Monthly Archives: October 2016

#31ZombieAuthors Rewind – Perrin Briar – Three Zombie Series and Counting

With Your Host: Schecky Blargfeld, Zombie Comedian

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It’s too bad the Americans and the Brits split up.

Sure we’ve got our differences.

They love tea. We love soda.  They love crumpets. We love donuts.

But we both love zombies…or at least love to read about them.

Last year, BQB dialed up across the pond and talked to Perrin about his love of everything zombified.

Check out that interview here.

And don’t forget to check out Perrin’s latest:

Skip: An Epic Science Fiction Fantasy Adventure Series (now available on Amazon.)

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#31WaystoDefeatAVampire – Politics

By: Count Krakovich, Asshat Vampire

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Bleh!

Trump, Hillary.  Hillary, Trump.

But I’m the bloodsucker?

Makes sense, bleh.

Yes, vampires hate politics – not so much government but people who make dumb arguments on both sides and them post them all over your Facebook wall long after you’ve told them you don’t care what they think, bleh.

The quickest way to get a vampire to turn tail is to offer your dumb opinions.  We prefer to keep it light and loosey goosey.  If you can’t be friends with someone who doesn’t share your political viewpoints then you’re a bigger weirdo than I am.

Have you ever caused a vampire to roll his eyes with your political discourse?

Discuss in the comments.

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Zomcation – Chapter 19

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The Wombat Garden was an enormous, state-of-the-art concert arena that seated roughly forty-thousand people in plush, comfortable chairs, most of which were full by the time Paige wandered in.

In a frenzied panic, the teenager walked up and down one aisle after another, searching for a free seat to no avail until someone shouted, “Hey!”

Paige turned her head. A freckled faced girl about the same age as Paige lifted a jacket off of the chair next to her and pointed to it.

It was right on the edge of a row so luckily, Paige didn’t even have to scooch past a bunch of people to reach it. She sat down right away.

“Thank you,” Paige said.

“No problem,” the girl replied as she shook Paige’s hand. “I’m Laura.”

“Paige.”

The teens looked around for a bit. The excitement in the room was palpable. Thousands of hormonal girls wearing Boyz a’Plenty shirts, holding up posters with their favorite boy on them, chatting away to each other incessantly.

“I’m sorry,” Paige said. “Were you saving this seat for someone?”

“In a way,” Laura said.

“Friend that couldn’t make it?” Paige asked.

Laura stared off into space and flashed a wry smile. “In a way,” she repeated.

“OK then,” Paige said as she leaned back. “Hashtag cryptic.”

Laura giggled. “My twin sister.”

“OMG,” Paige said. “Did she get lost or something?”

“She died,” Laura said.

Paige frowned. “OMG.”

“Oh its ok,” Laura said as she flipped through her official souvenir Boyz a’Plenty concert program. “Well, no, it’ll never be ok but it’s about as ok as it will ever be. We always went everywhere together. Movies, shows, concerts and she was always late, so I got in the habit of saving a seat for her.”

Laura’s eyes welled up.

“I’m sorry,” Laura said.

“It’s ok,” Paige replied.

“Its just that, she lost her battle with cancer two years ago,” Paige said. “And here I am, still putting my jacket on a seat like a big dummy hoping she’ll just walk right in and sit down.”

Now Paige was crying. “That’s not dumb. That’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever heard.”

“It is?” Laura asked.

“Hashtag love is forever,” Paige said.

“Hashtag love really is forever isn’t it?” Laura asked.

The girls traded a hug then Paige held up her tablet.

“Do you mind if I commemorate this moment with a selfie?” Paige asked.

“Commemorate away,” Laura answered.

The girls immediately pursed their lips into duck bills as Paige snapped.

“Hashtag bravest person I’ve ever met,” Paige said as she typed. “And posted!”

“So who’s your favorite?” Laura asked.

“OMG,” Paige said. “Hashtag a question for the ages. Let’s see. A.J. is dreamy but B.J. seems kind of damaged yet not so much that the love of a good woman couldn’t fix him, you know?”

“I totally know,” Laura said. “Sometimes I like to pretend that woman is me.”

“Me too,” Paige said.

“C.J. is the bad boy for sure,” Laura said.

“He is,” Paige said. “But you know, Davey just seems really sweet and down to earth so I’d have to go with him.”

“Everyone loves Davey,” Laura said.

“Hashtag so true,” Paige said.

The lights dimmed and thousands of girls instantly screamed in glee.

“Hello girls,” an announcer said.

More happy screams.

“Are you ready for the boys?” the announcer asked.

Joyous screams.

The lights flickered across the arena in a strobe effect. A hole opened in the stage and out of it, a platform immersed in fog slowly rose up.

“Coming to you from the Wombat Garden in fabulous Wombat World,” the announcer continued. “You’ve heard their hit singles ‘What Up, Girl?’ and ‘Don’t Be Sad, Girl.’”

The fog dissipated as the platform locked into the rest of the stage. Four shadowy boyish silhouettes were now visible.

Paige and Laura, like every other girl in the crowd, were on their feet, screaming like maniacs and bouncing up and down.

Choice words shouted from the audience included, “I love you, A.J!” and “Davey, I want to have ten thousand of your babies!”

“OMG,” Paige said. “Hashtag I’m gonna pass out!”

“I know,” Laura said. “Me too.”

Paige hit the record button on her tablet, pointed it at the stage and started a live stream.

“Here to perform their latest smash hit ‘Girl, Won’t You Be My Girl?’ its A.J., B.J., C.J. and Davey aka…Boyz a’Plenty!”

The spotlight hit the boys. They turned around, smiled and waved and every girl in attendance impersonated a mental patient that had just escaped from an insane asylum.

“OMG,” Paige said as she squinted at the stage. “Davey has peach fuzz on his chin!”

Laura squinted. “He does!”

The boys wore flesh colored headsets that amplified their voices.

“Hey girls,” A.J. said.

That was met with a resounding, “Woooooo!”

B.J. strutted right up to the edge of the stage. “You ready to make some noise, Wombat World?”

Oh they were. And oh they did.

“Wooooooo!”

“Come on,” C.J. said. “You can do better than that!”

The girls belted out an even louder, “Wooooooo!”

“Hey fellas,” Davey said. “I love Wombat World, don’t you?”

“We sure do,” A.J. said. “And not just because we’re contractually obligated to as we’re signed with the music division of Carruthers Brothers Amalgamated Studios.”

“I love the rides,” B.J. said.

“I love the cotton candy,” C.J. said.

“That’s all great,” Davey said. “But you know what would would make a day like today even more special?”

“What’s that, Davey?” A.J. asked.

“If one of these girls…”

The girls lost it. Ear drums were shattered as they screeched at a dog whistle pitch and lobbed various undergarments at the boys.

Davey grinned and looked out at the crowd. “…would be my girl.”

More hysterics until the announcer took over.

“Attention girls. If you are sitting in seat 47A, congratulations! Head up on stage so your fun filled day with Boyz a’Plenty can begin!”

Every girl in the joint frantically checked her seat. Paige’s heart pounded as she stared at the number printed on the back of her chair – 47A.

“OMG,” Paige said.

Laura smiled.

“What do I do?” Paige asked.

“What do you mean, ‘what do you do?’” Laura asked. “Get up there!”

Paige looked up at the boys on stage, then around at the auditorium filled with insane girls, then at Laura.

“No,” Paige said. “This is your sister’s seat. It should be you.”

Laura grabbed Paige’s hand. “Don’t even worry…”

Before Laura could finish her sentence, Paige was shouting, “OMG thank you Laura, I’ll never forget you!” as she beat feet towards the stage.

“…about it.”

Laura folded her arms in disgust. “Shit,” she said to a Paige who was no longer there. “You were supposed to call my bluff so could be all like, ‘Well, if you insist’ but just run your stupid, inconsiderate ass right up there.”

The lights went dark. A few minutes later, the spotlight hit the stage again and Paige was sitting in a chair, flipping out and live streaming away on her tablet as the boys surrounded her.

“Hey girls,” A.J. said to the audience.

“We’ve got a very special guest with us,” B.J. said.

“Her name is Paige,” C.J. said.

Davey walked over to Paige and got down on one knee. Tears of epic elation streamed down Paige’s cheeks.

“Paige, I’ve just got one question for you…”

The boy band member with the peach fuzz on his chin took Paige’s hand into his, looked her in the eyes and asked, “Girl…will you be my girl?”

Paige looked as though her head was about to physically explode.

Background music filled the speakers. It was a hip, funky beat.

The boys broke out into elaborate dance moves as they sang in unison, “Girl, won’t you be my, be my girl…”

All the girls in the arena cheered.

“…won’t you be my whole wide world? Oh girl, won’t you be my, be my girl?”

A fuming mad Laura remained seated. “What a bitch.”

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#31ZombieAuthors Rewind – Ann Christy – When Life Gives You Lemons…

With Your Host: Schecky Blargfeld, Zombie Comedian

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I don’t know why people are always complaining about being handed lemons.

Sure, they’re sour but after you pucker your lips for a minute they’re delicious.  Squeeze the juice right into a nice glass of water and you’ve got a good thirst quencher.

You know what the worst kind of food to be given is? Brains. Those things are disgusting.

Believe me, hot sauce does nothing to mask the brainy flavor.  If you’ve never eaten a brain, then don’t complain to me about lemons.  I wish that zombies were addicted to lemons instead of brains.

Anyway, at this time last year, Bookshelf Q. Battler called up Ann Christy on his space phone to discuss how to make the best of a bad situation, editing your work and of course, zombies.

Check out that interview here.

And don’t forget to visit Ann’s Amazon author page.

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#31WaysToDefeataVampire – Way #4 – Boring Social Media Posts

By: Count Krakovich, Asshat Vampire

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Bleh!

Eternity is a long time, 3.5 readers.

It is an especially long time when all the people around you are very boring.

People used to be interesting.  They went out. Had fun. Partied.  Talked to each other.

Now all you weirdoes do is sit at home on your computers and live stream your lunches to your 3.5 followers.

Bleh, you’re all boring I say.  So boring that every day, vampires are staking themselves in droves just to avoid getting another tweet with a picture of your dog doing something hilarious.

Just stop with the social media, people.  Your boring posts defeat vampires.

Oh wait, perhaps this is your intention.  Zuckerberg is by far the greatest vampire hunter of them all then.

Have you ever posted something so boring that it made vampires want to stake themselves?

Discuss in the comments.

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Zomcation – Chapter 18

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Doug wandered through Wombat Central Square, a fresh red bruise on his cheek from the purse he took to the face, wielded by the mother of the boy in the Kippy Kangaroo shirt.

“Earl,” Doug said into his walkie-talkie. “Been a half-hour since I’ve heard from you. Where you at, man? Riggs needs his Murtaugh, bro.”

The security guard leaned up on a fence surrounding a garden filled with leafy green bushes, each one trimmed into the likeness of a different Wombat World character.

“God almighty,” Doug said as he flipped the shades attached to his prescription glasses downward and watched the tourists pass him by. “I’m surrounded by rule breakers whose asses are covered by a corrupt system that won’t let me dispense my own brand of personal justice.”

A few feet away, a nine-year old boy leaned over the fence and blew chunks all over a bush shaped like Chester Chimp.

“Oh honey,” the boy’s mother said as she patted his back. “I told you not to eat all that candy. Are you ok?”

“Uh huh,” the boy said as he took his mother’s hand.

“Come on,” the mother said as she led her son away. “Let’s find a place to sit down for a little while.”

Doug stared at Chester’s barf covered face, then at the mother and son as they walked away.

“Not on my watch.”

The security guard was about to pursue the youngster when he heard a bunch of children laughing and instantly snapped his head towards them.

What a sight. Right in the middle of the square, an employee in a Willy Wombat mascot costume was lying down on the pavement, powerless against the hordes of small children who were jumping up and down on this poor individual.

Doug took one last look at the boy, who was now sitting with his mother on a bench on the opposite side of the square. “Shit. You just got lucky, punk.”

The security guard blew on his whistle and approached the scene.

“Hey you little criminals!” Doug shouted. “Attacking Willy Wombat is an official Wombat World offense!”

None of the kids seemed to think it was an attack. Some of the kids wrapped their little arms around Willy and hugged him. Others bounced up and down on his big belly. Some kicked, poked, and prodded him in the head and other assorted parts.
Doug blew his whistle again and tried shouting louder.

“Damn it! If you kids keep messing with the bull, you will get the horns!”

None of the kids paid the rent-a-cop any mind.

“Chief,” Doug said into his walkie-talkie. “I got a situation here. I’m going to need someone to bring me a stun gun and about twenty-seven cartridges. You know what? Make it an even thirty. Some of these kids are pretty fat.”

“Shut up, shit for brains,” the Chief’s voice replied. “Ellen’s on now and she’s going to dance with her guest. It will be heartwarming and hysterical.”

Willy flailed his arms and legs to and fro. Doug could hear a muffled female voice screaming from inside the oversized wombat head.

“Attention kids,” Doug said. “Free toys are being given away at the Wombat Gift Shop!”

The little urchins all looked up.

“That’s right,” Doug said. “Free toys at the Wombat Gift Shop.”

Like a pack of wild hyenas tripping on PCP, the tiny wackos stampeded away. Doug leaned over the mascot.

“Are you ok in there?”

“Unnghh,” growned the voice from inside the wombat head. “Holy shit.”

“Jess?” the security guard asked.

“Doug?” Jess replied.

“I thought you were Princess Paulina,” Doug said.

“I was,” Jess said. “But I turned thirty.”

“Oh,” Doug said. “Right. The official ‘no human character actors over thirty’ policy. My condolences. Happy birthday though.”

“Worst one ever,” Jess said.

Doug grabbed Jess by her furry hand and helped her to her feet. She stumbled a bit until she gripped Doug’s shoulder for support.

“It’s hotter than Satan’s asshole in here and twice as smelly,” Jess said. “I can barely see anything. I keep tripping over these giant feet. This whole suit must weigh like a hundred pounds.”

“Yeah,” Doug said. “FYI union rules require that mascots be led around the park by a handler. You got cheated today but next time don’t leave the backlot until they get someone to run interference on the kids for you.”

Doug led a very slow, extremely wobbly wombat actress to a bench in front of Jimbo Frog’s Pizza Extravaganza, helped her sit down, then joined her.

“I need to take this stupid head off,” Jess said. “I’m suffocating.”

“No can do,” Doug said. “Technically, I should run you in for breaking character. Using your own voice while in a mascot costume is a big no-no.”

“I could give a shit, Doug,” Jess said.

“I’ll let you off with a warning,” Doug continued. “The Chief’s been riding my ass to compromise my principles lately so I figure if all the little pukes running around here are getting a break then I suppose you should too.”

Jess sighed.  “I once got a call back for a second audition for a lead role on a premium cable TV show.”

“Which one?” Doug asked.

“The one with all the gratuitous nudity, violence, and absurd, nonsensical plot lines,” Jess replied.

“Oh,” Doug said. “That doesn’t exactly narrow it down, but as my partner Earl told me this morning, ‘in horseshoes as in life, close doesn’t count.’”

“Earl’s your partner?” Jess asked. “I thought he was just an old man you stand next to.”

“Yeah,” Doug said. “I could see how a layperson such as yourself could make that mistake.”

The boy who vomited minutes earlier was up and feeling better. He and his mother were standing in front of Willy.

“Willy!” the boy cried. “Mom, it’s Willy!”

The boy’s mother handed Doug her camera. “Would you mind?”

“I absolutely mind, lady,” Doug said. “I can’t compromise park security by appearing in your photo.”

The woman glared at Doug. “I meant can you take a photo of my son and I with Willy?”

“Oh,” Doug said as he looked at the slumped over mascot, which he knew contained an aching Jess.

“Willy’s on break,” Doug said.

“No,” came Jess’s voice from inside the head. “Its ok.”

Doug stood up and pointed the lady’s camera at Willy as the boy and his mother hugged the mascot.

“You sound funny, Willy,” the boy said.

“Yeah,” Jess replied. “That happens when you get curb stomped in the vagine fifty times, kid.”

“Huh?” the boy asked.

Jess was quiet for a few seconds, then mimicked Willy’s squeaky voice. “Have a wombat-tactic day at Wombat World, little boy!”

Doug handed the woman her camera and sat down as the boy and his mother left.

“Hey Doug,” Jess said.

“Yeah?” Doug asked.

“You and I started working here right around the same time, didn’t we?” Jess asked.

“Hmm,” Doug said as he thought about the question. “Yes. The year was 2006. George W. Bush was in the White House and Dick Cheney had just shot his friend in the face. Justin Timberlake was bringing the sexy back and The Departed was on its way to winning the Oscar…”

“Didn’t ask for a history lesson,” Jess said. “Just seems like time has gone by way too fast.”

“Time is the cruelest of all mistresses,” Doug said.

“Where’d you think you’d be by now?” Jess asked.

“On the force,” Doug said. “Figured this security gig was just a brief stop until I got a state police cruiser of my very own. You?”

“Crushed under the weight of all my acting awards,” Jess said.

“That’s a big dream,” Doug said. “Me? I’d just settle for a nice wife to come home to.”

“Come to think of it,” Jess said. “I have been wondering where my handsome prince is.”

Doug raised an eyebrow. “Maybe closer than you think.”

Without skipping a beat, Jess replied, “I said, ‘handsome,’ dummy.”

“Eh, you know Jess,” Doug said. “No offense but I’ve always believed incredibly good looking women such as yourself are nothing but a major hassle anyway.”

“Seriously?” Jess asked.

“Yeah,” Doug said. “Give me a woman low on options who shares my interest in nerd culture and I’ll be a happy camper.”

“But you just came on to me,” Jess said.

“When?” Doug asked.

“When you said maybe my prince is closer than I think,” Jess said.

“Pbbbht,” Doug said. “Stop flattering yourself, woman. All I meant was that yes, somewhere around here there’s a handsome guy who will be willing to take on the arduous, unenviable task of keeping an attractive woman happy.”

“I’m not that high-maintenance,” Jess said.

“Jess,” Doug said. “Please. Accept your rejection and move on.”

“Really,” Jess said. “I’m all about grease and wrenches. I’m happiest when I’m working on my bike.”

“Shh,” Doug said as he held up his finger and pressed it against the mascot head’s fuzzy fabric lips. “You’re just embarrassing yourself now.”

“Uggh,” Jess said. “Whatever.”

Jess and Doug sat silently for awhile.

“Say Doug?” Jess asked.

“Yeah?” Doug asked.

“Didn’t you just cause a big headache for the gift shop?” Jess asked.

“Oh shit,” Doug said as he pulled out his walkie-talkie and pressed the call button. “Wombat Gift Shop! Wombat Gift Shop, come in!”

An employee of the gift shop returned Doug’s call with a deafening, “Arrrrrrggggh!”

Doug stood up and took off. “I better look into that.”

Jess remained on the bench, mumbling to herself. “Turning thirty. Losing my princess job. Being forced to wear a throw-rug shaped like a glorified rodent. Getting rejected by a male mutant I wasn’t even propositioning. Can this day get any worse?”

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Movie Review – Masterminds (2016)

I feel like I’ve been watching this trailer of Kristen Wiig getting punched in the cooter forever and now this movie is finally here.

BQB here with a review of Masterminds.

Based on the true story of a 1997 heist for $17 million dollars from armored car company Loomis Fargo (the largest in history), this comedy stars the eternally awkward Zach Galifinakis as armored car driver/thief David Ghannt.

Ghannt is a loser engaged to creepy weirdo fart enthusiast Jandice (Kate McKinnon), but pines for co-worker Kelly (Kristen Wiig).

When Kelly’s friend Steve (Owen Wilson) devises a plan to rip off Loomis, Ghannt ends up on the run in Mexico, Steve and his wife Michelle (Mary Elizabeth Ellis) go on a lavish, attention grabbing shopping spree, and Kelly ends up caught up in the middle – trying to save Ghannt from Steve’s double-cross.

There are many parts that are laugh out loud funny.  Zach has a knack for playing clueless dummies who aren’t self-aware.  Owen played a great douche.  Kristen was a good confused love interest. Kate will continue to make a fortune for staring creepily into the camera.

Also – Jason Sudeikis as a hitman who enjoys his work too much and much to my surprise, Devin Ratray (aka Kevin’s older brother Buzz in Home Alone) all grown up as one of Steve’s flunkies.

Meanwhile, Leslie Jones gets the chance to flex a little acting muscle as the FBI agent trying to crack the case.

Sounds cliche, but if a comedy makes me laugh, it wins.

My main worry – I wonder if it is a good thing to make a movie about these people.  It almost turns a bunch of criminals into heroes.

Then again, it does explain how these were regular, working-class people who ended up being around more money than they could ever have dreamed of and weren’t able to control themselves.

Still, I can’t condone it, but I suppose all these years later we can laugh at it.

STATUS: Shelf-worthy.

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#31ZombieAuthors Rewind – Day 3 – Stevie Kopas – The End of the World is Not Glamorous

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With Your Guest Host: Schecky Blargfeld, Zombie Comedian

You know folks, a lot of people say they’re into zombies.

In fact I just had dinner and now I have a few people inside me.

:::rimshot:::

I’m here all month, folks.

“The end of the world is not glamorous.” That’s a lesson people learn in Stevie’s Breadwinner Trilogy.

Its true.  Enjoy civilization, people, what with money and jobs and heat and plumbing and TV because an apocalypse, zombie or otherwise, would not be fun.

On the third day of his journey into zombitude, BQB talked to Stevie about her books, publishing, and even learned about her favorite beer.

Check out that interview here.

And don’t forget to check out Stevie’s new book, Never Say Die: Stories of the Zombie Apocalypseavailable on Amazon now.

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#31WaysToDefeataVampire – Kindness

By: Count Krakovich, Asshat Vampire

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Hug a vampire.

Bleh!

“Kill ’em with kindness” goes the old saying and it is applicable to vampires.

Seriously. Humans see us and they’re all like, “Eek! A vampire!”

Its ridiculous because we don’t always want to eat you.  Sometimes we’re full and we don’t want to eat you at all.

Sometimes we just want to hang out with you and shoot the breeze and talk about cars and movies and make paper airplanes and trade taco salad recipes.

Ever think of that?

No. Its always “Waah but I don’t want to be permanently damned.”  You people are so needy.

Next time you want to confuse a vampire, give him a hug.  He’ll be so surprised he’ll just walk away.

Or he may very well bite you.

You know what, now that I think of it, there’s like a 90 percent chance he’ll bite you and a ten percent he’ll just be confused and walk away so I get it. You probably don’t want to take those odds.

Have you hugged a vampire and lived to tell the tale?

Discuss in the comments.

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Zomcation – Chapter 17

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Earl walked across the cement floor of the Wombat World main receiving warehouse. Boxes of cheap, tacky toys and merchandise shipped in from third world labor camps lined the shelves.

His walkie-talked squawked.

“Hey Earl,” came the garbled voice of Doug. “Got a little boy here wearing a Kippy Kangaroo shirt. That’s the mascot of the theme park down the road. I’m going to bring him in for questioning.”

Earl pulled out his walkie-talkie and pressed the call button. “Doug, just stand there and do nothing until I get back.”

Too late. Doug’s voice came through once more. “Hey kid! Hold up! We don’t take kindly to kangaroo lovers around here…”

“Asshole,” Earl said as he holstered his radio.

The back end of a tractor trailer truck was lined up with the loading dock. Brother Klaus, still wearing Jim Bob’s clothing and sunglasses, stood inside the warehouse, waiting.

“Hello,” Earl said. “What have you got?”

“Oh just a whole mess of soda pop syrup, I reckon,” Brother Klaus said in a southern accent. “Hoo dowgie, traffic was a bear but I wrassled it all the way here, sure enough.”

“Got your ID?” Earl asked.

“Yessir,” Brother Klaus said as he handed over the driver’s license he pilfered from Jim Bob. “Can’t be too careful nowadays, especially with all them terrorists running around willy nilly.”

Earl inspected the license. It was issued in Florida. It listed the driver’s name as one James Robert Tucker. But something was off.

The security guard squinted at the photo, then looked up and squinted at Brother Klaus’s face.

“You lose a little weight there, fella?” Earl asked.

Brother Klaus was quiet for a moment, then patted his skinny, nearly non-existent belly. “Why I sure did, pardnah and thank you for asking. My wife done got me on that program where you stand on your head three times a day and you gotta slap yourself in the face with a wet noodle anytime you eat anything bigger than your fist. Works wonders.”

“Huh,” Earl said as he turned around and took out his walkie-talkie. “Hold on. I’m going to call this in.”

Brother Klaus reached into his pocket and pulled out a garrote wire.

“Chief?” Earl said into his walkie talkie.

“What is it, Earl?” the chief’s voice replied. “You know I hate it when people interrupt me during the View. Joy Behar is a national treasure.”

The cultist separated the two handles and gripped one into each of his hands.

“Sorry, Chief,” Earl said. “Look, I got a…”

The wire was around Earl’s throat. Brother Klaus yanked back with all his might, crushing his victim’s windpipe.

Earl dropped his radio on the ground. He threw his hands up and lunged at his attacker, but it was of no use. His eyes bugged out and his face turned purple.

“Earl, I don’t have all day here,” the Chief said. “Aww shit, Whoopi’s on fire today.”

“Gack.” Earl struggled a bit more.

“Earl, you there?” the Chief asked over the radio. “Eh, probably something to do with old shit for brains. Tell Doug to stop harassing the customers over piddly shit. I’ve gotten ten complaints already and I haven’t even had my breakfast burrito.”

“Ack.”

The long, difficult life of Earl Hutchins had come to an end.

Brother Klaus looked around and seeing no one, he pocketed his wire, then dragged Earl’s body through the warehouse until he found a dumpster. He lifted the lid, hoisted his victim in as if he were so much trash, then let the lid drop.

“Earl!” came the Chief’s voice. “Everything ok there?”

The cultist returned to the scene of the crime and picked up the radio.

“Shit,” the Chief said. “If you’re hurt or something let me know. I’d check it out but the ladies are about to tell me why my penis makes me inferior.”

Brother Klaus adopted his best, default American accent and pushed the call button. “Everything A-OK here, Chief.”

A moment passed.

“Earl, you sound funny,” the Chief said.

“Me?” Brother Klaus said. “No. Maybe your inferior penis has affected your brain.”

“Probably,” the Chief said. “Take it easy, Earl.”

“OK,” Brother Klaus said. He then returned to the dumpster, opened up the lid, chucked the radio in, then closed it.

It wasn’t a moment too soon, for as Brother Klaus returned to the trailer, a team of burly looking workers wearing yellow coveralls with Willy Wombat’s face on the back walked in.

“You got a delivery?” one of the workmen asked.

“Sure do,” Brother Klaus said. “Whole heap of soda pop gunk.”

“Where’s security?” the workman asked.

“Ahh there was a feller what come in here a few minutes ago,” Brother Klaus said, returning to a southern accent. “He gave it all a once over and said it looked good.”

“Weird,” the workman said. “They usually wait until we get here.”

The workman and Brother Klaus stared at each other for a bit.

“Oh well,” the workman said as he shrugged his shoulders. “Come on guys, lets get this all unloaded and off to the concession stands.”

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