Zad wrote:
Pretty good. Like the Robert Rankin and Tom Holt influences!
Yeah, I was going through a pretty heavy Robert Rankin phase while churning this out. Anyway, on it goes...
COLOSTOMY BAG PINATA
When it was decided to raise the U.S.S Arizona from the bottom of Pearl Harbour one would say it was raised a few hundred kilometres too high since it was now in low orbit above the Earth. It wasn’t really raised by people though; they just assumed it was misplaced. People looked everywhere for it including places they’d already looked before without success. Yet looking for it in space never occurred to anyone so naturally the official explanation was that the original crew had become zombies with rage and raised the vessel for a revenge mission on the Japanese only to sink again somewhere off Indonesia because they hadn’t welded up all the holes properly. Well it was kind of true, but Beasts of the Stars had intercepted the Arizona before it reached the shores of Tokyo and converted it into a crude space cruiser while the zombie sailors were dropped off at the only place they would go unnoticed.
The Chicken and Fanbelt welcomed its newest members.
Zartor, high and mighty leader of the Beasts of the Stars was terribly angry, terribly angry indeed. The great crustacean, resplendent in his purple and gold cloak, stormed down the rusted, dripping corridors of the Arizona, his lackeys and yes-men following behind at a safe distance. Shoving aside those who were not quick enough to get out of his way, Zartor stomped along the steel grated floors until finally reaching a heavy, thick door.
Banging loudly on the metal with one great claw, Zartor bellowed at the occupant to open up. There was a loud clank, followed by a deep hiss as the hydraulics strained to open the thick, steel door. The room was dark when Zartor entered, and finding the light switch the room was bathed in a sickly pale light. On a bunk to the left of the room lay the curled up form of Zargon, Zartor’s second in command.
‘Wake up Zargon!’ shouted Zartor. He glanced briefly around the room. It was pretty much the same as his own, rusted and bare, dripping with moisture through cracks in the metal bulkheads. The only difference was sitting in a jar beside Zargon’s bunk. It was a thing from Mog, and it gave Zargon the willies.
Zargon turned an eyestalk to face his leader standing in the doorway. With a groan the giant prawn tried to get up but couldn’t. ‘Can’t you come back another time, Zartor? I’m not feeling very well.’
‘I need a word with you right now!’ Zartor yelled.
Outside in the corridor, three megaplankton came chatting and laughing among themselves. When they saw their irate leader they were suddenly quiet as they passed him, and when they reached the far end of the corridor, Zartor thought he heard them sniggering.
‘You told me that Wokie Retrieval Unit you sent was the best! Have you any idea what they brought back?’
Zargon didn’t answer, he merely groaned. From outside the room Zartor heard someone making cooing noises, followed by raucous laughter. This only angered the great leader all the more.
‘I order you to get up now!’ he bellowed.
With a mammoth effort Zargon rose and sat on the edge of the bunk. He looked a different shade of blue than usual. ‘What happened?’ he finally managed to ask.
‘Your unit did not bring back the Wokies I had specifically requested. I have Prince Zoobador Poobar coming tonight and we had the entire evening set aside for playing Snap the Wokie!’
When the super intelligent megaplankton had given up on the sea and set off into space, they had expected a life of infinite opportunity and excitement. What they did find was that space was incredibly dull. The sheer spectacular distances that spanned the void prevented them from establishing any sort of home world, and any exciting encounters with alien intelligence was the thing of fantasy. As far as they knew, Beasts of the Stars were the only space faring race out here in the galactic wilderness. Thus the game of Snap the Wokie was born. Although it was a game totally unlike Rugby League it too was considered a homosexual metaphor.
The rules involved first obtaining a Wokie, or earthman, from a discrete trailer park or art gallery. The next phase was to strap said Wokie to a steel table and shove as many Victorian bicycles up the creature’s rectum until it burst, or “snapped”. If a Wokie snapped, the plankton was the winner. However if the Wokie survived the wagered amount of penny-farthings up his arse he was the winner (so to speak) and released back on Earth.
Beasts of the Stars never bothered erasing the memories of their contestants so any who did survive had full memory of the nastiest anal probing in extraterrestrial history.
‘So what happened?’ asked Zargon groggily. Zartor fidgeted with the clasp of his robes, staring at the floor.
‘Everyone is laughing at me.’ He replied. ‘I don’t know what the hell that thing was that your guys brought back but it scared the hell out of me.’
‘So that was your girlie scream I heard not long ago. I thought Mrs Zeflar had trod on a stoat. I like stoats.’
Zartor didn’t. In fact he found them too long and sneaky. And as high lord and master of the most feared (and only) race of intergalactic bullies he was very shocked and appalled at how high pitched and silly his scream was. Not only that but he knew the ship’s intercom was on so the entire crew would have undoubtedly heard it.
Well what do you expect, he reasoned with himself,
when a flock of white doves fly out of a technicoloured Wokie’s bum. Zartor regained his composure, and with as much authority he could muster he ordered his second in command out of bed.
‘Your weird Wokie escaped from the insertion chamber and is loose somewhere in the ship. I want it found and returned to me immediately, and prepare “Old Side Splitter”!’
‘But Zartor,’ Zargon exclaimed, ‘we don’t have enough lubricant to probe with it! The three seater is just too big!’
‘Don’t worry Zargon,’ Zartor replied maliciously, ‘we won’t be needing any.’ Zartor took one more look at that thing from Mog, shivered, and left the room.
Zargon negotiated the deep, dark bowels of the ship very carefully. The tiny torch he carried in his huge claw only penetrated the darkness a few metres before him. The sound of water dripping through the floors above was joined by the constant throb of the ship’s engines. And Zargon was feeling queasy for four very good reasons. Firstly that multicoloured Wokie whom his team and foolishly believed was an exotic specimen but was really a creepy, creepy thing was loose down here. Secondly if he didn’t find it Zartor was no doubt going to send him to the insertion chamber to bear the full brunt of “Old Side Splitter”.
Thirdly he really wished he hadn’t eaten that Earth dog that was brought back with the Wokie. It was making him very, very nauseous.
And finally, several months ago he decided his thing from Mog looked lonely and needed a mate. So after procuring one against the strong wishes of Zartor he decided to hide it down here where nobody would know. The problem being that it had escaped from its jar the very next day and was lurking somewhere down here.
The worst part was that he had no idea what a thing from Mog really involved. Was it dangerous, or was it something that was just going to die and stink out the whole ship? Who could say, he just had to find it before Zartor did.
Zargon carefully climbed down the rusted, iron ladder that led to the bottom deck. Nobody ever came down here, partly because it was so dark and humid but mostly because it was very possible to step through a poorly welded up torpedo hole and float off into the void. Contrary to most beliefs, this is not a pleasant experience.
The giant prawn felt his way along a pitch-black corridor. Every now and then a doorway would open up on either side. Zargon would check each one nervously then move on, yet before long the fear and stress were too much for him.
Running to a nearby disposal port Zargon heaved the contents of his stomach into the tube. When the outside port opened with a metallic screech, one half digested and still alive hound dog shot out and began its long and quite traumatic descent back to Earth.
Feeling much, much better Zargon wiped his mouth with the back of his claw and continued along the darkened hall. The last room he hadn’t checked lay at the very end. The great prawn had to climb under and over a tangled mess of leaking pipes and twisted metal to get to what looked like a room that had been sealed, only to have the metal plate welded over the doorway torn open.
Gingerly he peered inside. As he expected he couldn’t see a thing, and he dared not shine his torch inside fearing he would disturb whatever was in there.
To his surprise Zargon thought he heard voices coming from inside. Strange voices. Hushed voices. Voices that can startle a hare at twenty paces. There were two of them and they seemed to be conversing.
Zargon strained to listen over the hum of the ship’s engines. The first voice seemed to be confused and afraid. It spoke in fluent Earth Wokie and was surely the one that had escaped the insertion chamber. The second voice Zargon was not so sure about. It spoke in a calm and soothing manner, but with broken speech as though it was struggling with the language. The only explanation Zargon could think of was that the Wokie was conversing with the thing from Mog and that the thing from Mog was giving the Wokie emotional support.
The conversation went a little like this:
Thing from Mog: So you are afraid of becoming a better person?
Wokie: No, I just don’t know if I can adjust and I’ll end up hurting those around me again.
Thing from Mog: If you don’t try, you will never know.
Wokie: I understand that, but what difference will it make? I’ve already caused too much grief. I want to change completely.
Thing from Mog: And that is what we shall accomplish today. With my guidance you will become what you always wanted to be, but never had the strength and courage to become.
Wokie: Yes! I will become a different person, but I can only do it with your help.
Thing from Mog: And so you shall. Let us begin…together!
Zargon heard footsteps coming towards him from inside. Quickly he dashed down the hall towards the rusted ladder. He scampered up to the next deck, and the next and next. Eventually he came to the upper level and raced down the corridor, pushing aside startled crewmembers. Zargon’s mind was racing with a hundred thoughts. All this time he had taken advantage of Wokies and enjoyed harming them for his enjoyment. Now he knew they were sensitive, fragile creatures that only wanted to better themselves. What right did the Beasts of the Stars have to play such vulgar games with them? From now he was going to protect Wokies rather than violate them.
And then there was that thing from Mog! It was nothing to fear, it was a soothing, helpful creature that lent its support and took an active role in bringing people to their full potential. All this time he had one sitting on his bedside table in a jar without realising what a treasure he truly had.
Sweating and panting, Zargon slip around a corner and banged on the opening mechanism to his quarters. Slowly with a hiss the huge door ground upward and Zargon ducked underneath and scurried inside. As always there in the jar was the thing from Mog. Zargon took it up in one claw and threw it to the floor, smashing the glass.
‘Oh thing from Mog,’ he began ‘I always wanted to return to the seas of Earth but my responsibilities here require me to remain in AARGH!’
Free from its glass imprisonment, the thing from Mog immediately grew one thousand times its size and devoured Zargon in one slurp.
Deep down in the very bowels of the ship, two figures emerged from a darkened room. A large and authoritive figure stood beside a short and fat one.
‘So you promise me I will become a new person?’ Asked the short, fat one.
‘Oh, yes.’ Replied the tall figure. ‘You shall assume the guise of a young bartender named Mikhail Parrot. For seven years you shall remain anonymous and discreet, developing your powers through years of endless frustration as you are forced to deal with the lowliest sub humans that life can throw at you.’
‘But it seems so extreme, can’t I develop my powers sooner?’
‘I could make you a kitchen hand named Charlie if you like. It will cut your time in half but there is a good chance you will go insane before your powers are ready.’
‘Erm, no. I think I’ll stick to the first one.’
‘Very well. So long Seppo, and good luck.’
‘So long Zartor, when I reach my full potential I shall beacon the Beasts of the Sea to join with us, then the world will be at your mercy.’