The first outbreaks of buscemitis hit Miami hard; frantic dermatologists try to establish a link to sun damage, to Botox, to anything. None of it sticks. The only characteristic all the victims share is two X chromosomes.
There’s no cure. Experimental hepburnigrafting is only a topical treatment, and really no better than sunglasses. It spreads, leaping oceans, with cases in France, Estonia and Egypt (Buscemiless, they call it “Mubarak’s Legacy”).
The HBO gangster show gets pulled. Deep in his cups and the Trees Lounge replica in his basement, Buscemi watches the news with eyes like the soul of the world.
A ghost that has forgotten its name has no hope of ever resting; most of them grow quieter than whispers as the centuries grind down.
But some grow louder.
Xue Si holds her candle tight as a foul and arctic wind turns its flame to streamer. “I can give you a new name!” she yells. “I can give you silence and peace!”
What a kind offer, says the wind, sharpening into teeth and tongues and cruel laughter. The next word you say will name me!
Xue Si opens her mouth. All that comes out is the tearing sound of rotten silk.
Nobody’s ever going to build you a flying car, and you wouldn’t be permitted to fly it if they did. The music on the radio still won’t be good by our fortieth birthday, but someone will make that awful rhyming joke. You’ll still have a project due in a week, and it’s kind of neat, and if you could just find a girl who understood, you could get your plans together for the first time in what seems so long–it’s May 3rd, 2021, and–
Please remember that the world is round.
Please recall that you are never on level ground.
Hello. This is my last scheduled story on this site. You can read some sardonic thoughts about the project in retrospect, if you like.
The saw goes that mastery requires ten thousand hours of practice. By that measure, I’m now about one-fifth of halfway decent at writing goofy 101-word stories. But despite my occasional assertions, there are other ways to learn than doing, and one of them is aping your betters. I’ve persuaded some of the superstars I ape to write guest posts here for the next couple weeks. Lucky me!
Thanks, gentle reader. You have been unfailingly kind.
This is the fault of Ben Carson
After they took off, the clouds came down to envelop them. Wilhelmina grips the controls and peers through the Curtiss Condor’s windshield.
Adamson, her navigator, is behind her in the cabin, stiffened and dead from snakebite. On the seat next to her there is a glint of gold; something peeks out from a worn leather satchel. Too late for poor Adamson but the idol vindicates their claims, drowning out the scoffery of those salon-bound fools.
Wilhelmina glances at the fuel gauge struggling above reserve before firmly setting her eyes upon the roiling haze in front of her. Zero she flies.
A story by Grumpy Tim Coe
We will build houses, we will move mountains. We will put villages and villagers into valleys of contemporaneous security, license animated characters and unconventional love songs to commemorate our great groundbreaking. Men with trucks and ladders and wills will arrive early, early, early, flash their hammers and saws and seize lumber and wire, building houses, churches, stores, a depot. Their tools ring out into the bright dawn. Their even tans attest to the morality of good work. Love is a building, and they are building. They are loving. They are here for us, and by us. What can stop us now.
Suddenly a Ninja Dave appears
The clockwork man made of springs and mostly wicker moved closer to the little girl. “So warm,†the creature crooned in a disembodied voice, its gears whirring and clicking as it moved closer, limbs crackling like a forest fire. The girl screamed as the clockwork man leapt at her. Afterwards, the clockwork man wiped the warm, dark fluid from his sharpened teeth and looked down at himself. The girl’s myriad innards were running, oozing, dangling awkwardly from his exposed inner-workings. With no digestive system, this feeding had resulted, simply, in a sticky mess. “This isn’t what I expected,†the creature sighed.
Stephen Heintz forgot to title this story
“A magic talking monkey! Incredible!â€
It sighed. “As I’ve said several times now: I’m a chimpanzee.â€
The human was bouncing with excitement. “Who cares? You’re magic!â€
“I care? Chimps are smarter, we don’t have tails… It’s a pretty big difference.†The chimpanzee rolled its eyes.
“Can you grant wishes?â€
“Sure, lots of ‘em. To people who don’t call me a monkey.â€
The human stomped his foot. “So that’s it? I don’t get wishes?â€
“That’s right.â€
“You’re an asshole!â€
“No, I’m a chimpanzee.â€
The human reached for his machete. I can probably get a few wishes out of that paw, he thought.