I preferred to see. The gist of the
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whole lunch situation was that of mess. The whole act of eating
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was disorganized and sloppy. No less than half our food ended up
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on the floor, or in a companion's hair or a permanent fixture on
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his/her clothing. This was what seemed so enjoyable. Whereas
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other times we seemed to be getting chided for every small
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infraction, there were no expectations when lunchtime came around.
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There was one general rule of the house. Nobody the age of 5 or
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under could go anywhere without an adult. That was fine, because
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nobody wanted to. Very shortly after lunch the apple juice would
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pass through and everybody had to go. And go we went, depending on
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our age, in our pants or in (or near) the toilet. I had been
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pretty good with this and generally could hold it atleast two
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minutes after I felt the urge. I was actually rewarded for this.
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And so the masses walked in two's or sometimes five's to the
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bathroom, which was on the complete other side of the daycare
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center. About three of four hundred preschooler steps at the
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least. This was when I would stare deeply at the red-grill box as
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my arm strained from being held by someone so much taller than me.
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One particular day after lunch I had to go. I took a quick look
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around and found no larger person to escort me to the bathroom. I
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decided to hit the high road and take the walk myself. I eyed the
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distance and noted my path. It would be easy, just walk straight
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and when I get to those things leading down i'll go straight some
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more and then go left. Although it was actually several years
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later until I learned what "left" and its opposite "right" meant.
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So I started on my venture, walking sketchily towards my goal.
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Finally I reached a landmark, the fire alarm. This insured my
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route was correct from past trips. Although this was quite some
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time after my interest in the red box had faded, I thought about it
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again after needing it as a navigation tool. I focused my gaze
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upon it again and watched it suspiciously as I began to pass it.
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At that point I had realized, somehow, that it was a fire-alarm,
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and that it made a loud noise to warn everybody of danger. As that
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exact thought had begun to turn into another, the alarm went off.
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I froze.
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The reverberation of the room was phenomenal, so reverberent infact
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that a few playing children sounded like a whole playground at
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recess. I was terrified. It seemed so odd. My intrepretation was
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that this "alarm" was actually alive, because how else could it
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have done anything? This terrified me more. The loud buzz, sharp
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and pounding my young eardrums, only grew worse. My young ears
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were screaming as well as my young voice. I spontaneously fell to
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the hard tile floor and writhed around in extreme confusion.
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Hours later it seemed, but only about thirty actual seconds, a mass
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of toddlers and teachers darted towards me from the lunch area. It
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was a stampede as far as I could tell. The alarm pervaded my
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hearing and I began hearing another sound, a mellow ringing in both
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of my ears. The teachers encircled, and I expected great reward
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for my heroism. However, I was snatched up and taken with my
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fellow friends quickly downstairs and outside to street level.
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I was shaken, to say the least.
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I remained crying along with every other child, creating an odd
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stereophonic wail from all points. A given friend (as in, I was
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his friend because his parents knew my parents) of mine named Jesse
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was close at hand and the two of us got together and cried in
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unity.
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The alarm was false, as so many more would be in my days in public
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school, and each and every time, even up until the end of high
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school, I would respond in ways that would scare my friends.
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3] Ben's two minutes
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--------------------
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Beanjack was quietly reading bad prose and sipping his poison.
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Meanwhile Ben was strolling parallel down the street amusing at a
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cat that followed him closely. A general hush was present. The
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cemetary flowed along as his hair flowed with the cool breeze.
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Twin-engine planes sounded in the sky reminding Ben of todays day,
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Sunday. He walked carelessly down the cracked sidewalk, unaware of
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his continuous stumbling.
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She left her house and smiled at him. He felt a warm blush on his
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face. She was his mysterious neighbor, living next to him for a
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year and still he didn't know her name. She was tall, exotic, and
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almost dreamlike. They crossed paths accidentally as he stumbled
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on yet another crack, grazing her side as they passed. His eyes
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remained affixed on her...They crossed paths and he looked back
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examining her from another angle. She turned back wondering if he
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had any response to his bumping into her. Her smile was simply
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entrancing. He smiled at her and began to apologize.
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"I'm, I'm terribly sorry...I, I..." he stopped, too caught up in
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her eyes. She smiled and gestured a quick forgiveness. She too
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was amazed with him. She was nervous and visibly shaking. "No, it
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was my fault." She said wearily.
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Ben hated cliches. He knew only too well that it was his
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carelessness that led him to collide with her. She had no right to
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claim responsibility for his mistake, it was unfair. He felt
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himself turned off by her response. His nervousness dissipated.
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"Hey, I ran into you..." he spoke, almost agitated. She
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interpreted this response defensively. "Well, I, I just wanted
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to.." Ben interrupted, "Look, I think you're beautiful and all, but
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why do you have to be so fake? Its quite obvious that it was my
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fault and that you're trying to claim responsibility for some odd
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manipulative reason."
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He was babbling to himself and to her, something he had refined in
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the asylum. He caught himself and began to feel uncomfortable. He
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tried again, hoping to convince her to restart this odd
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conversation. She was visibly offended and continued on her way.
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He knew it. He continued his walk, distancing himself further from
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her as she headed into town. "Strike one" he spat in disgust. He
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continued down the street, verbalizing a new approach to the
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following cat.
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4] Deeth and its offerings..
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----------------------------
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Look at you! Just look at you! A fine excuse for a human being if
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I may say so which I will cause I can and I did. Man, the nerve of
|
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some people, or whatever the heck you think you are. I seem to,
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utilize the feet more than, usual as of lately. And it's okay, a
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warm day, Novembur and it's nice and warm and yeah, I like it.
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Makes me think of Neeeevaaahhduh. And driving wit T and were
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wearin' out and burning out and we just gotta get somewhere and
|
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relllaxxxxxx...That's hella sick, dog....It get's late and the
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eyelids are a gettin' sleeeepppyy...And T is spaced out like a
|
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sleepin' dawg. Ain't sweatin' the car no more, no siree...Just a
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|
bit numb to the whole breakdown thang...And big long roads, no
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|
lights, one car light, wolves, cactus and the great outdoors. I
|
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|
keep on thinking, that I'm seeing something, I swear. It's the
|
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|
same thing, and man, isa freakin' me out. And so I just blow it
|
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|
off as a "whatever" and we make it to like some small town and like
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I forgot the name but if like you remember you should go there
|
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|
sometime and visit. And islike, buuuutiful. And islike, SOOOOO
|
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|
clear and we're way up high and the stars are like on the ceiling.
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|
And we crash at th' motel, but islike, totally WEEEEIRD! And the
|
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|
guy, we woke that farming bastard up, and he'slike, "Yuh want a
|
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|
room, do ya?" (hick hick hick...) "Islike 20 dolla's, islike the
|
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|
best room wez got!" And it was like, ahh gee, a goddamn
|
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|
trailer...Oneadem grey spacy lookin' bastards that could like orbit
|
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|
an' shit. And that's wuz home and we sat there lookin' at each
|
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|
other and laughin' and shit as th' sink spewed out dis green shit
|
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|
(and stuff) and islike, so WEEEEIRD!! And I got the weak bed
|
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|
(islike an Army cot) and islike, comfortable as a buck. Islike we
|
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gotda breakfast da next mornin' and islike, shit, that shit is grub
|
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|
there buck.
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Alex Swain <swain@cybernetx.net>
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--END--
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