Sunday, February 17, 2008
Sunday, January 6, 2008
The Body Shop
The door chimed as it opened for me, causing the grizzled man behind the counter to look up from his paperwork and wipe his work-stained hands on his coveralls.
“Welcome to Pete’s Body Shop. I’m Pete. What can I do fer you?”
“Well, I’ve think it’s about time I got a tune up,” I replied. “You have any openings today?”
“Depends. How long has it been since your last?”
“About five years, I think.”
“Hmm, okay. Yeah, I got some openings. Whole shebang will run you about two grand. It’ll take a few hours though.”
“That’s okay, I had planned on doing this today. Two thousand, huh? What all does that include?”
“Well, the basics, but just those. We do flange rotation, spinal alignment, a full liver flush, replace worn cartilage in the joints, do a lung scrape to remove any carbon deposits, and give the ol’ arteries a solid once over.”
“That’s not too bad, I’ve been meaning to get my liver flushed anyway. You know, I’ve been running a little rough for a few months…memories fading, short-term recall lagging, headaches, that sorta thing…will the tune up fix that?”
He shrugged. “Eh, it couldn’t hurt, but I won’t guarantee anything above the shoulders. You want that kind of work, you need a headjob.”
“Shit, I’m sure that’ll cost me…but then again, forgetting this missus’ birthday cost me too, and we both know I’m not talking about money.” I forced a small chuckle, hoping my attempt to ingratiate myself with Pete the body mechanic would translate into some sort deal.
“I’ll bet. A headjob runs an extra grand, but I do a much more thorough job than those big-name guys. We’re talking brand new cerebrospinal fluid, frontal lobe recalibration, and neural replacement. Then I clean and restring the optic nerves, replace the tympanic membrane, optimize your olfactory receptors and replace th’ papillae…”
“My what?”
“Yer taste buds, boss.” Pete said, shooting me the kind of look that let me know I had fallen solidly into the typical ignorant customer category, dashing my hopes of any discount. Oh well.
“You want my opinion, do everything at once. Most people skip it, think its unnecessary, but in the long run its cheaper to maintain yer parts rather than replace ‘em once there gone, and no offense buddy, you look like you need all the tuning up you can get.”
“Yeah, I’ve been meaning to come in for awhile, I just got busy, I guess.”
“That’s what they all say. But it’s okay, ya know? That’s what I’m here for. So, whatcha think?”
“All I can afford right now is twenty-five hundred.”
“Hey, I gots kids in school. Twenty seven and I’ll give you a new set of chompers on the house. Also, you should know I take pride in my work. This won’t be a wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am thing. I don’t run no assembly line body shop like those corporate bastards. Everything is guaranteed and you don’t pay a dime until you’ve run a couple laps around the shop and made sure nothins’ on backwards. Deal?”
“It’s a deal, Pete.” We shook on it, signed the forms and then he led me to the back room where I’d be getting worked on. I counted backwards from ten, almost making it to zero before everything faded.
********************************
When I opened my eyes again, I could tell something was wrong. My head had never whirred before. Also, I couldn’t feel my limbs. Hell, I couldn’t feel anything!
“Pete! What’s going on here?”
“Well, we ran into some problems during the tune up, so we stuck you into a loaner-bot until we can get it all sorted out.”
“Problems? What kind of problems?” I asked. I knew I should feel angry, but the without an endocrinal system it’s rather impossible to feel any sort of emotion at all. And the lag! It was seconds before my mouth spoke what my mind was trying to say. Mild annoyance with the whole thing was the most I could conjure up, and it was unsatisfying at best.
“Take a look for yourself,” said Pete, gesturing to the workshop.
After a second, my robot eyes whirred and clicked into focus. My body was spread across the room, intestines draped over a chair, organs and tools in a pile on the floor. Again, my complete lack of a real body probably was to my advantage at this point. It was strange, seeing my body from the outside like that, but it didn’t make me want to scream in terror or panic, seeing as I had controlled voice modulation and no adrenaline to pump through my lack of veins. I whirred in closer, focusing on my open skull.
“See, the problem is right here, wrapped around your cortex. If we’d only been doing the regular tune up we woulda missed it, so you got lucky, bub,” said Pete. “It’s a malignant tumor, and its growing. A few more weeks and you woulda had complete cognitive failure—and then ain’t nobody would be able to help, you’d just be gone.”
“Great. Just great. Well, how much is this gonna cost?” I droned, able to put only a modicum of feeling into it. I didn’t know that they even made bots that interfaced so poorly anymore.
“Well, you got a softball sized tumor wrapped around your cerebral cortex, buddy. It ain’t gonna be easy or cheap. We had to special order a new brain, and we had to go overseas for that, so it’s gonna take five to seven days to get here. We’ll have a quote ready for you then. Why don’t you go home and try to get some rest or something in the meantime?”
“Rest? Do I even need to sleep? What am I going to tell my wife? We had dinner reservations at The Valis restaurant tonight, but I can’t go looking like this… “
“Here, take these pamphlets. They’ll answer most of your questions. I’m sorry for the inconvenience, but hey, its better than bein’ dead, right?”
“Yeah…you’re right, Pete. Thanks a bunch. I guess I’ll get on home now. You’ll call me as soon as the new brain gets in, right?”
“Sure, sure. We’ll be in touch. Take care now.” The door failed to open automatically for me, not sensing my body heat. I began the walk home, knowing that no cab would ever pick up a bot as a fare, but at least I couldn’t get tired. I was about halfway home when it started to rain and my left knee servomotor seized up.
Bodies. It’s always something.
By Dan Steinbacher
Monday, December 24, 2007
It's a good tree...
Saturday, December 8, 2007
Good Grief
Thursday, November 15, 2007
May You Be Happy
So it's been awhile since I posted, sorry for that to all the...twos...of you who read.
- Just this week I finally got my room the way I really and truly want it. I know i have a really stupid amount of pride in my room, but if you ever saw my Crack Street apartment, you know why. I got a sweet new desk and a sweet new chair that doesn't hurt my back all to shit, and a sweet new monitor that I don't have to squint and hunch to use. It makes me feel like a professional writer and shit!
- I played disc golf with Mike and Conor. Barefoot, even!
- I got an amazing swedish massage.
- I found a amazing place to rent for my March Costa Rica trip (there will be a blog about this when plans are more finalized...ha, like you really want to hear about some trip you can't go on...)
- I went to Dave and Busters in San Diego with my high school buddies, drank beer and adios muthafuckas whilst shooting dinos, zombies, and terrorists, and laughed till my tummy hurt, then sang Mariners Revenge Song on the way home so loud my voice is still hoarse.
- I began working on two different major writing projects and they're going really well and i'm excited about them.
- Oh, and I went to a The Hold Steady show. They rocked so FUCKING HARD.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
...
...and when I open my eyes, I'm inside a house. More of a mansion, really, with high ceilings and candelabras, portraits lining the walls.
I squint to get a better look at the dim room, it must be a dining room, on account of the twelve foot, laquer-black table with accompanying chairs. Very modern gothic. Over in the corner I spy some sort of cabinet. Good. My flask could use a topping off. The house is silent--well, not really silent, I guess, I mean, they're aren't any voices, but still, it's not really quiet either. I pry open a drawer, hoping to come across a knife or something I can use to pry open the locked doors where the booze is undoubtedly kept, but it's dark and I'm not really looking in the drawer.
As soon as my hand touches it, its' not my own anymore. My hand isn't numb, it just doesn't listen to me. It's fondling this...i dunno...I can't tell what it is, but my hand, quicker than I've ever seen it move, puts it in my jacket pocket. I try to let it go. Nothing. I try to take my hand out of my pocket. Nope. I begin to feel faraway, that fugue state I pass in and out of, but I fight it back, concentrating.
The light in the house has changed, become thicker, syrupy. The portraits have lost their victorian sophistication and acquired a hateful sneer across their faces, spittle on their lips. With blackness creeping in the edges of my vision, I bolt from the room, out into a foyer, where I immediately spy the heavy wooden door that can only lead outside. I make it about a mile before I collapse in a bush.
...
Dark again. well, that's probably for the best, I think, and a thought pops into my head, a black flash, not a thought in words, and certainly not one of my own, a dark whisper that feels like cold oil dripping through my brain. Whatever it is in my pocket has been busy. My traitor hand is still squeezing it, caressing it. My thoughts roll away from it, like fish from a sinking stone. Fine. There are leaves in my hair, and as I'm reaching up to brush them off, a deer steps quietly into view. I've never actually seen a deer close up before. She's sniffing the grass, her ears twitching, and doesn't seem to notice me at all. It's a rare moment for me, quiet and still, which is what makes it so awful when the hollow-tip makes her head burst.
"Wooooohoooo! Yew see that?" shouts a voice, as several large crashing sounds draw closer.
"Boy, you didn't just shoot that deer, you damn near EX-ploded it! What a shot! Shee-it!"
I'm still sitting upright, bits of deer brain on my cheek and a cut from a renegade piece of jawbone on my forehead, lap warm with blood that smells strong and alive, when the hunters come upon me and the doe. Beer cans in their hands, their stupid hick mouths hang agape, at a complete loss for words. I try to speak, to explain, to ask for help, but my mouth won't obey. Instead, I am trapped inside my eyeballs watching the scene around me unfold. Part of me fights, but mostly I'm just so tired that this is a welcome respite. The two men, perhaps unsurprisingly, think that I too am somehow dead. They begin to argue over what to do, swearing and spitting, throwing beer. The smaller one draws a knife from his boot, a bowie with the confederate flag on the blade, and buries it in the back-fat between the other man's shoulder blades. Although it's a fatal blow, its not an instant kill, which gives the dying man a chance to use the second bullet in his rifle on his former friend, effectively vaporizing the back of his head. He gasps out a halfhearted curse to god, then repents and says an our father before gurgling his last.
I struggle to my feat, an insidious warmth creeping up my arm. As I pass by the deer carcass, the flies that are hovering in a food orgy drop out of the sky in unison. Going back to the house seems like the only option I have, so I start out back on the road. I'm not exactly sure which way is going, but my feet seem to be obeying me for the time being. My hand had stopped thrashing in its pocket, but it felt swollen and bruised, tired and full.
It's strange, seeing a road I've seen before but don't remember, but soon I am passing through a small town, and far, far off, I can see the spires of what can only be the mansion. I try not to make eye contact, fearing what will happen, knowing that this is all beyond me, I am ill-equipped for this task. As I looked down, though, I glanced at a homeless man sleeping in the crook of a building and the sidewalk. His eyes fly open, his face contorting into shapes no face should make, until he holds his chest and gets very still. I begin to run.
A dog, a beautiful white wolfhound darted into the road, right ahead of me. The oncoming truck tried to brake, jackknifed and hit the dog anyway, then plows into oak tree, ejecting the driver into a solid wood wall. I was unscathed, again. Not trusting myself to stop, I turn my attention to the road. My legs shake uncontrollably, making walking hard, but I force them to keep moving until it subsides.
The house was in view when I heard the fuel tank of the truck detonate. The whole town will burn. Staggering up the steps of the house, I pull the door, wrenching my shoulder when it doesn't move. A new voice, slow and heavy, tells me in an frozen instant of plodding color and shapes that I Have Taken The Burden It Held, And It Is Under No Obligation To Take It Back. It Is Mine To Bear, Forever.
A wellspring of fury that I've never known, a surging flood of rage burst in my eyes, and in that fraction of a second, my hand was my own again. I thrust the object out of my pocket, into the light.
...
Many people would think that time slows in moments like these, but they're wrong. It's flash-fast, its the understanding that's so instantaneous that makes you think that time has slowed. It's that you can't understand why you understand what you understand as fast as you've understood it. So everything has happened at once, but you can't fit that into you're perception, so everything looks slow so it'll make sense to you. This is what's happening right now, all in this moment, even as you're reading this.
....
My clammy hand holds what looked to be a ball of writhing yellow-white maggots, pulsing red light from their underbellies, eyelessly crawling. I know now that it is a Deathwish. My Deathwish. It the blackest thing in the pit of all mens souls, the immortal terror we all run from and never escape, fed by the fears of a billion generations crying out in the night and wondering why. It brings death and pain as naturally, as neutrally as a candle brings light, feeding off my desire for my own death, to end the suffering I cause, killing all those near mebut keeping me alive, for if I die so will my Deathwish. It is a spiraling event horizon no soul can escape.
Unless, chimes in the house, causing my nose to drip blood, Unless You Burn It. I Was Too Afraid To Try, But You....
The Deathwish surges in my hand and the redblack scream that splits my head in two drowns out all thoughts, mine and otherwise. But a tiny part of me whispers, burn it, so I pull out my flask and pour. The maggots writhe furiously, standing up somehow, growing, molting. I touch my lighter to it and it's not the explosion I would hope, its a wet sizzle that turns into a hiss that screams as the maggots begin to dance, melting and bubbling. My hand finally lets it drop, blistered and withered, where I stomp and stop and stomp until it is only a greasy black smear. I don't even notice the storm clouds release their rain, putting out the fire behind me and swirling the ashes of the Deathwish until they dissolve.
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Sunday
By Dan Steinbacher
There is a boy, and he is sitting in the back of his parents grey station wagon. They are coming from church, and his father has the windows of the car down. The air is invigorating, full of chimney smoke and brisk breezes. The father inhales deeply-- he loves this weather. It reminds him of football, of childhoods. Church has briefly pierced the walls he fastidiously keeps around himself, and he feels goodwill towards most, if not all, men. Time slows to a crawl for him, during this drive, as he subconsciously takes the longest route home he can. He senses deep in his gut that today is important, a fork in the road day. Because the services were so rousing that morning, the hymns sung were such uplifting songs, and the pastors sermon, delivered in his irish brogue, was especially good, the father attributes this feeling to God. In that spirit, sensing the potentiality of the day and merging it with his faith, the father decides today is a perfect day to teach his son a lesson about doing good.
How will he do it? The father is unsure. There are so many ways to do good. Most of them, he thinks, are bound not to work out the way he wants. This experience, he knows, will color his son, will mark out the territory of his character for years to come, so it has to be perfect.
Driving past a familiar road, he suddenly knows what to do, so he takes a rather sharp left, jostling the boy, who is smart, sometimes a little too much for his own good, who carries dark circles under his eyes that make him look faraway, which he usually is.
The father is smiling. They are seconds away from the grandfather's house, a big house that has been a little too empty since his mother died. His father, not knowing how (or perhaps not caring) to clean up after a house himself, lives in a dark, dusty castle with blue-green shag carpet and cobwebbed abalone shells. But it is not the inside of the house that bothers the father, it is the yard. The yard is huge, twice the size of all the others in the area, and it is completely wild. This agitates the father, who as a teen, used to care for this yard by himself, because he hated having his house look ugly on the outside.
Appearances are very important to the father. By having the boy do yardwork at his grandfather's house, it will impart so many lessons to the boy! It will teach him the value of hard work, of caring for family. Three generations of his line will be working together, side by side, in the autumn air. They will rake leaves for a few hours, tell stories and then have hot cocoa inside. He'll light a fire in the fireplace, and his wife and son and father will all sit around it, talking and laughing. His son will remember it as a wonderful day, and when he has a son of his own, will bring him to his father's house, and they will relive the day again.
This is all as clear as day in his mind as he tells his son, "Let's go to your granddad's place and rake some leaves, whaddya say?", looking at him from the rearview mirror.
The boy, who has been staring out the window, pauses, which is hard to do because he hadn't said anything yet, and thinks not of the yard or the house, not of the cocoa or the fireplace or really even his granddad, who he loves as all eight-year olds love their granddads. He is thinking about the dog. His grandfather's dog is old, and dying slowly. Yet because he is such a good dog, so full of life and joy, he does not seem to mind his hips dislocating as he wags his tail, dying to get a single pat, some love from these people he has protected all these years. But the grandfather is too lonely and lost to pet the dog, let alone feed it regularly, and every time they visit, the dog is skinnier, more desperate. It breaks the boy's heart into a billion pieces to see this. The boy often sees the injustice and cruelty in the world and takes it in stride, but this, this is a terrifying punishment for being a good dog. The boy has played with the dog for hours when he was there before, knowing it was not enough, seeing the bewildered desperation in those cataract-grey dog eyes, understanding that there is nothing he can do. When the dog howled as they left, his parents didn't seem to notice, but the sound gave him nightmares for days.
Thinking in a way he does, by not thinking at all, the boy grasps the situation at hand. On some level he ascertains what his father is hoping to accomplish, as well the fact that his father would never understand the reasons why he didn't want to go help his granddad. The boy doubts he could ever articulate exactly how he is feeling anyhow. It feels to big for words to contain. It is fear the boy feels, not fear of death or illness, but the fear that the world contains so much hurt that one day the vibrating feeling that accompanies it, the thrum in the pit of his stomach that makes the bottom of his heart turn to cold stone will one day overload him, and he will lose control of his emotions, and they will tear him to pieces with their force. Faced with imminent death or parental disappointment of the highest degree, the boy closes his eyes and makes his choice.
"I don't want to go."
"You don't want to help your granddad?"
"No. I'm just...tired. I want to watch tv."
The father's mental picture shatters, deflates, implodes. He tries hard to be a good father, but his child is lazy. Television, video games, he has been spoiled rotten by all of his father's hard work. All that has sought to accomplish has left him with a son who is selfish. He shouldn't say it. But he promised himself that he wouldn't coddle his son, that he would dish it straight even if it was hard to hear.
"That's really selfish of you, son. I would think after all the nice things your grandfather does for you, you can't even help him rake some leaves? Too much to ask to get off your ass and help someone?" The volume and venom in his voice steadily increase.
The boy winces. He knew this was coming, and wishes that today wasn't such focal point, wasn't such a defining moment. He fights back some tears, reasoning that this hurts far less that seeing the dog, angry at situations that are beyond his control and seem to be set against him.
"I'm sorry, I just don't want to do it." he says, finally.
"Fine." The father does a U-turn in the middle of the street, sullen and silent, the tires squealing.
He ignores him for the rest of the day, which is easy because the boy spends it sitting in his room, grounded from tv for a week, reading and imagining God as a being comprised of a infinite number of ears, eternally listening to the prayers of the world and unable to stop listening to go help anyone.
Saturday, September 22, 2007
Proclamation!
As you may have noticed, I changed the template of my blog. I like the links on the left side, but I'm not sure about the rest of it. Really, all I want out of a template is readability, but looking super-cool would be nice as well. So, googleplex of readers, what say you? I want your feedback, since you're the poor bastards who have to stare at it as you check hourly, hoping for an update. New one? Old one? Or maybe you have a link to a site w/ sweet templates?
Or perhaps you just want to shower me with praise. I'm fine with that also.
Hello? Anyone?
Anyone at all?
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
It's a Con(or)test!
Okay.
Here's the thing: My buddy Conor of Mediocre Extraordinare, is having a contest! A writing contest! Inspired by our mutual (and much more responsible, hard-working, overall better person) friend Mike Guardabascio of A Storied Year, who has held several very successful writing contests in the past, Conor's contest revolves around a picture entitled "Offices, Gorilla World". The stories must be fifty words or more and be inspired by or connected somehow to the picture.
Now, whats the best part about contests, other than that I always win them? Prizes! Yes sir, there certainly are prizes attached to this lucrative contest. They include*, but are not limited to:
- A full body, sensual massage from Conor and his man-hands
- Lifetime immunity from Conor's piercing wit and sharp tongue
- Conor will name his first illegitimate child after you, regardless of the gender
- A pony
- A year membership to Conor's other site, www.conorthecamboy.com, (a $200 value!)
Best of luck to you all***,
Dan
*do not include
**if you beat me, you have my solemn vow that I will cut off your toes with a hacksaw and eat them like cocktail weenies right in front of you.
***You illiterate cretins don't stand a fucking chance, you hear me?
Monday, September 17, 2007
Gorilla World
I thought the choice was obvious, so I headed right, down a zig-zagging pathway lined with bamboo and paved with river rock, opening into a courtyard. It was wide, the white walls of the enclosure gently reflecting the sun onto the grassy field where a large number of gorillas were spread out. A transparent glass wall cut through the middle of their habitat, a wall that displayed, quite clearly, a cut-away vision of the office building. The apes were doing all the normal simian things: lying on their backs, scratching their heads with their toes, some were combing each others hair and carrying their kids, they were alone and in pairs and in groups, they were eating bananas and thumping chests and staring majestically into space. They were also talking.
And I could understand them. I stepped into the clearing, quietly, but not a single primate took notice of me. Walking closer to a smaller pair of gorillas, I waved. If they saw me, there was no sign of it. I leaned in to hear what they were saying better. One was a taller, heavier one, male by the look of the silver on his back. He wasn't the oldest gorilla, but he'd been around. The one who was talking was obviously female, with a smaller frame and hunched stance.
"I just think it's cruel."
"You're nuts! Those guys are having the time of their lives in there! Look at them! They get to talk all the time, and sit in chairs and drink all the coffee they want! It's paradise!"
"But they're captives! They don't have a choice! And those terrible clothes they dress them in!"
"You think that matters to them? Honestly, I wish I could do that all day. All this sitting around, eating bananas, climbing trees...I hate it. It's boring. I want to sit on chairs. I want to talk into little plastic things. I want to look at glass boxes. So don't go getting all chimpy on me."
"I'm sorry...you just know how I feel about other living things. Come on, lets go pick a fight with Chief, he looks sick, I think you can take him..."
I looked through the see-through glass, at all the people, running around, mouths opening and closing silently. They didn't look happy. They didn't look sad either, they just looked...empty. As if something inside themselves that had been burning was just ashes now. I watched the people for awhile, then, deciding that it was just as sad and cruel as the female had said, turned away. Instead, I watched the biggest silverback, Chief, give the other male gorilla (whose named turned out to be Bongo, which may have explained his lack of alpha-male status) a sound thrashing, while the others gathered around, hooting and throwing feces. It looked like a lot of fun.
For awhile, I watched the gorillas every day. You would think it was great, but Bongo was right: it was boring--the same old bitter rivalries springing up again and again, the same lofty professions of the perfection of bananas, the unending debate over what could possibly be in the little glass boxes all the humans watched all the time.
I began to ignore the apes, and started watching the people every day. Perhaps the humans really did have a paradise, even if they were had an odd way of showing it. The world on the other side of the glass looked brighter, cleaner, safer. I longed to sit in a chair, to taste coffee, but mostly to be able to talk and have someone hear me, even if it meant I could never leave. With a final look back at Gorilla world, I headed back down the path, turned left at the sign, walked down a narrow corridor, and opened the metal door that led to the Offices.
The sudden rush of noise made me jump. Buzzing and ringing and whirring and under it all was the nearly inaudible hum of the florescent lights. They saturated the Office with a flat, uniform brightness, robbing everything of its shadow. I shut my eyes and shook my head, trying to get my bearings while quietly noting that I was now wearing human clothes, what the gorillas had called a monkey-suit and holding the thin rectangular box that I knew was for putting paper in.
A man in a blue suit, who was tall and very tan, came up to me, smiling widely and not blinking nearly enough. I tried to speak to him, but before I could say a word, he grabbed my hand and squeezed it, launching into a speech with an automatic look on his face.
"Hey there! You must be the new guy! Hi, new guy! Welcome to our office. It's not much, but it's ours. Good news! You get a desk with a window! Ha! We all do! Yep, it's our one claim to fame, we're the only office I've ever heard of that looks out onto a zoo! Yep, monkeys all around, HQ thinks they help productivity or office feng shui or some shit. Anyway, lemme show you to your desk. Hey! You want some coffee?"