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You see, there were these teeny tiny people who lived in a doll Tamara bought at the mall and though they were quite peaceful and kind, when they came out to introduce themselves she thought they were fleas and sprayed the whole lot of them with an industrial de-lousing agent that really was chemically harsh and probably not something pregnant women should get within 50 yards of.
The people, who were called Unids, by the way, didn’t die from the spray but rather developed a thick tolerance for the stuff, like French people with sarcasm. As the old saying goes, that which doesn’t kill you only makes you stronger, but the part they left out is that it also gets you high as shit. When the Unids finally came down after a fantastic three days of psychedelic reverie and a full-body buzz, they no longer cared about uptight square concerns like whether the inside of the doll was a mess or if they had a contingency plan in place in case the vacuum cleaner came around again. They cared about one thing and one thing only: gettin' some more of that happy juice.
For a while, this was easy, since all they had to do was pop out of the doll when Tamara was around and wave their arms around. Before you could say “Louse in my house!” they were swimming in the good stuff like bennies from heaven. It was wild, I’m talking high on the hog like the ’86 Mets. They’d call it the “Salad Days” if salad came with crack as a dressing option.
But the problem was, before too long, Tamara figured out that the Unids weren’t fleas at all. Nor mites, nor any kind of vermin she’d ever seen before. After a few weeks the shock wore off and she started looking at the Unids a little closer, and that’s when she realized that they were kind of cute. Sort of like tiny little wooden dolls with stylized, painted-on faces. Pretty happy-looking really. And once she’d figured that out, well, then there surely wasn’t any reason to de-louse the poor little buggers, was there?
Big, big problem for the Unids. Their connection had dried up like an Arizona housewife hitting menopause. Their future wasn’t so bright as to require the wearing of shades, but they wore them anyway, to hide their bloodshot, bugged-out eyes. The Unids were going cold turkey like a third grade class on a picnic field trip to the North Pole, and they liked it about as much as they liked Sarah McLaughlan. Which is to say, not at all.
Finally one day one of the Unids, who shall remain nameless since none of them ever had any names, so why should we start now? They didn’t have telephones or fax machines or anything, so they hardly had use for names, “Hey you!” always did them fine and they hated the stuck-up little prick types of little tiny people like the Omits who insisted on everyone calling them by their absurdly long snooty full names, like Alexandarium Mananavicholious Tooterflute.
Anyway, one day one of the Unids figured out that the only way they were going to score again in this lifetime would be if they all put their heads together and came up with some really freakin’ scary costumes. If they could manage to scare Tamara bad enough, she just might send some of that sweet, sweet de-lousing spray their way in a panic, and then my friends, the train would be made of gravy. That’s what he said anyway, I’m not sure what the train thing supposed to mean, some kind of cultural slang thing that doesn’t translate well probably.
So anyway, this is how the Unids honed their now-legendary costuming skills. First, they were dressed as fleas. Then, when Tamara got wise to that, it was skin mites. Then ticks, then moose fleas. I don’t think there really is any such thing as “moose fleas,” but Tamara didn’t know that so I have to give them some points for creativity there. Before long, word got out that the Unids made some pretty wicked costumes, and they soon went into business for themselves and did well enough that they could buy their own delousing spray and they nodded off happily ever after.
A pretty heartwarming story, true. But if you ever get any of those little junkie pricks living in your beanbag chair, you might as well just throw the thing away, because it’s just going to stink after that.
Shinto the Pinto
Shinto the Pinto was the nicest car anyone could ever reasonably hope to meet. He drove at reasonable speeds, signaled for turns, and hardly ever ran down baby carriages on the sidewalk merely for sport. His interior smelled like a freshly unwrapped deodorant tree, and his seat covers were refreshingly free of diarrhea stains. But still, nobody liked Shinto.
Leland Was a Flea
Leland spent his days bounding along, enjoying the breeze and biting things that were too big to really even see him and definitely too big to bite him back. He wasn’t sure why he liked biting things, it was some kind of flea tradition that dated way back and he wasn’t really the kind of flea to rock the boat on the whole biting issue.
The Land of Rotten Children
Avoid like the plague or like measles or beets. Avoid them like odd-colored stains on your sheets. Avoid them like murder and dandruff and stink. Avoid them like things moving under the sink. For this is the behavior I would strongly advise unless you’d like a sandwich of mustard and lies.
Toudle-Lou & Toudle-Lee
They’d been through hobbies, like sleeping in lobbies, and making underwear out of cats. They’d sat in a urinal while folding the Journal into intricate stock-market hats.
Jojo the Imp
In the Valley of Sali, beneath a beautiful bridge, lived an Imp named Jojo who dreamed of one day being a construction worker.
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