Daily Archives: September 18, 2016

Zomcation – Chapter 9

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In the election of 2016, the unthinkable happened. Republican billionaire Vincenzo “Vinny” Stugotz of New York made an alliance with Democratic Senator Mildred Pierce, a California lawyer prone to speaking in legalese, to form the first dual party ticket in modern history.

Their deal? They agreed to change positions every four years. Stugotz took the first go around as President with Mildred as VP. In 2020, they were to switch and let Mildred take the helm while Stugotz played second fiddle. Ultimately, they figured this would lead to them both having their hooks sunk into the presidency until 2032.

With nice sounding political promises to work together and heal a divided nation, the Stugotz/Pierce ticket won by a landslide against Democratic and Republican politicians who cried that it was outright blasphemy for members of opposing parties to do anything other than go on live TV and accuse each other of breathing fire, kicking babies and being the second comings of Hitler, all while average Americans sucked it up and accepted no one was ever going to solve any of their problems.

For a month, it seemed like America had turned a corner and that a brighter, more positive future was on the horizon.

But soon, it became crystal clear that Stugotz and Pierce were not going to be able to agree on anything.

It was certainly clear to General Merrick as he sat in the White House Situation Room, as he and other high ranking military men and security advisors sat back and waited for Stugotz and Pierce to resolve their latest bru ha ha.

“So we’re talking zombies, is that it?” Stugotz asked as he ran a comb through his long, luxurious, gravity defying, jet black pompadour. “Because let me tell you, no one would be better at defeating zombies than me, OK? We’re going to go after those zombies big time, you hear me? Big time. They won’t know what hit them. If you’re dead, then under a Stugotz administration, you’ve got to stay dead. No ifs ands or butts, not even some candy and coconuts, capiche?”

Mildred chimed in. “No Vinny, you right-wing fascist…”

“Don’t you ‘right-wing fascist’ me, you feminazi liberal commie,” Stugotz replied. “Go shave your armpits.”

“Look,” Mildred said. “All I’m trying to say is that before we go all crazy and blow up all the zombies, maybe we should just try to see things from the zombies’ point of view. Maybe the zombies aren’t so bad once you get to know them.”

“They’re criminals,” Stugotz said as he pounded his fist on the conference table. “Criminal zombies who won’t stop until all of our brains are devoured.”

“That’s a rather broad brush, isn’t it?” Mildred asked. “Surely there are some zombies who just end up getting confused. I would imagine there are many undead Americans who just want to keep bumping into walls until they figure out how to walk around them that don’t pose a threat to anyone.”

“Keep living in your fantasy world, pinko,” Stugotz said.

“Fine,” Mildred said. “And you can keep being a hateful, closed minded, rabid zombaphobe.”

Sitting next to Merrick was National Security Agency analyst Allan Carver.

“Are they always like this?” Merrick whispered.

“Worse,” Carver whispered back. “This is one of their good days.”

Merrick cleared his throat. “Mister President, Madame Vice-President, if I may…”

“Right,” Stugotz said. “The floor is yours.”

“Thank you, sir,” Merrick said “I’d first like to remind everyone that the debate over what to do with the quote unquote ‘zombies’ is premature due to the fact that there are no reports at this time of zombies being spotted in public.”

“Chop their ugly zombie heads off if you do see any,” Stugotz said.

“No,” Mildred said. “Herd the zombies into a nice holding area and then sign them up for free brain deliveries courtesy of the U.S. government.”

“Oh holy shit, Milly,” Stugotz said. “And where are you going to get the brains?”

“I’m sure if we think about it there are vast brain resources available,” Mildred said. “Goat brains. Sheep brains. Cow brains. Perhaps we can convince people to donate their brains to the hungry zombie cause when they die.”

“Yeah,” Stugotz scoffed. “Like that isn’t going to cost the taxpayer a pretty penny. Build a wall, make the zombies pay for it and bada bing, bada boom, problem solved.”

Merrick cleared his throat to remind his bosses that he was still there. “As I was saying, there are no reports of actual zombies roaming the streets, so I believe it would be prudent to focus on the information we have at this time.”

The general pointed a remote control at the humongous monitor that lined the wall and pushed a button. A paused video featuring the Heretic appeared.

“As we’re all aware,” Merrick said. “The Heretic released a video to the press demanding that the public implore world leaders to give in to the Day Zero cult’s demands.”

“Screw the Heretic,” Stugotz said. “Find him, lock him up, and attach a car battery to his nut sack for the rest of his life.”

Mildred clutched her pearls. “Let’s give him a break. He probably had a rough childhood.”

“Here now is the video that the Heretic sent to the leaders of every nation in the world,” Merrick said as he pushed play.

“Leaders of the world,” the Heretic said. “Your policies driven the masses to lives of crime, fighting over scraps while you all live high off the hog. You support factories that poison our water and pollute our air, all the while encouraging non-stop, reckless consumerism amongst the masses. Instead of talking your problems out, you build bombs capable of leveling entire cities to threaten one another with. Man was not supposed to live this way.”

The screen switched to footage of a cage, where a young, frightened man grabbed the bars and cried for help.

“Please!” the hostage said. “I don’t know who these people are! They just kidnapped me and dragged me here and…oh…oh God.”

A green gas filled the room. The man grabbed his throat and choked, hacked, and wheezed until he finally fell down.

“Sweet merciful crap,” Stugotz said as he watched.

Seconds later, the young man slowly stood up. His eyes were blank. He moved like a mindless automaton.

“As you can see,” the Heretic said in a voiceover, “I am, thanks to incompetent security at one of America’s many black sites, now in possession of the X48 virus, which means I now have the power to fill the world with as many zombies as I please. One whiff and a subject is zombified. Once infected, zombies are able to infect others by biting them so this is all about to get very interesting, isn’t it?”

The zombified man grabbed the bars and furiously bashed his head against them as he growled and snarled.

“Of course,” the Heretic said as his shadow returned to the screen. “It doesn’t have to be this way. Resign from office. Order your armies to stand down. Scuttle your weapons of mass destruction. Shutter all businesses and demolish all structures so that the trees and plants can heal the badly damaged ozone layer and humans are left to revert to the innocent creatures they were always intended to be. For at the end of the day, we all know the chief architects of division amongst the people are you, the leaders of the world who control their citizens as if they are puppets. This will be your only warning. Comply within twenty-four hours or enjoy the zombies.”

Merrick shut off the video.

“Holy shit,” a panicked Mildred said. “Give him whatever he wants!”

“What?” Stugotz said as he made the universally recognized ‘I’m jerking off because what you’re saying is boring me’ gesture. “General, find this guy and shoot him in the face with a nuclear warhead. Nuke him. Nuke his whole family. Nuke all his brothers and sisters and cousins. Nuke his third grade teacher. Nuke his Goddamn cat, dog, hamster, and goldfish. Nuke everyone who has ever spoken a single word to this asshole.”

“I’ve got Phalanx Company working on it as we speak,” Merrick said. “They are, without a doubt, the best of the best.”

“General,” Mildred said. “Is what he said, true? Are we responsible for making this virus?”

Merrick sighed. “I’m afraid so, Ma’am.”

The general punched a button on his remote and a virtual image of a perfectly chiseled muscle man appeared on screen.

“Ten years ago,” Merrick said. “Certain forces in our government saw the writing was on the wall, that Americans were tired of constant wars, and people weren’t as accepting of the idea of a military draft as they used to be. Thus, a desire to create a new army of indestructible, super soldiers was born.”

Merrick hit a button and an image of Professor Goldthwaite popped up. “Ten years ago, Professor Abner Goldthwaite, once a renowned lecturer in the field of neuroscience, became a laughingstock when he published a paper claiming that through a combination of the right chemicals, proteins, bacteria and assorted enzymes, he had created an indestructible rat.”

“I remember that guy on TV,” Mildred said.

“Yes,” Merrick said. “He followed up his paper with videos in which he set the rat on fire, pounded it with a hammer, and even ran over it with his car and yet in each instance, the rat kept on scurrying along. Critics just assumed Abner had used special effects to make the rat look like he wasn’t hurt and thus, Abner became a pariah amongst his fellow scientists, mocked for being a shameless attention seeker.”

“Ahh,” Stugotz said. “So let me guess. You idiots hired him.”

“His rat was the real deal,” Merrick said. “And we hoped Goldthwaite’s research would lead to civilian applications. After all, super soldiers would be great, but super people would be even better. End the ability to cause physical harm to someone and you’ve ended all crime and all wars. Allow humans to live forever and they end up with unlimited time to seek out their hopes and dreams.”

“Dreams, schmeams,” Stugotz said. “It all got cocked up, didn’t it?”

Merrick pushed a button and twenty minutes’ worth of footage of Abner gassing human test subjects only for them to become hideous zombies played.

“Since 2007, Goldthwaite has made forty-eight separate attempts to construct a chemical agent that could turn humans indestructible,” Merrick said. “Alas, what worked in a rat only turns humans into mindless brain chomping bastards.”

“Well good luck with the court martial, dip stick,” Stugotz said as he popped a mint into his mouth.

“Me?” Merrick said. “I was ordered to start this program by one president and instructed to keep it going by another president.”

“I’m the president now and I don’t know a damn thing about this,” Stugotz said. “Mildred, do you know anything about this?”

Mildred coughed. “Ahem. I can categorically state that I do not recall whether or not I may or possibly may not be aware about any information regarding American involvement with the production of a zombifying virus. Further, if I could recall, it would be likely that I could not affirmatively state whether or not I recall due to concerns of national security.”

“God damn, Mildred,” Stugotz said. “You straight up lawyered the ever loving shit out of that one. High five.”

President and Vice-President slapped their hands together. Merrick shook his head.

“Oh great,” Merrick said. “So now you two finally agree on something?”

“Yup,” Mildred said. “If this fiasco gets out of hand…”

“…then its your ass that’s going to be getting it with no vaseline a la Ice Cube’s greatest hits, my friend,” Stugotz said.

Merrick grunted disapprovingly. “Story of my life.”

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Zomcation – Chapter 8

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Abby looked at the clock in her mini-van. 6:19 A.M.

“He’s not coming,” Abby said.

“I’m telling you,” Dylan said. “He said he is. Just give him his five minutes.”

Mack emerged from the house in a pair of jeans, a black T-shirt, and a pair of sunglasses with a duffel bag slung over his arm.

“Dylan,” Abby said as her brother approached. “How did you pull this off?”

“I just know how to talk to people,” Dylan said.

Abby popped the hatch and Mack stowed his duffel in the back, then walked around to the driver’s side.

 

“Shall we give the girl soldier a shot at the wheel?” Mack asked.

“It’s your funeral,” Abby said as she snuck through the pass-through to the back seat next to Dylan.

A giddy Paige moved over to the driver’s side as Mack took the passenger’s seat.

Once all doors were closed, Mack made some announcements.

“Family,” Mack said. “Be advised I am not attending this trip out of a desire for fun, recreation or quote unquote ‘having a good time.’”

“Whatever you need to say, Mack,” Abby said.

“I am attending as the world is a dangerous place and the idea of allowing people I am related to venture off unescorted is an untenable situation in my estimation,” Mack said.

“You love cartoon wombats,” Abby snickered.

“I’ll ignore that,” Mack said. “People, this is the point of no return. Has everyone gone to the bathroom?”

“Sir, yes sir,” replied Mack’s family.

“Good,” Mack said. “Because a premature stop would cause an unnecessary delay. Does everyone have all required medications and assorted items the failure of which to pack would bring our excursion to a grinding halt?”

“Sir, yes sir,” the family replied.

“Excellent,” Mack said as he opened up his wallet. “Boy soldier!”

“Sir?” Dylan asked.

Mack passed the boy a twenty dollar bill.

“You have been appointed quarter master of this operation, the man in charge of procuring all necessary goods and materials,” Mack said. “At our first stop, you will procure me a Red Bull and a bag of Funions. Use any remaining currency to procure snacks and drinks for yourself and fellow soldiers. Have I made myself clear?”

“Sir, yes sir,” Dylan sad.

“Sister soldier!” Mack said.

“Will you stop with the ‘soldier’ bit?” Abby asked.

“Now is not the time to descend into chaos, Abby,” Mack said. “You have been appointed as navigator. Keep an eye on your cell phone GPS and make sure we’re headed to our destination using the best routes available.”

“It’s got a GPS right there,” Abby said as she pointed to the monitor at the front of the vehicle. “See?”

“Oh,” Mack said. “Then take a much deserved nap as a reward for all your labors and be rested for when your driving shift comes.”

“Don’t mind if I do,” Abby said as she leaned back.

“Girl soldier!”

“Sir?” Paige asked.

“In my career, I have received the requisite training to drive tractor trailer trucks, Humvees, tanks and also to pilot helicopters and all manner of aircraft, light and heavy,” Mack said. “You are now under my command and will be expected to follow my instructions to the letter or be relieved of duty. Have I made myself clear?”

“Sir, yes sir,” Paige said.

“Good,” Mack said. “Take us out.”

Paige immediately put the car in reverse and took her foot off the brake.

“Boom!” Mack shouted.

“What?” Paige asked as she braked.

“You’ve failed to put on your seatbelt,” Mack said. “Had there been a collision, your carcass would have flown through the windshield only to flop around like a fish gasping for air on the hood.”

“Do we need to be that graphic, Mack?” Abby asked.

“The more graphic I am today the less likely she’ll experience such a scenario in the future,” Mack said. “Resume driving, girl soldier.”

Paige started to back out again.

“Boom!” Mack shouted.

“What?!” a frazzled Paige asked.

“You’ve failed to adjust your mirrors,” Mack said.

“I did,” Paige snapped.

“Lies,” Mack replied. “Your mother is taller than you are and has her mirrors set to her liking. You are shorter and if you are unable to see out of your mirrors then it is only a matter of time before you careen this vehicle into another transport and set us all ablaze in an inferno that will seal our doom.”

Paige adjusted her mirrors. “Oh. That is better.”

“Proceed,” Mack said.

Paige did and it wasn’t long before Mack shouted another “Boom!”

“OMG!” Paige shouted as she hit the brake. “What now?”

“You failed to check if anyone was coming on the roadway behind you,” Mack said. “You lucked out this time but had there been a transport, you surely would have killed all of us, all of them, or some combination of us and them. Best case scenario in that situation is you end up badly mangled, recover after years of surgeries and physical therapy, then are forced to live out the rest of your days with the horrendous, agonizing guilt that comes with knowing that your screwup got your family and other innocents killed.”

Paige nodded, checked her mirrors, checked her blindspots, then brought the car out into the road.

“This is going to be a long trip,” Dylan said.

“Mack,” Abby said. “You know she’s never done any highway driving before.”

“Only way to learn is to do it,” Mack replied. “No one taught me how to drive a truck at a hundred miles an hour down a runway as the enemy pilot of an attack helicopter mercilessly deployed a barrage of gunfire and missiles my way. You learn or you die. It’s that simple.”

Paige and Dylan’s eyes lighted up.

“Did that really happen?” Dylan asked.

“That’s classified,” Mack replied.

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Zomcation – Chapter 7

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Beep! Beep!

It was a little after dawn and Abby was in her best Chester Chimp t-shirt and sitting behind the wheel of a packed to the gills car, blaring on the horn to get her daughter’s attention. “Paige! Let’s go!”

Ignoring her mother, Paige parsed her lips into a duck-billed smooch and snapped a selfie.

“Come on, Paige,” Abby said. “We’re burning daylight.”

“Just a minute,” Paige said as she uploaded her selfie onto Lifebox. “Hashtag get this party started. Okay.”

Paige hopped into the passenger’s seat. “Can I drive?”

“Maybe when we get to Georgia,” Abby said. “They’ve got those nice roads that go in a straight line forever so it’ll be less likely that you’ll kill us all.”

“Hashtag I’ll never get my license,” Paige said.

“Hashtag its your own fault if you end up walking everywhere,” Abby said.

Dylan popped his ear buds out and poked his head up. “Is Uncle Mack really not coming?”

“Afraid not,” Abby said.

“Hashtag lame,” Paige said.

“Maybe you guys can each send him a nice post card when you get there,” Abby said.

“Can I try one more time?” Dylan asked.

Abby shrugged her shoulders. “I guess it couldn’t hurt.

Dylan jumped out of the car.

“Dill,” Abby said.

“Yeah?” her son replied.

“Don’t be a nudge,” Abby said. “If he says no then say goodbye and that’s the end of it.”

“Okay.”

Dylan walked into the house and found his uncle counting his sit-ups on the floor while watching the news on television.

“Nine hundred ninety eight, nine hundred ninety nine….one thousand.”

Mack wiped the sweat from his brow, guzzled a glass of water, then noticed his nephew.

“Hey,” Mack said. “You forget something?”

“No,” Dylan said. “What are you watching?”

“Ahh,” Mack said. “Just the news. Always some bad shit going down somewhere.”

The screen cut to an ample bosomed blonde reporter sitting behind an anchor’s desk.

“Good morning, Americans. I’m a Hot Ass Blonde Chick with Big Titties reporting for Network News One. Our top story today, the anonymous underworld criminal known simply as, “The Heretic” has issued a new communique regarding the Day Zero Cult’s activities.

Next up on the screen was a shadowy figure of a man who spoke using an electronic voice changer. It made his voice sound deep, dark and sinister.

“People of the world,” the Heretic said. “Know that I have given your leaders an important ultimatum, one that they must obey if you are all to survive. I have no desire to start unnecessary panic, so I will not reveal the details of my demands to the public at this time. However, I implore all of you to urge your leaders to do my bidding or else my wrath will be swift and severe. Heretic, out.”

Back at the studio, a mustached man with graying hair joined the female reporter.

“Homeland Security officials refused to answer any questions on this matter,” the reporter said. “But here to shed some light on this story is Network News One Terrorism Analyst Carl Baxter. Carl.”

“Thank you for having me, Hot Ass Blonde Chick,” Carl said.

“No problem,” the reporter replied. “Carl, this is tougher talk than we’re used to hearing from the Heretic, isn’t it?”

“It is,” Carl said. “His typical modus operandi is to mobilize his Day Zero hackers to engage in some type of computerized malfeasance. You remember the time they shut down the stock market for three hours…”

“Or the time they turned off all the lights in Times Square,” the Hot Ass Blonde Chick said.

“Right,” Carl said. “Usually the Heretic will command his tech savvy minions to pull off some misdeed and only after does he release a video to the press taunting law enforcement. This current situation is very different.”

“How so?” the Hot Ass Blonde Chick asked.

“Here, he’s warning something bad is going to happen first,” Carl said. “And you can tell he’s trying to put pressure on the masses to lean on world leaders to do something. What it is, your guess is good as mine.”

“That’s not helpful at all, Carl,” the Hot Ass Blonde Chick said. “Keep talking to fill up this block, will you?”

“Sure,” Carl said. “Now the Day Zero cult, they’re anarchists. They do not believe in law and order. They do not believe in government of any kind. They don’t believe in capitalism or communism or any kind of economic system. The Heretic has been quite clear in his previous videos that he and his followers want the world to regress to the so-called days of Adam and Eve.”

“Adam and Eve?” the Hot Ass Blonde Chick asked.

“Right,” Carl said. “No buildings. No houses. No schools. No factories. No hospitals. No businesses. No order of any kind. They simply want the world to regress to its natural grassy state and for all of mankind to frolic naked amongst the trees as our ancient ancestors did.”

“Sounds fun,” the Hot Ass Blonde Chick said.

“In many ways it would be great,” Carl said. “No more nuclear weapons. No more war. Certainly no more lawyers.”

“I sense a catch,” the Hot Ass Blonde Chick said.

“No more art,” Carl said. “No more music.  No more books or movies. No more science or technology. No medicine.”

“We’ll end all threats to life but be left with no reason to live,” the Hot Ass Blonde Chick said.

“That’s a very profound observation, Hot Ass Blonde Chick,” Carl said.

“Should we be worried?” the Hot Ass Blonde Chick asked.

“All the law enforcement sources I’ve spoken to refer to these people as kooks,” Carl said. “Occasionally, they manage to cause the world some grief with their hacking skills, but they’ve yet to graduate to more sinister, physical forms of terrorism.”

“That’s a relief,” the reporter said before turning to the camera. “We’ll stay with this story as it develops. After this commercial break, our Hot Ass Asian Chick with Big Titties will be reporting live from Capitol Hill, where Congress is currently debating House Resolution Seventeen, a bill so complex and complicated no one can understand it, but it will most certainly lead to you contracting anal warts. And later, there’s one item in your refrigerator that can cause you to drop dead if you eat it. Stick with Network News One and we’ll tell you what it is at some point in the next three hours.”

The Network News One logo popped onto the screen, followed by a rugged, manly sounding announcer. “Network News One: The hottest chicks. The biggest titties. Oh yeah, and occasionally we report the news and shit.”

Mack grabbed the remote and shut the TV off, then looked to his nephew. “Shouldn’t you be going?”

Dylan looked down at his uncle and stretched out his hand. “Never leave a soldier behind.”

Mack wasn’t one to cry, but he felt a little choked up by the boy’s gesture. He nodded, then took Dylan’s hand and stood up.

“T-minus five minutes for me to pack my gear, soldier,” Mack said. “Report to the transport.”

Dylan nodded. “Sir, yes sir!”

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Zomcation – Chapter 6

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Mack sat at the kitchen table watching as his nephew arrange his power action ninja soldiers all over the table in a harrowing battle.

“And this one is Doctor Laserface,” Dylan explained. “Because he…

“…shoots lasers out of his face,” Mack said. “Got it.”

“And this one is Wrecker,” Dylan said. “Because he wrecks things.”

“Naturally,” Mack said.

“Then you’ve got Spelunker, Freewave, Battlecaster, Corporal Slice,”

“And these guys are all ninjas?” Mack asked.

“And soldiers,” Dylan replied.

“Makes sense,” Mack said.

“What rank were you?” Dylan asked.

“Were.” That word hit Mack pretty hard.

“Lieutenant,” Mack said. “I was a lieutenant.”

“Cool,” Dylan said as he held up a rather brutish looking action figure that was sporting big muscles and a buzz cut. “Then you’d be this guy. Lieutenant Paine McDanger.”

“Awesome name,” Mack said as he picked up the figure. “And not a bad likeness.”

A flustered Abby buzzed into the kitchen carrying two suitcases. “Dylan, where are your swim trunks?”

“I don’t know,” Dylan said. “Do I need them?”

“Yes you need them,” Abby said.

“I hate swimming,” Dylan said.

“You love swimming,” Abby said. “I won’t be able to keep you from the pool once you get to the hotel.”

“I don’t know,” Dylan said. “The bottom of my closet maybe?”

“Can you just go look?” Abby asked. “The bottom of your closet is a crap covered hellhole I want no part of.”

“OK,” Dylan said as he delicately placed a small, plastic weapon into the hand of one of his figures. “In a minute.”

“Now, Dylan.”

“I said, ‘in a minute!’”

Mack winced at Dylan’s flagrant disregard for authority.

“Mom!” Paige bellowed as she bursted into the kitchen. “Where’s my tablet?”

“I don’t know, Paige,” Abby said. “I’m not the keeper of your electronic gadgets.”

“Well,” Paige set. “This is going to be hashtag the worst trip ever if I can’t live stream everything that happens on Lifebox!”

“All your Lifebox friends are losers,” Dylan said.

“No one asked you, doofus,” Paige said. “And aren’t you a little too old to be playing with baby toys?”

“These aren’t baby toys,” Dylan said as he put one of his ninja soldiers behind the wheel of a plastic truck. “They’re collector’s items.”

“Mom, this is the worst!” Paige complained.

“I don’t know, Paige,” Abby said. “Keep looking and if you can’t find it you can just live stream everything you do with your phone.”

“What?” Paige asked as she held up her phone. “You mean this pathetic little sixteen gig weakling? I need my tablet to tell everyone what I’m doing at all times or I’m going to end up hashtag so yesterday.”

Dylan made explosion sounds as he knocked his toy truck over.

“You know Paige,” Abby said. “When I was a kid people thought you were the worst if you made them look at your vacation pictures.”

“I don’t care what they did in Jurassic times, Mom,” Paige said. “Here in the now I need to make everyone believe that everything I do is awesome or else that see you next Tuesday Heather Haskell will be with Tommy forever.”

Abby scrunched up her face in confusion. “See you next what now?”

“Pew, pew!” Dylan shouted as he made laser noises and knocked his soldiers over one by one. “No one can defeat Doctor Laserface!”

The fighting. The shouting. The silly noises. It all became too much for Mack.

The giant stood up and from the bottom of his gut pushed out the loudest, most visceral, “Atten hut!” his family had ever heard.

All three of his family members stopped what they were doing.

“Not you, Abby,” Mack said as he stood up.

“Oh,” Abby said. “Right.”

Mack clutched his hands behind his back and took on the stance of a drill sergeant.

“Dylan!” Mack shouted. “You will stop playing with your baby toys and you will brave the depths of your crap hole closet and you will not come out until you have located your swim trunks, have I made myself clear?”

“Sir,” Dylan shouted. “Yes, sir!”

The boy instantly ran to his room.

“Paige!” Mack shouted.

“Sir?” Paige replied.

“You will think about where you last used your tablet and you will report to that location and you will no doubt discover it there when you do so,” Mack said.

“OMG,” Paige said as she gave herself a light bonk on the head. “I left it at Kelly’s house next door.”

Paige walked off, leaving Mack and Abby alone.

“You have got to teach me how to do that,” Abby said.

“It’s pretty simple,” Mack said. “Create an aura around yourself that indicates you’re not willing to take shit from anyone.”

Abby shook her head. “I’m not sure I have much to work with here.”

“You do,” Mack said as he sat back down. “You just don’t realize it.”

On the opposite side of the kitchen, there was a desk up against the wall. Abby took a seat and started going through her mail.

“The thing I’ve learned over the past year,” Abby said. “Is that when parents are separated, kids tend to rise to the level of the most carefree parent.”

“Meaning?” Mack asked.

“Meaning,” Abby said as she ripped an envelope open. “Scott picks them up every once in awhile and lets them do anything they want. Thus, when I try to instill some rules they look at me like I have two heads.”

“Not really my place,” Mack said. “But when are you going to get rid of that guy?”

“I don’t know,” Abby said as she crumpled up and tossed a piece of junk mail. “He said he needed some time to find himself. I thought that meant he’d go be by himself for two weeks, but that was a year ago.”

“I never liked him,” Mack said. “Mom and Dad, God rest their souls, never liked him.”

“I understood a little bit where he was coming from,” Abby said. “We were fresh out of high school when I got pregnant with Abby. We were trying to do the right thing by getting married but we were never right together.”

“Blah, blah, blah,” Mack said. “Translation: he’s an ass whose lucky to have a wife and kids who love him and he’s too stupid to realize it. Time to find someone who will.”

“Son of a…”

“What?” Mack asked.

Abby sat down at the table and tossed Mack a bill that was replete with ominous red lettering.

“He took out a new credit card in my name!” Abby said.

Mack read the bill out loud. “Eight hundred and eleven dollars at the Gentleman’s Funbag Enthusiast Club…one thousand fifty nine dollars at the Meow Meow Kitty Kat Lounge…two thousand two hundred and four dollars at the Skank Factory?”

At that moment, Abby did something very un-Abby like. She huffed. She puffed. Then she lifted her head up into the air and screamed. “Arrrrrrrghhhhh I hate his stupid face!”

“Time to call a divorce lawyer,” Mack said.

Angry Abby left. Sad Abby took her place. She sobbed. She cried. She moved over and rested her head on her big brother’s shoulder.

“But I still love his stupid face,” Abby said.

“We can’t choose who we love,” Mack said. “Just what we let them to do us.”

“What do you know about it?” Abby asked.

“A thing or two,” Mack answered.

“Classified?” Abby asked.

“Yes,” Mack answered.

“Whatever,” Abby said as she lifted her head up and dried her eyes. “I really wanted us to work. I hoped if I just kept giving him his time and his space that he’d come around but all he ever does is keep asking for more time and more space and now this.”

“I don’t want to tell you what to do, Abby,” Mack said.

“No,” Abby said as she stood up. “I know what to do. I’m going to enjoy Wombat World and then Scott’s ass is gone for good as soon as I get back.”

“Bravo,” Mack said. “You need any help packing?”

“No,” Abby said as she opened up a cabinet above her sink and took out a small, plastic case.

“Dylan’s bee problem never got better?” Mack asked.

“Nope,” Abby said. “He has to carry a shot with him wherever he goes. This is his spare. Figured it’d be good to bring it just in case. Just one more addition to the Lane family’s lifetime bad luck-a-thon.”

“I don’t remember the Mackenzies having it that good either,” Mack said.

Abby hoisted a suitcase up onto the desk, unzipped it, placed Dylan’s shot into it, then zipped it back up. She then took a seat and stared up at a collage of old family photos on the wall.

“We had some good times,” Abby said as she pointed to a photo of her smiling parents.

“Yeah,” Mack said. “But call it God, call it cosmic forces or whatever, but them both coming down with cancer and dying within three years of each other…”

“Not fair,” Abby said.

“I’ve expected nothing to be fair ever since,” Mack said. “And life hasn’t disappointed.”

Abby smiled as she looked over the collage. Christmas photos of a little her and a little Mack opening up presents. Halloween photos with a little her dressed up as Princess Paulina and Mack dressed up as a soldier.

She stopped and tapped her finger on one photo in particular. In the background, there was the gigantic, magnificent Wombataorium, a marvel of modern architecture that was visible for miles, serving as the main attraction of Wombat World.

In the foreground, there was a ten year old Abby wearing a Wombat hat and a “I Love Willy Wombat” T-shirt with a look of sheer, unbridled joy on her face. She was standing next to her fourteen year old brother, Mack, who looked as though he would have rather been anywhere else.

Scrawled underneath the photo in black pen were the words, “Mackenzie trip to Wombat World, 1993.”

“Say, Mack?” Abby said.

“Yeah,” Mack said.

“You remember this?” Abby asked.

Mack stood up, walked over to the desk and looked over his sister’s shoulder at the photo.

He snickered. “Oh yeah.”

Abby dug into her suitcase and pulled out a plastic card with a picture of Ferdinand Ferret’s dopey face.

“I’ve got an extra all-access pass to Wombat World that Scott isn’t going to use,” Abby said.

Mack blinked, unsure of where his sister was going with this.

“And you happen to find yourself unemployed at the moment,” Abby said.

Mack scratched his head. “Oh, no…I don’t think…”

“Why not?” Abby asked.

“It wouldn’t be right,” Mack said.

“It wouldn’t be right to not use this,” Abby said. “It’s not like I can cash it in.”

“This is a place for children,” Mack said.

“They’ve built it up so much since we went there as kids,” Abby said. “They have stuff for adults to do too. They’ve got a Wombat Race Track, a Wombat Ball Park, Wombat Gourmet Restaurants, a Wombat Golf Course. Maybe they’ll let you play if you promise not to blow the course up.”

“Abby,” Mack said. “It’s just that…”

“It’ll be just like the time Dad drove us all down in the station wagon,” Abby said. “Only if you and I take turns we can get there faster.”

“Abby,” Mack repeated. “You don’t understand…”

Mack looked around and realized that the kids had been eavesdropping for awhile.

“Uncle Mack’s coming?” Dylan asked as he handed his mother his smelly swim trunks.

“Yeesh,” Abby said. “These need a wash.”

“Hooray,” Paige said as she hugged her uncle. “Uncle Mack is coming! Hashtag best vacation ever now!”

“Oh right,” Abby said. “Now you say it’s the hashtag best vacation ever now.”

Dylan joined in on the hugging.  Mack felt a need to shut it all down quick.

“Kids…kids…enough!”

The kids backed off.

“Thank you,” Mack said. “But I would not be any kind of a man if I went on this trip. I’m out of work and the first thing I need to do tomorrow is to pound the pavement and apply for jobs. No man worth a damn would go on a trip to a park dedicated to a cartoon wombat in my situation.”

“Please?” Dylan asked.

“Pretty please?” Paige asked.

“No,” Mack said. “That’s my final answer. You kids will understand when you’re older.”

“Boo,” Dylan said as he sat down at the table and returned to his power action ninja soldiers.

“Hashtag worst vacation ever again,” Paige said as she handed her tablet over to her mother for packing.

“You know your hashtags really hurt sometimes, Paige,” Abby said.

“Hashtag sorry not sorry,” Paige said as she left the room.

Abby continued packing for awhile. Dylan made more “pew, pew” sounds as he knocked down his soldiers.

“Ack!” Dylan shouted as he knocked his Spelunker figure down on the table. “Spelunker’s down! I gotta go on without him!”

“Whoa, whoa, whoa,” Mack said.

Dylan stopped playing. “What?”

“What do you mean, ‘go on without him?’”

“Spelunker got shot in the leg,” Dylan said. “He’s a goner. He’s just gonna weigh Freewave down.”

“Not on my watch,” Mack said as he picked up Spelunker and leaned him up against Freewave.

The giant then pointed a finger at his nephew. “Listen, kid. Whether its in a dumb game or in real life, you never leave a soldier behind, you got me?”

“I got you,” Dylan said.

“Good,” Mack said as he tussled his nephew’s hair. “Get to bed already. You got a big day tomorrow.”

“Sir, yes sir,” Dylan said as he collected his fingers and left the room.

Abby checked her suitcase one last time, then zipped it up and set it down by the front door.

“You sure I can’t talk you into this?”

“I’m sure,” Mack said.

“Because its not like you’ll be able to find a new job in one week,” Abby said.

“The sooner I get to work on it the sooner it happens,” Mack said.

Abby’s face turned grim. “It’s just that…”

Mack sighed. “I swear I won’t touch it.”

“Alright then,” Abby said.

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