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History of the Safety Pin

The modern-day safety pin was invented on the 10th of April 1849, by New York mechanic, Walter Hunt. Hunt, who was a prolific inventor, was born in 1796, the year that a vaccine for smallpox was developed by English physician Edward Jenner.

Despite not preventing as much suffering as Jenner’s medical marvel, there is no doubt that Hunt’s new and improved version of the safety pin has made life easier for billions of people in the generations since. Hunt’s safety pin was the first to have both a protective clasp and a spring hinge. Safety pins didn’t spring from nowhere. The ancient Romans pinned brooches into place with a safety pin like mechanism.

Walter Hunt was not the savviest businessman the world has ever seen. He sold the rights to his safety pin innovation for only $400. Although that is the equivalent of approximately $16000 in 2024 money, it’s mere pennies in comparison to the fortune that various others have amassed from safety pins.

Some of Walter Hunt’s other inventions were a new type of rifle, an ice plough and one of the forerunners of Lewis Waterman’s modern fountain pen. Waterman perfected the fountain pen in 1884.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024


References

When was the fountain pen invented? (2023) Goldspot Pens. Available at: goldspot.com/blogs/magazine/when-was-the-fountain-pen-invented (Accessed: 08 April 2024).

Inflation rate between 1849-2024: Inflation calculator (2024) Value of 1849 dollars today | Inflation Calculator. Available at: officialdata.org/us/inflation/1849 (Accessed: 08 April 2024).

History of smallpox: Outbreaks and vaccine timeline (no date) Mayo Clinic. Available at: mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/history-disease-outbreaks-vaccine-timeline/smallpox (Accessed: 08 April 2024).

National Inventors Hall of Fame (2024) National Inventors Hall of Fame Inductee Walter Hunt Invented the Safety Pin. Available at: invent.org/inductees/walter-hunt (Accessed: 08 April 2024).

Featured

Appropriate Censorship in Writers Groups

What should a writers group’s approach to censorship be? Should it outlaw censorship to protect freedom of expression? Conversely, should some contentious topics be eliminated entirely? Or are both extremes problematic? Is it a question of finding a healthy balance between protecting its members from harm and preserving their freedom of expression?

What would happen if censorship itself was the only thing censored in writers group meetings, if the participants could literally say whatever they like? The results of absolute freedom of expression could range from glorious to hellish. With a typical group of writers, I think it’s unlikely it would be worse than the occasional unpleasant disagreement from which they would quickly move on. But what if Satan, or one of his henchmen, weaselled their way into group, with a gleaming salesman smile concealing their thirst for mayhem, fetish for fakery and desire for total control?

Satan would be sure to dish out some diabolical insults. And not even his blueprint for Armageddon would have a trigger warning attached. I don’t think he would begin with the last chapter of his grand scheme for the ruination of humanity. He’d want to educate the group on the finer points of everything from bomb making to the alleged virtues of arson, waterboarding, and lynching first. Teaching his fellow writers how to terrorise their enemies wouldn’t be enough for him. He’d be just as passionate about converting them to his latest religious cult and manipulating them into voting for the politicians he favours. No doubt, he’d try to sell his fellow writers a panacea for everything from obesity to anxiety too. He’d be sure to stab them all in the back with the free set of steak knives that come with the magic pills for just $99.95.

To guard against the perils of the evil one, and his dastardly stooges, surely, a writers group would need some semblance of censorship. Censorship of personal insults, censorship of threats to physical and emotional safety and censorship of financial scams. Satan loves to sell worthless digital currencies in person. He just doesn’t get the same satisfaction from letting his army of bots do all of his dirty work.

Is censoring away the possibility of unpleasant disagreements as feasible as banning the Prince of Darkness from sharing the intricacies of bomb making or manipulating the group into helping him make Peter Dutton the next Prime Minister of Australia etc? Is it possible to entirely eliminate contentious topics such as politics, religion, violence, and pornography without destroying freedom of expression, the lifeblood of creativity? How much can we realistically censor away without throwing out the good with the bad?

Politics, religion, depravity, violence, and destruction are intricately interwoven with countless social and physical science topics. The complete abolition of political and religious expression etc would mean that the writers wouldn’t be able to share their explorations of wealth inequality, equal opportunity in employment and education, human rights, refugee rights, colonisation, genocide, indigenous rights, the dynamiting of sacred sites, terrorism, antisemitism, Zionism, islamophobia, propaganda, war crimes, freedom of the press, political prisoners, misogyny, misandry, feminism, abortion, homophobia, marriage equality, euthanasia, climate change, renewable energy, MRNA vaccines, needle exchanges and a myriad of other topics.

Successfully eliminating contentious themes, opposed to placing sensible, objective limits on them, would leave a writers goup with little to discuss that is more profound than sensible shoes versus stilettos, polka dots versus stripes, mullets versus mohawks and Megan and Harry’s latest stay rich scheme. And limited censorship, without cautiously constructed guidelines, would inevitably involve censors making arbitrary decisions based on their conservative or liberal bias. Literally no censorship at all could be problematic but putting freedom of expression/creativity in a straitjacket is bound to be destructive. Censorship requires a cautiously guided scalpel, not a recklessly swung sledgehammer. In cutting out the cancer of endangerment, bigotry, and disrespect, writers groups must do their utmost to avoid damaging healthy creative tissue too.

© Rodney Hunter, 2024



Featured

The Contradiction

You are one of the most self-contradictory phenomenons in the universe; a self-proclaimed proponent of political neutrality, who turns conversations political and then declares them over for being too controversial.

You’re as ironic as that firefighter who loves saving priceless artifacts from being incinerated. The one who set the museum alight. You’re reminiscent of that surf life saver, who saved all those tourists from drowning. I’m talking about the fellow who likes to put the flags in front of whirlpools. That police officer who starts brawls so he can shut down nightclubs for being too violent can’t compete with you. Some say the paramedic who injected the homeless with heroine, so he could save people from overdoses, is more notorious. The former President of the Chastity Society, who starred in Turkey Harem Parts 1-15, to warn people against the dangers of zoophilia, is probably more prominent in the tabloids than you.

You’re not a hypocrite you say? Yes, I know, your denial makes so much sense, just like those liquid free beverages. No, no, no, not the frozen ones. I’m talking about those drinks that make titanium look like jelly. You should get the gold medal for plausible denial. It’s a close contest though. That serial killing pacifist is the favourite in some peoples eyes. And the man who wants to improve safety standards in cliff diving, by removing all that dreadful water, is hard to beat.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024

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Don’t

Don’t climb, you might lose your grip. Don’t run, you might fall over. Don’t walk, you could get sore feet. Don’t go swimming. What if there’s a sudden storm? You might get electrocuted. Don’t drink water, it could be polluted, and the same goes for breathing, you reckless fool, anything could be in that air. Don’t talk about politics, or spirituality, or atheism, you might have an argument. Forget discussing history or current affairs, it could turn political. Restrict everything, because the good is never thrown out with the bad. How is your heavily censored writers group faring? Are you enjoying all those profound discussions about the merits of polka dots versus stripes? Be careful, some of those patterns are reminiscent of controversial flags. Next thing you know, there will be duels at ten paces, and you’ll be blowing off each other’s faces. Don’t let people say whatever they like. Things could get out of control. It barely took more than thirty years for a political crusader to act as nasty as Darth Vader. You might have to expel someone else before the end of the decade.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024

Featured

The Flaw

I checked it several times, so how did I fail?
The lone error is curled like a scorpions tail.

That superfluous comma lurks on the page
like a bloodstain leering at a careless killer.
No doubt, every grammar NAZI in the city
is closing in on this panic stricken writer
like a furlong long procession of vultures.
As they sharpen their talons on the roadside,
the ostracised author is showered in sparks.
But wait, next month’s ad will be error free.
There’s no need to disappear into the desert.
The marred marketeer has been catapulted
into the colosseum of confidence.

Swiftly, he strangles, plucks, guts and fries
the raptors who dreamt of stealing his eyes.

© Rodney Hunter, 2024








Featured

The Droob Shield

“Hi Devon, I’m Doctor Wilkinson, one of the psychiatrists in Candlevale Mental Health Unit, what brings you here?”

“Haven’t you read my file.”

“I haven’t actually. A computer glitch is preventing me from accessing the system. Our IT person is working on the problem as we speak. In the meantime, maybe you can enlighten me regarding how you came to be here.”

“Something that happened at my Uncle Albert’s eleventh wedding has been causing me some stress. The event just didn’t go according to plan.”

“What happened?”

“Let’s make this a guessing game. I find the facts more palatable that way. I’m not sure why, but I do.”

“Was there a problem with the catering?”

“No, that’s not it.”

“Did the wedding photographer fail to show up?”

“No, they got there early actually.”

“Did the bride fail to show up?”

“No, that’s not it, she arrived early too, everyone arrived early, except me and the DJ. He’s the one who firebombed the venue because several of the guests failed to pay him for services rendered earlier in the year, when he was working in a more controversial industry. Wandering amongst the charred remains of my family and friends is not how I wanted to spend my Saturday afternoon. I didn’t really feel like going to work the following Monday. The company counsellor sent me to you for a psychiatric evaluation. You don’t look well, are you okay doctor?”

“I think so. That’s a horrific weekend to say the least. According to Nurse Willis, you have a keen interest in reincarnation. Is it okay if we switch subjects and discuss that, or would you rather discuss the wedding disaster?”

“I’d prefer to switch subjects actually. I don’t feel like I have anything to gain by dwelling on such horrors right now. Where I’m from originally, the average person remembers their last eight lives in considerable detail. According to them and their hypnotherapists, some people can remember snippets of lifetimes from hundreds of thousands of years ago, long before the quantum computing age was conceivable. In some cases, some obscure and difficult to access historical records have helped to verify their stories. Where I come from originally, people’s memories of lives in what Earthlings like to call the spiritual realms tend to be just as vivid. People aren’t cynical about such things there, they’re much better at communicating with beings that reside entirely or partially in the hidden realms that overlap with this universe.

“I see.”

“I’m not sure that you do doctor, but that’s alright, it’s not unusual for Earthlings to be so enamoured with their five physical senses that they ignore the possibility of anything more. The time in the womb is somewhat hazy for most of my compatriots, but it’s unusual for someone not to remember fragments of it. On my home planet Droob, anyone who can’t remember anything before the first anniversary of their birth, in their current lifetime, is viewed in the same light as a human who can’t recall anything that happened more than a few minutes ago.”

“And here I was thinking that Droob was just a new age commune overseas somewhere. I’m more fascinated than ever now.”

“But you don’t believe a word of it though do you doctor.”

“I can’t honestly say that any of it sounds plausible to me, but it’s fascinating, nonetheless. If, for arguments sake, what you’re telling me is accurate, how did you travel to Earth?”

“Perhaps you’re wondering if I think I travelled here in a spacecraft, or if I believe I was beamed here Star Trek style. This so-called universe alone is far more multi-dimensional, so much more interconnected than most Earthlings imagine, so it is possible to travel between galaxies in a surprisingly short time, but I didn’t arrive here in a spaceship though.”

“You’re right, I did wonder if you think you travelled here in a spaceship. If you didn’t travel here in a ship and you weren’t beamed here, how did you get here?”

“I don’t deny that I was born on Earth Doctor.”

“So when you say that you’re from the planet Droob, you’re saying that you incarnated there in some of the past lives that you say you remember? Is that what you’re telling me?”

“As ludicrous as it sounds to a lot of Earthlings, that’s exactly what I’m saying.”

“Do you normally tell people about the planet Droob and your apparent memories of living there for several lifetimes?”

“Of course not. I’m a financial advisor. Do you think people would trust me with their money if they knew that I see myself as a citizen of the planet Droob first and an Australian citizen third? I’m a citizen of the Earth second, in case you’re wondering. I have a very cosmopolitan outlook.”

“You certainly do. These apparent memories of life on Droob that you speak of, how do they make you feel?”

“They’re a source of comfort most of the time. When you’re a Droobian you learn not to carry much emotional baggage. That’s important when you have a fairly comprehensive memory of the past millennium or two. One of the reasons we don’t remember a lot from further back is we tend not to relate to the person we were several millennia ago. Another is the constraints that a biological brain put on what Earthlings call the spirit. Between physical incarnations one can access so much more of their personal history.”

“Do you think that your apparent memories of past lives on the planet Droob have made this lifetime on Earth better or worse?”

“Being able to recall my past lives definitely makes this incarnation easier. Delving into fifteen centuries of memories, during a crisis, is more useful than reading self-help books. Does remembering lives on Droob get me some sort of label such as schizophrenic?”

“I haven’t come to any firm conclusions yet. Oh, and by the way, I avoid using words like schizophrenic. I prefer to say person with schizophrenia instead of schizophrenic, otherwise it’s too much like calling someone with leukaemia a cancer.”

“I haven’t really thought about it that way before doctor, but now I have I must say that I agree with you. I have noticed how mental illnesses such as schizophrenia are usually potrayed in a very sinister way in the movies and on the news. It seems like we rarely hear about people with schizophrenia until one of them stabs someone. I do have friends who suffer from the condition and none of them feel good about harming a cockroach let alone a member of their own species.”

“You’re better informed than the average person Devon. Trying to educate the general public about the matter can be a frustrating experience. I’ve met some cynical and ignorant people, who failed the mental health first aid course on their first and second attempts, that think they know more about mental health than the most highly regarded psychiatrists. Anyway, I digress.”

“I bet some of them were antivaxxers and flat Earthers Doc.”

“Some of them were. You might be surprised by how rational a some flat earthers and antivaxxers are in other areas of their lives though. As I was saying earlier, I haven’t reached any firm conclusions regarding your mental health yet. I don’t define mental health solely on the basis of how plausible I think a patient’s beliefs are. It’s really not my job to decide that someone is out of touch with reality simply because of how unlikely their story sounds. That might sound absurd, so I’ll explain further if you like.”

“Please do.”

“If, for example, you’d sincerely claimed that the hospital administration has been infiltrated by deceitful Droobians, who have disguised themselves as the nursing staff, my first thought would be that you’re suffering from some form of psychosis, such as schizophrenia, or schizophreniform disorder. You’ve told me about some memories that in my opinion aren’t real, memories that don’t seem to be harming anyone, memories that don’t appear to be adversely affecting your ability to function in day-to-day life. I’m much more concerned about the possible impact of the disaster that occurred on Saturday. I do have a couple more questions for you regarding the planet Droob though. When did you first develop memories of the place?”

“It all came flooding back to me yesterday in the form of a dream that lasted most of the night. I know how that sounds, but that’s what happened. I dreamt about the highlights and the lowlights of fifteen centuries of lives on Droob, and the lives in between that Earthlings call spiritual.”

“That doesn’t seem to fit in with the idea that Droobians have a fairly comprehensive memory of the last millennium or two of their existence.”

“Amnesia is extremely rare among Droobians, but not completely unheard of and it’s very common among Earthlings. You seem to have forgotten for a moment that I have incarnated as an Earthling this time around.”

“The timing of the return of these apparent Droobian memories concerns me. They could be a coping mechanism for the events that occurred on Saturday. The blase manner in which you spoke about a firebombing that killed most of your relatives and friends concerns me too. I think that you’re suppressing the true impact of the tragedy, that you’re still in a state of shock”

“And where are these views of yours leading Doctor Wilkinson?”

“I’d like to keep you in here for at least a few days to evaluate the impact of the crisis on you.”

“Would you like a game of chess doctor? Before you tell me that I’m using chess as a distraction from what ails me, I can report that I’m well aware of that.”

“If you are using chess as a form of diversional therapy, I don’t see anything wrong with that. I was just thinking about whether I can squeeze a game in. It is my lunch time, and it is a surprisingly slow day, we don’t normally have those, so why not.”

“Are you a good player Doctor Wilkinson?”

“With people like Gary Kasparov and Magnus Carlsson in the world, I don’t like to talk myself up.”

Devon pulled a marble chessboard and a chess clock from his suitcase. He pulled the crystal pieces from an ornate hand carved box that looked terribly expensive.

“Lightning, bullet, rapid or classical, the choice is yours?”

“I think we can fit in a game of rapid; ten minutes apiece probably isn’t too long.”

Devon used a crafty variation of the Sicilian opening that almost caught Doctor Wilkinson napping. The Doctor had been the best player in the local chess club for more than a decade, but Devon anticipated his tactics with consummate ease. Occasionally, he paused briefly, but they weren’t the pauses of a man who has no idea what to do next, they were the pauses of a chess warrior who hasn’t yet decided how he wishes to end proceedings. Doctor Wilkinson conceded five moves away from the inevitable.

“I wouldn’t dwell on it Doctor, there aren’t a lot of people on this planet who are competitive against me in a chess match. Not many years ago, I was rated in the 2600’s in all forms of the game. When I was thirty-eight, I was ranked 68th in the world in classical chess and in the top 100 in all the other forms of the game. I’m retired now, but I still coach grand masters. I’m still competitive against the best of the best. I’m a young fifty-five.”

“How do you find the time to be a financial advisor as well as coach elite chess players?”

“My brother runs a financial advising service and when I have time I work for him. Researching fortune 500 companies and up and comers is another passion of mine. How do you like my powers of concentration doctor, is the sort of laser focus I displayed in our chess match common in people suffering from psychosis?”

“I wouldn’t say it’s common, but it’s by no means unheard of, not everyone with psychotic delusions has difficulty focusing on the task at hand. Not everyone with a psychotic illness has disordered thinking on topics unrelated to their delusions. And it’s important to remember that I haven’t diagnosed you with anything Devon, we’re just having a casual chat to give me some indication of how you’re feeling and so you can get used to talking to me “

“Am I still a voluntary patient?”

“Yes, you are, but that could change. I’m hoping that you are willing to stay at least until you’re reassessed in three days’ time. If you choose not to stay, I’d like to refer you to one of the psychiatrists at the Candlevale District Mental Health Service for weekly appointments.”

“I’m happy to stay for a while. Maybe some of the patients who are in relatively good health would like some chess lessons.”

“There might be a few people who are interested, especially those who are due to be discharged soon. They’re more likely to be capable of focusing on something as mentally taxing as chess. Before I see some of my other patients, please tell me a little more about the star system where Droob is situated.”

“There are five habitable planets in the Droobian White Dwarf system. The differences in climate, gravity and the composition of the atmosphere etc on these five planets are subtle enough for most Droobian System species to survive somewhere on all five planets. It took many millennia for my species to develop immunity to the pathogens on the other Droob system planets though. Droob is the planet that’s right in the middle of the so-called Goldilocks zone. The equator isn’t too hot to survive and there are several major cities that are just a few hours’ drive from the poles. Droob has the most gravity of the five planets. Gravity on Droob at three thousand metres above sea level, on the equator, is virtually the same as gravity at sea level, at the poles on Quarb, the habitable planet with the least gravity. The difference between how far one can throw a ball and how fast they can run on each of the five planets isn’t blatantly obvious. Droobians have colonised all five planets but Quarb, Gorb, Lorb and Zarb don’t have any permanent residents, they’re used mostly for eco-tourism and the mining of metals and gemstones precious enough to justify the weight of the cargo.”

The more that Devon talked, the harder Doctor Wilkinson looked for contradictions in his story. At one point Devon thought that Doctor Wilkinson suspected him of using his remarkable memory to deliberately invent the Droobian White Dwarf star system and the planets Droob, Quarb, Gorb, Lorb and Zarb. Did he think Devon was a paid actor from an anti-pyschiatry association? Members of those organisations imagine that the ability of some professional actors to briefly fake psychotic illnesses is evidence that psychiatrists don’t have any real expertise.

The next day, Devon’s first words were “Doctor, I’ve had another dream that might explain why I seem to remember living on a planet called Droob.”

“Seem to remember? I haven’t heard you phrase it that way before Devon.”

“The memories still feel as real as my memories of our chess game yesterday, but I might have a reason to doubt them despite that. I dreamt about a series of ten epic fantasy novels, by a writer known as Charles Bentley the 3rd. They’re collectively known as the Droob Zone novels. I don’t know if Charles Bentley is real or not yet, because I don’t have internet access here. The shortest of those novels is over a quarter of a million words. I have a feeling that I’ve read these books several times. What I don’t understand is how I could possibly forget that. I remember chess matches in more detail than most sports historians can remember games of football so how could I forget reading a series of ten epic novels?

“Devon, there is something very comforting about the Droob Zone universe for you. It’s much more comforting when you think it’s real. Subconsciously, you know that it’s just a science fiction fantasy. Deep down, you remember reading those books, hence the dream. Maybe there’s something soothing about the sound of the word Droob too. You’ve been through a lot lately, to say the least. Something as adventurous, fascinating, and perhaps also Utopian as the Droob system is very therapeutic for you. I love a good novel myself. Reading can be a great way to relax.”

“Are you going to make me take some sort of anti-psychotic medication?”

“Personally, I don’t see the value in giving you medication to take away a world that is still a source of comfort to you, not when it isn’t interfering with your ability to function in day to day life. On the one hand, you know it’s not real, but it still feels real. You’re fortunate to have a delusion that is a source of comfort for you. Some patients feel like everyone on television is talking about them, joking and laughing about them and plotting against them. They don’t necessarily think that’s really happening, but they can’t escape the feeling that it is. It’s so much to feel like the Droob System is really out there than to think the news broadcaster and the weatherman are talking about killing you in code.”

“Doctor Wilkinson, is it a good idea to tell me about the frightening delusions that other people experience? What if those delusions are psychologically contagious?”

“Are you afraid of developing every delusion you hear about Devon?”

“No, not really, but a feeling of dread does wash over me when I hear about other peoples delusions. It seems weird to me that you brought them up.”

“It seems that I am in error, so I apologise.”

After three days in the mental health unit, Devon finally ran out of the food he’d brought with him. For the first time, he thought about how strange it was that the hospital hadn’t supplied him with meals or coffee etc. He’d had to drink from the taps in the bathrooms to stay hydrated. There hadn’t even been any sheets on his bed. He’d seen beds without mattresses and rooms without beds too. He’d wondered if he was having the opposite of a hallucination when he failed to see things that were surely there. Devon’s discussions with Doctor Wilkinson distracted him from dwelling on those details. While he was pondering the oddness of his situation, Devon was approached by a stranger in high visibility clothing.

“Sir, what are you doing here, how did you get in? There’s not supposed to be anyone in here, this building isn’t open to the public. Large parts of it are no longer structurally sound. It’s due to be demolished in a few weeks.”

“Who are you and what are you talking about? Look around you, there’s patients, nurses, occupational therapists, social workers, and psychiatrists all over the place and you’re telling me nobody is supposed to be here. What have you been smoking?”

“My name is Dave. It seems to me that you’re experiencing mental health problems sir.” the stranger in high vis clothing replied, choosing his words carefully.

“Well of course I am. I wouldn’t be here otherwise would I. This is a mental health unit you know.”

“Sir, this building hasn’t been used for that purpose for years. A lot of people think it’s haunted though so maybe you’re not as out of your mind as you seem, maybe you’ve been talking to ghosts and seeing apparitions.”

“There’s a difference?”

“Yes, ghosts have a mind attached to them and apparitions are just images of people that remain long after the actual people have gone. Apparitions might do all sorts of things, but you can’t interact with them because there’s nobody there anymore, just an imprint of who used to be there. Apparently, not everyone can see them.”

“That all sounds rather confusing. Do you really believe in such things?”

“Sir, the alternative is that you’re having hallucinations of Angel Trumpet overdose proportions.”

“You’ve made a believer out of me then. I don’t see how I could possibly hallucinate the entire staff and all the patients in a mental health unit. Has anyone ever had hallucinations of that magnitude?”

“I think some drug users do, but otherwise I don’t know. I’m not a medical doctor of any description. Would you like to come with me sir?”

“Where are we going?”

“I would like to drive you to the nearest operational mental health unit, if that is okay with you, just in case it’s not ghosts and apparitions you’re seeing.”

“Hopefully, at the next mental health unit there won’t be a member of a demolition crew tapping me on the shoulder to inform me that I’m in an abandoned building. I could do without life reminding me of a mirror image within a mirror image within a mirror image. Take me to reality please. I’m sure it wasn’t long ago that I was there, but it feels like it’s been years.”

Devon could still hear the hustle and bustle of a functioning mental health unit in the background but when he turned around both the images and the sounds morphed into thin air. Did that mean he’d been talking to ghosts? He’d recently played a game of chess. He would have noticed if he was playing against himself, wouldn’t he? Had he gone into some sort of fugue state while making an imaginary Doctor Wilkinson’s moves for him? How could Doctor Wilkinson’s words have been figments of his imagination? Hadn’t he told him things he didn’t know? Devon scoured the internet, trying to verify or debunk the doctor’s statements.

Dave found the chess board. The coffee cup Devon thought he’d seen Doctor Wilkinson drink from still sat behind it, but there was nothing in it besides dust and cobwebs. It was about lunch time. Devon hoped that the member of the demolition crew, who was kind enough to drive him to hospital, was a chess player.

© Rodney Hunter, 2024










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Who Are the Terrorists?

The terrorists are the politically motivated murderers we don’t approve of. They’re not the ones killing children for the right reasons. Our boys aren’t responsible for the murders of those babies they shot. All they did was pull the trigger. The enemy made them do it by fighting back. What choice did our boys have? The alternative was to let the enemy’s children grow old enough to fight against drones with makeshift rockets, rifles, and stones. Make things harder for the next generation of our glorious warriors? Don’t be silly.

It was better in the old days when there weren’t any cameras around. The public relations budget never ballooned out of control back then. There weren’t any pesky journalists to tell the world about the enemy being driven from their houses at gunpoint or crushed to death in their demolished homes. In those days, nobody talked about the burning of their olive groves and the theft of their farms like it was some sort of crime. Rewriting history was so much easier then.

How dare those journalists wilfully misrepresent my words! Our boys were just driving vermin off valuable land, but the world wouldn’t have understood. If outsiders had of known what was really happening, they would have misinterpreted everything. They’re too naive to see how the ones doing most of the killing and the stealing could be the victims. If only they were prepared to acknowledge that the enemy doesn’t have any civilians. Then, they might be able to wrap their minds around the situation.

Yes, I know that two-year-old girl didn’t throw any grenades, but that’s what she was destined to do until a missile obliterated her home, killing her parents and siblings and turning her legs to a bloody pulp. Don’t worry, the medical team from Doctors Without Borders wasn’t able to get across the border, so there weren’t any IV drips to rehydrate her when her uncle pulled her from the rubble. Being the unduly merciful souls we are, we let them through the checkpoint eventually, but not too soon. With artificial limb technology being what it is, we couldn’t afford to take any risks.


 © Rodney Hunter, 2024

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No Respect

Spotted pardalotes
and pied currawongs calling.
Ambience fractured
by vandals music blaring.
Birdsong lost in pollution.

They scribble on rocks
like dogs pissing on saplings.
The only message
these people have for the world
is I am here, I am lost.

Spray paint marred boulders
hint at the concrete monster.
It threatens to eat
what remains of the forest.
Town cancer’s tendrils growing.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024



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WordPress Frauds

From yoga to Mars, so many paragraphs.
Today’s epic upload is all about giraffes.
You don’t need to pass detective courses
to know they’ve never read their sources.
The Wikipedia cut and paste brigades
are in cold pursuit of writing accolades.
Their own lines are so clumsily worded.
Every last one of them looks murdered.
When those sad dopes steal verbatim,
zero stars is the only way to rate them.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024



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The Altruistic Billionaire

Alicia Gray was only twenty-three years old, but she had already interviewed dozens of major celebrities. The subject of her next interview, best-selling novelist Jeremy Sorbonne, was renowned for making outrageous statements when people least expected it. Alicia was sure that the time she’d spent working on building sites, before she went to university, would render her immune to his most debauched remarks. She was barely nervous at all, as she rode the lift to Sorbonne’s modest sized unit.

Jeremy Sorbonne owned the penthouse. Its balcony was as broad as a suburban backyard, yet he chose to live on the floor below in a modest sized apartment. Sorbonne had never been one to flaunt his wealth. Unlike most billionaires, he didn’t have servants to answer the door for him. The security personnel in the apartment complex lobby were his only line of defence against overzealous fans and political enemies.

“Come in gorgeous, come in” Sorbonne gestured towards his lounge suite down the hallway. Alicia had heard that he called ugly people gorgeous to be playfully sarcastic, nice people gorgeous to pay homage to their inner light and pretty women gorgeous whether he wished to take them to bed, or he simply felt as cheeky as the palace fool. Sorbonne could act as well as he could write, so he was notoriously difficult to read. Alicia had the feeling that he had no intention of being opaque with her though.

The prize-winning author was dressed in jogging shorts and a singlet. The latest in running shoe technology hugged his feet. Apparently, he’d been working out on his treadmill. Its electricity supply was supplemented by an exercise bike. Some of the weights lining the walls of his spare bedroom gym looked like they might be difficult to roll across the floor, let alone lift. Sorbonne wasn’t bulky, but his physique was as chiselled as a comic book hero’s nonethless.

Unlike some of the celebrities Alicia had conducted hard hitting interviews with for the left leaning Waves Magazine, Sorbonne’s balcony wasn’t big enough to feature a swimming pool. Potted fruit trees lined the glass wall. Above them, was an awe-inspiring view of an azure sea. The loungeroom was his office. His ergonomic desk and chair dominated the centre of the room. An antique upright piano sat where one would expect to find a television cabinet. It all blended well with a bookcase old enough to have belonged to Lord Byron.

“Have a seat darling. You look like you’ve been out in the scorching heat for an eternity. What’s your cure for that, a towering glass of ice water or something sweeter?”

“On hot, steamy afternoons, like this one, soda water with slices of lemon and lime and crushed ice is my favourite drink.”

“You’re lucky I’ve got a slushy blender. Any sugar with that refreshing concoction?”

“No thanks”

“You’re sweet enough already, I’m sure.”

“Is it alright if we get started while you’re making that drink?” Alicia replied, ignoring Sorbonne’s brazen flirting. His phone was ringing, but he didn’t appear to hear it.

“A go-getter aye. Give it to me girl.” Alicia couldn’t help but giggle at the famous author’s unselfconscious, carefree banter. She had heard that he was normally a quiet and introspective man. That may have been so, but he certainly wasn’t shy. Sorbonne took his time slicing the lemon and lime. He looked lost in a wonderful daydream as he poured newly crushed ice from his blender into the mix.

“Before we get to the serious questions, what are you thinking right now?”

“The sight of this drink got me thinking about a swimming pool and you dressed in a floral bikini diving right in.”

“You don’t always have your filter switched on do you Mr Sorbonne?”

“No, not really, I’d much rather talk about your bikini top falling off and getting stuck in the filter of my fantastical swimming pool than switch my filter on. You did ask me what I was thinking, did you not? That can be a risky question girl.”

“Do you normally flirt so openly when being interviewed by young women?”

“Only the ones that can’t help but look at me like they’ve never seen a man before. Normally, I’m the quintessential gentleman, but for you I’m making an exception. How could I not? I’ve never been big on filters. Filters are for people with something to hide babe. By the way, I resent the idea that asking me what I’m thinking isn’t a serious question. All my thoughts are serious, whether we’re talking serious business or serious fun.”

“I’m going to shift to my idea of a serious question now Mr Sorbonne.

“You can call me Jeremy, if you like darling.”

“Jeremy, are you concerned about the link between excessive consumption and environmental degradation? It’s a two-part question. Would you agree that the worst offenders, as far as trashing the environment through excessive consumption is concerned, tend to acquire their wealth through the exploitation of the poor?

“Oh, I know where this is going. I’m not one of those evil billionaires sitting on their private island throne, stroking a prize peacock with priceless stolen jewels cloistered in its cloaca. I don’t make my money from paying malnourished people two dollars an hour to work sixteen-hour days. I’ve checked, all the Sorbonne merchandising is as fair trade as Oxfam. I bet you’ve checked too. I have a friend that underpays and over works his staff. Nobody ever mentions how he lets them have Sunday off once a month. Journalists always want to focus on the negatives. He’s as persecuted as Jesus.”

“Obviously, you’re joking. You are joking, aren’t you? You’re so good at looking deadly serious whether you are or not. One Sunday off per month doesn’t sound like much of a positive.”

“I’m much more generous than that miser. The people who work for me have every Sunday off. To tell the truth, the staff at Sorbonnecorp usually have their entire weekend free. And I’m as generous with my money as I am with their work/life balance. I’m much more philanthropical than Oprah ever will be.”

“That said, I’m not claiming to have taken a vow of poverty. My ocean view is magnificent, and masterpieces decorate my walls, but the dimensions of my home are humble enough. It’s just a three-bedroom apartment with two bathrooms. Admittedly, it wasn’t Davo the tiler that laid that elegant mosaic on the balcony. And that’s not department store carpet either. The carpet I walk is fit for a Pharoah. It’s as lush as a meadow beneath my feet. And my antique furniture is as pleasing to the eye as the sculpture gardens in heaven. It’s as comfortable as beautiful too; rather like you, I think.

Are you hitting on me?

“It’s just a compliment darling, don’t get carried away like a raft in white water. Are you a fan of white water Miss Grey? Do manly rapids get you going? It’s alright, you can answer, it’s strictly a canoeing question” Sorbonne assured her.

“Yes, I like canoeing. Moving on now, why should all these exquisite, extraordinarily expensive things around us be owned by you and you alone while there are people in the world who struggle to find a milk crate to sit on, or a battered second-hand mattrass to lie on?”

“First of all, I’ve bought plenty of mattrasses for the needy in my time and delivered hundreds of them myself. You ask how I justify owning these beautiful things? Most of what you see before you is wonderful art. Whether we’re talking about this lounge sweet, the bookcase or that painting of a molten clock I bought the other day, it’s vitally important to preserve it. How would the craftsman who made my bookcase feel if he learned it was no longer overladen with learning? How would the man who made my loungesuite feel if he found out that nobody sits in it anymore? Wouldn’t that render it as useless as a trail bike collecting dust in someone’s garage? If you disagree, feel free to sit on the floor baby.”

“Don’t call me baby.”

“You love it. You wish you didn’t, but you do.”

“Your Rolls Royce, isn’t that an unnecessary extravagance?”

“I sold it a month ago and gave the money to my favourite suicide prevention charity. That car appreciated in value just because my saintly arse was in the driver’s seat for a bit. The sedan I drive now isn’t as prestigious as reliable. I’m planning to get a new one as soon as the warranty runs out, but I’ve never had more than one car at a time. I’m not a shopping addict like my friend Elton. Don’t you have two cars darling?” Alicia would have said don’t call me darling, but she didn’t want to get bogged down in an interview etiquette debate.

“I drive two cars Jeremy, but I don’t own two, the one in the carpark beneath this building is owned by the magazine.”

“Does anyone else drive it? Your silence tells me no. Isn’t that like owning two cars?”

“I need my personal vehicle to take my younger sister to dancing lessons and my little brother to football practice etc. I’m not allowed to use the company vehicle for that.”

“Relax baby, I’m just teasing. Shall we continue? You keep being the hard-hitting socialist journalist. I’ll keep being the suave, sophisticated, billionaire author whose hobbies include, philanthropy, generosity and saving the world. Being the guy, whose best-selling novel outsold the entire Harry Potter series, feels a hell of a lot better than owning too many cars or houses. I’m no twenty first century Karl Marx, but I’m not Milton Friedman either.”

“You talk as though this apartment is your only home, but don’t you own literally hundreds of properties?”

“That is sort of true. Technically, I own one hundred and eighty-six properties with a combined value of approximately two point four billion American dollars. I’m not your typical landlord though. Some of the farms, apartments and houses in my property portfolio are lived in almost rent free by struggling writers, painters, musicians, sculptors, dancers, magicians, teachers, nurses and medical students. I never charge the market rate. Some say I’m guilty of being too much of a patron of the arts and not supporting education and healthcare enough. Maybe they’re right, but I do support a few public hospitals, schools and homeless shelters though.”

“Can you recall all of your major assets?”

“From my mansions, to the brand and colour of my spare toothbrushes, I can describe all of my belongings. It’s easier than recalling the details of my shortest book.”

“You would have me believe that you’re far more philanthropical than your lifestyle is extravagant and wasteful, but aren’t you a jetsetter between your various residences? How do you reconcile the burning of so much aviation fuel with your claims of being environmentally responsible?”

“You have an exaggerated idea of my travel schedule Miss Gray. I’m too busy writing to spend much time in planes. Perhaps you are unaware that, unlike some people in my financial position, I don’t have a private jet waiting for me at the nearest airport, with a pilot and a team of mechanics on retainer. I could if I wanted to. I’m one of the few people in the world that could choose to shower themselves in such opulence. Most people will never be burdened by that choice. I have travelled business class, on long haul flights, a few times, but I’ve never travelled first class, not once. I don’t need a hotel room at ten thousand metres to arrive on the tarmac refreshed.”

“Occasionally, I need to duck across the Tasman for book launches. Whenever I go to New Zealand, or somewhere else nearby, I always travel cattle class. It’s unusual to see me in a chauffeur driven limousine too, you’re more likely to find yourself seated next to me on the bus. One needs to speak with regular people to keep a grip on reality, I think.”

“Earlier, you mentioned the importance of wonderful art not going to waste. Wouldn’t the priceless paintings on your walls and your aristocratic furniture etc benefit society more if it was in a museum?”

“Yes, to some extent, but not as much so as you seem to believe. Although I spend eighty plus hours a week writing and researching, for fifty weeks a year, year in and year out, it’s not just me, a few celebrities and other close personal friends of mine that that bask in the wonders of my abode when this introvert puts on his party hat.”

“A lot of people say you’re an introvert, but how true is that?”

“How many extroverts, or ambiverts for that matter, do you know who spend eighty plus hours a week behind a desk writing with their phone on silent?”

“Don’t you have research assistants to help you give your stories their extraordinary realism?”

“Yes, but I don’t blindly accept their conclusions. My assistants don’t exactly do my research for me, it’s more accurate to say that they smooth the path. I still walk it. There are times when it’s important for me to communicate directly with historians, sociologists, anthropologists, ecologists, climatologists and all the other ologists whose academic papers my assistants expertly select and summarise for me.”

“What was I saying before I started going on about research? Oh, that’s right, I was talking about how a lot of people get to see this place. I hang out with some A Plus celebrities, it’s true, but I can guarantee you, that you’ve never heard of most of the creatives that enter my domain. Many of them are currently no names battling to escape the drudgery of meaningless nine to five jobs. I sponsor the brilliant ones. I give books about the creative process to the moderately talented ones. And I play billiards with most of them.”

“Marilyn Bolt from the Great Southern Land Gazette accused you of buying friends and influence in the arts world, do you have anything to say in response to that?”

“Not a lot besides mentioning that I’ve had the misfortune of hearing that guy sing karaoke once. Normally, when a journalist assaults my ears with that kind of caterwauling, I like to say stick to writing, but in the case of that hack a different retort is in order. Marilyn Bolt had a go did he? If I was wealthier than Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg combined, I wouldn’t dream of buying that skunk a beer to keep him on side. I shouldn’t insult skunks like that. He’s not a skunk, he’s not even a skunk’s arsehole. I wouldn’t waste dead fly infested dregs on that semi-literate loser. I am supportive of fellow creatives, who I believe deserve my help, but my writing speaks for itself, I don’t need to curry favour with anyone. Talk about a textbook case of projection Marilyn. His boss Sir Richard Mordor can go fuck himself too. Feel free to print that in full.”

“A little while ago, I was telling you about how I like to play billiards with up-and-coming creatives. I didn’t get around to mentioning how I commissioned a talented young carpenter to fashion a lid for my Victorian era billiards table so it can double as a dining table. Look how seamlessly the new blends with the old. Isn’t it wonderful. Despite my best efforts, I was unable to find an entirely original piece like that which predates Edwardian times.”

“I can’t say I’ve ever delved deeply into the history of furniture before, but it sounds fascinating.”

“It is.”

Are you able to play that beautiful upright piano that sits where a television would in a regular home?”

“You think I bought that beautiful instrument just so I don’t have to leave home to listen to Billy Joel and Elton John tinkling the ivories in search of their next recording?

“You make it sound as though they pop over most afternoons. How often do they visit you?”

“These days just a couple of times a year unfortunately. When I lived in London for half the year and New York for the other half, I saw them more often. You wanted to know if I can actually play the piano. I stumble my way through most classical pieces, except for the simplified versions, but I can learn to play pop tunes quicker than the average hack. There’s rhythm in these fingers baby. I don’t get too close to anything with strings attached, but I do alright when it comes to keys and drums. In most realms of my life, I’m good at finding the keys and drumming up support for just about anything. While I’m seated at the piano or the drums, I’m less persuasive. They’re not just there for decoration though Miss Gray.”

“How do you get away with playing the drums in an apartment?”

“I invested a lot of money in sound proofing for the second bedroom, more money than most people are willing to spend on a new car, but don’t tell anyone” Sorbonne said with a conspiratory wink. Once again, Alicia wasn’t sure if the poker faced author was joking or not.

“Earlier, we were discussing air travel. Can we return to that topic now please.”

“You don’t give up do you.”

“Don’t you think it would be better if people avoided air travel, whenever reasonably possible, until fully electric passenger planes are capable of long-haul flights?”

“Fully electric long haul passenger flights aye? They’re nearer to the horizon than laser beams concentrated enough to use as weapons, I suppose. I might still need to be cryogenically frozen like Austin Powers to shorten the wait for them though. Did you know that international man of mystery’s powers of seduction are nothing compared to mine? Have you stumbled upon that fact in your research? You don’t want to know about that though do you, you just want to talk about the responsible use of resources, carry on.”

Alicia couldn’t help but burst into laughter, but she was laughing with her interviewee, not at him like the dominant side of her personality wished to. After she’d finished wiping the mirthful tears from her eyes, she continued the interview.

“Some reviewers say that you have written surprisingly few books, that you’re too much of a perfectionist to write an epic novel every year, year in and year out for decades.”

“You make me sound so old when you say that. You know I’m closer to thirty than forty don’t you? This face is not a mountain range yet, it’s still the Nullarbor Plain. This my darling is the moment where you’re supposed to chime in and say ‘The Nullarbor Plain Jeremy, what do you mean? You’re anything but plain.”

“Shall we return to the topic of your books Mr Sorbonne?”

“As long as we can take the scenic route and hold hands along the way, I’m happy to put aside my good looks and talk about my books.”

“Where are we going exactly?”

“Just to the balcony and back. My GP advises against sitting still for too long. I’m just following his medical advice that’s all. Shall we oxygenate our brains together? Does that sound nerdy enough for you Miss Gray? You are coming with me aren’t you Alicia?” Sorbonne held out his hand as though it was more of a statement than a question.

Alicia gripped Sorbonne’s outstretched hand. It wasn’t a dinner plate mocking, earth moving equipment rivalling mechanism, reminiscent of the hands the heavyweight UFC fighter Alicia once interviewed. Sorbonne’s hands, it seemed, had been designed for a standard sized QWERTY keyboard. They weren’t much bigger than hers, but despite their modest size, they looked just as capable of crushing a stone as cradling a butterfly. Although she didn’t normally hold hands with the subjects of her interviews, Alicia kept reminding herself that there was nothing untoward happening. This situation is no more intimate than a line dancing class, she silently repeated to herself.

As they stood gazing at the ocean, Sorbonne casually interlaced his fingers with hers and caressed her hand soothingly. It felt far too good for her to think about objecting. Thoughts of his hands migrating to her thighs and beyond bubbled to the surface. Banishing them proved to be impossible. Sorbonne’s phone was ringing again, and once again he ignored it. Alicia wondered why he didn’t just switch it off.

“Shall we continue the interview.” Sorbonne finally said.

Alicia was glad that the recording app on her phone was still running. Her concentration was as broken as an egg dropped from the roof of the Empire State Building. She composed herself and asked another question.

“Jeremy, there is no doubt that some of your novels and short story collections have been read and re-read by literally hundreds of millions of people, yet every eighteen months of so tens of millions of readers still find the the money and the time to read your latest masterpiece. There are literally millions of in depth amateur reviews online to prove it. The novella you wrote during the school holidays, when you were only sixteen years old, has been turned into a Broadway musical. Several of your other books have been adapted to the silver screen.”

“Why do I have the feeling that your speech isn’t going to conclude in the fan girl manner it started?”

Suddenly, Alicia badly needed another lemon and lime soda water.

“I’ll get you another drink” Sorbonne promised. How did he know she was thirsty? What gave that away? And how could he be so sure that her next question wasn’t a flattering one, despite the lead up? He was right of course. Alicia was beginning to feel like her mind was as transparent as a glass box. She found it impossible not to stare at Sorbonne’s athletic form while his head was turned. Jeremy Sorbonne wasn’t a noted sportsman, yet he looked like an Olympic middle-distance runner. He pulled out his phone and hastily checked his messages. He replied to one of them. His fingers danced over the electronic keyboard with impossible speed.

Before Alicia could avert her gaze, the cheeky author was looking right at her, responding to her dilated pupils with an impish grin. Thoughts of his lips upon hers and his strong hands taking all sorts of liberties flooded her mind. She had checked in the mirror before she left home to make sure her purple lace bra was invisible beneath her lilac silk blouse, she’d checked several times, but to no avail. Despite her elegant, businesslike outfit she was starting to feel as naked as a burlesque performer in the final moments of their act. For the first time, Alicia stammered as she continued her line of questioning.

“There-there is an extraordinary amount of merchandising associated with your stories, everything from toys to t-shirts to colouring in books to 3D printed garden gnomes.” she said between sips of icy lemon and lime soda water. Alicia continued “you’ve written everything from award winning children’s stories to epic novels more popular than Steven King’s most famous work and more beautifully crafted than Hemmingway’s finest efforts. Do you see yourself as an advocate of fast fashion and the billions of dollars’ worth of other unnecessary peripheral products that your writing has inspired?”

“To be honest, I do think that the merchandising dragon is out of control, but that monster can’t be slain now. It treats spears like splinters. I believe I am influencing it for the better though. I’m not simply letting it run rampant. Having said that, as influential as I am, it’s not like the merchandising dragon is prepared to sit and roll over upon my say so. I won’t say I’m just the writer, but I can’t be the marketing people, the accountants, the entire board and all the investors too. The situation isn’t perfect, but at least I’m not shutting my eyes to it all and letting other people represent my work however they like. There are more than enough third rate book reviewers out there wilfully misrepresenting my work, so I do the best I can to stop merchandisers from doing it too.”

“As important as the accurate representation of your characters is, the focus of my question is the tonnes of plastic etc that goes into manufacturing more toys than the children in wealthier nations could possibly ever need. Unfortunately, the bulk of it ends up in landfill, instead of being passed to the next generation, because there is a new range of toys and ornaments etc coming out every year.”

“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to distort your question Miss Gray. I’m a passionate advocate of upcycling and recycling. I’ve invested a considerable amount of money in scaling up the manufacture of biodegradable plastic. Sorbonnecorp is doing better with the transition to environmentally friendly products than most companies that sell affordable toys and ornaments. There is still a long way to go of course. I am among those who are increasing their wealth through excessive consumption, but at least I’m diverting literally billions of dollars of that wealth into worthy causes, including recycling. There is only so much I can do though Miss Gray. I can’t be the puppet master of the millions who are too thoughtless to take their preloved goods to their local opportunity shop instead of putting them in the trash.”

“Moving away from waste management issues now. Do you think it was a mistake to allow so many of your books to be converted into movies?”

“Yes and no. I am not just a fan of the written word. I celebrate all the arts, books, movies, live theatre, the lot.”

“There was one question regarding merchandising that I forgot to put to you earlier. I must warn you, it is rather provocative. Isn’t excessive consumerism a drug of sorts, a psychological drug and aren’t those most responsible for building a culture of consumerism somewhat analogous to dealers of illegal illicit substances?”

“Whoa, that question sure is a little more provocative than the earlier ones darling. You forgot to ask it did you. Are you sure you weren’t just trying to lull me into a false sense of security before firing that one at me? You were trying to set me up for a sucker punch, I bet. I have a question for you Miss Gray. Do you think that everyone who buys a printed copy of that monthly magazine you work for has time to even skim through it? No doubt, some potential readers get their dopamine hit when they first see the cover of Waves Magazines. Then it sits on their coffee table for a while, slowly getting buried beneath the magazines they actually get around to reading, before being flung into the recycling bin, or the trash.”

“Just one more question sir.”

“It’s sir now is it. You don’t know whether to berate me or fellate me.” Alicia was dumbstruck. A heady concoction of outrage and desire left her reeling. She didn’t know whether to storm out in protest or grab one of the velvet cushions from Sorbonne’s lounge sweet and get on her knees.

“Don’t get too worked up darling. I’m still in my interviewee chair. I haven’t exactly tucked you under my arm and carried you to the bedroom or the kitchen bench, at least not yet anyway.” If virtually anyone else had spoken to her like that, Alicia would have immediately stood and briskly headed for the door, but instead she was battling to avoid squirming in excitement.

“What was your question darling? Most of the people who interview me ask me how much tax I pay. Is that it?” It was a predictable question, but not everyone Alicia interviewed was sharp enough to see it coming. She didn’t say anything she just let Sorbonne continue.

“I’m not going to tell you precisely how much tax I pay, but I’m prepared to reveal that it’s always tens of millions of dollars more than Donald Trump has ever paid in one financial year. I’m not into tax avoidance. I love contributing to public roads, hospitals, schools, libraries and sporting complexes etc without cutting ribbons and handing over novelty cheques. Paying enough tax means contributing to society without being dragged away from my word processor. Giving a speech at a charity dinner was cool the first few times times. Usually, I’d rather just pay enough tax and donate online than do all that self promotional bullshit though. Over the past decade, I’ve paid more tax than the amount of revenue that globally renowned magazine you work for has generated. Is the ballpark I’ve sketched for you small enough?”

“Alicia was out of words; all she could think about was Jeremy Sorbonne tucking her petite form under his arm or over his shoulder and carrying her to wherever he wished to undress her. Presumably, he would do so agonisingly slowly. She couldn’t imagine him rushing under any circumstances, not unless he was fighting a fire or tackling a terrorist.”

“Would you like another lemon and lime soda water? You’re trembling, so perhaps you would like a splash of vodka and a little sugar in it this time? You pour, I can’t have you thinking I’m trying to get you drunk. Perhaps it’s a massage and not a beverage that your frazzled nerves are pining after.”

Alicia found herself leaning towards Jeremy Sorbonne without consciously deciding to. His touch felt more expert than that of any massage therapist she could recall. He kneaded the tension from her back as easily as a lesser mortal could’ve squeezed the excess water from a sponge. Then he worked on her scalp, face and arms.

“While I was studying for my doctorate in creative writing and my masters in English literature at Oxford, I worked part time as a massage therapist. I started as the secretary and was trained on the job” Sorbonne explained. “How about I get some massage oil and a towel so I can do this properly? Would, you like to remove your trousers and your blouse so that I can access your legs and stomach? I want you walking out of here feeling like you’ve just returned from the most peaceful meditation retreat in the known universe. Nothing less is good enough for my favourite Waves Magazine journalist” Sorbonne crooned.

His fingers glided from Alicia’s feet to her thighs with the aid of a liberal splash of lavendar oil. He went tantalisingly close to brushing against the edges of her purple lace panties. Sorbonne was just as disciplined in his soothing of Alicia’s pectoral muscles, which ached from too much swimming and driving. What had happened to the man who mentioned wild sex as casually as one might speak of the weather? She waited in vain for him to slide his hands beneath the cups of her brassiere.

Alicia’s heavenly gaze turned to a miserable frown when her interviewee turned massage therapist informed her that it was time for her to get dressed. She was a storm of ambivalence. She hadn’t known it was possible to simultaneously feel so humiliated by the disintegration of her professionalism and so thrilled by her capitulation. How had she succumbed to the wiles of such a rude and arrogant man? How did he manage to talk to her the way he did and leave her silently pleading for more? Why hadn’t he made wild, passionate love to her yet? Sorbonne’s shifting of gears from bombastic Casanova to a genteel massage therapist was the definition of inexplicable. It was all so bewildering.

“Your interview seems unfinished. Feel free to come back tomorrow with more questions. Any time after six in the evening is fine. I’ll have packed away my laptop and my old-fashioned notepads by then.”

Less than twenty-four hours later, Alicia found herself knocking on Jeremy Sorbonne’s door once more. This time, her hair wasn’t tied into a businesslike bun. Neither was she dressed in a lavender silk blouse, tailored navy-blue slacks and sensible office shoes. Part of her still wanted to look like editor in chief material, but the yearning to be ravished by the world’s best-selling author trumped every other consideration. As Churchill might say, Alicia’s black velvet dress was like a good article, short enough to create interest and long enough to cover the subject. Normally, a hint of cleavage was enough to make Alicia feel like a naked woman in a crowded church. That night she wasn’t remotely uncomfortable about her creamy breasts peeking out of her shy floral silk brassiere. Her legs trembled from anticipation as she heard Sorbonne’s footsteps in the hallway.

“You look frightened. Tell me what it is you wish to say. There is no judgment here” Sorbonne soothed as they sat beside each other on his exquisite antique lounge suite.

“I was wondering who was on the throne when your bed was born from a tree in a royal forest.”

“I see, you’re here to continue our discussion about the history of furniture, of course you are. Come, explore history with me in the master bedroom. Maybe, while we’re there, I can teach you to talk like a bad girl. You won’t go to hell for it, I promise. If you overdo it, you might get a good spanking though.”

“Oh God.” Alicia muttered as Sorbonne tucked her under his arm and carried her to his king size bed.

“Never mind God, since when has that prude been dedicated to giving you pleasure? How about we forget that puritanical kill joy for a while” Sorbonne teased as he dumped his student of Earthly delights on to freshly laundered silk sheets. His trail of kisses was more epic than Magellan’s journey.

“Did I say you can take that off yet?” Sorbonne chided playfully as a frustrated Alicia began to slide her black velvet dress over her head. Sorbonne gave her the spanking he’d spoken of earlier, but not for uttering anything he would’ve refrained from writing in an erotic novel. He disciplined Alicia for her impatience. Fear and excitement intermingled as Alicia felt the sting of Sorbonne’s stern hand. Finally, he removed her dress. By the time she lay breathless beside him, he’d introduced her to acts she hadn’t even read about, every one of them more thrilling than the last. As Alicia lay in her favourite writer’s embrace, his phone began to vibrate on the bedside table, but he didn’t answer it.  

As they stood on Sorbonne’s balcony, gazing at the sunset glazed Pacific, Alicia had never felt more relaxed and vibrant. They sipped absurdly expensive wine as mindfully as monks.

“You chardonnay socialist, you” the quality craving, best-selling author teased.

“I might have too many interview questions left to get through tonight. I haven’t asked you anything about the characters in your novels, or how you crafted the plots, yet.”

“Don’t worry, we can finalise the interview after breakfast tomorrow” Sorbonne said with a wink. “Oh, and by the way, that call that came through when we were recovering from our bedroom adventures, that was my accountant ringing to let me know that my purchase of Waves Magazine has been finalised. I found out via voice mail, while I was getting our drinks.”


© Rodney Hunter, 2024



      


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Rise of the Machines

“The day that Dionysus the Elder of Syracuse invented the catapult was the day that the world stopped caring about shot putters hurling cannon balls the length of tennis courts. All of a sudden, those King Kongs of track and field looked remarkably puny. They were banished from Mount Olympus forever. And as soon as muskets were more accurate than inebriated stone throwers, archery ceased to be a sport. That’s how it works people, every time machines do something better than humans, yet another talent is consigned to the rubbish dump of history.”

“You want a more recent example? I’ll give you one. In 1949, the American propellor driven bomber, Lucky Lady 2, circumnavigated the globe. It went up to six thousand kilometres at a stretch without quenching its thirst for aviation fuel in midair. That’s a lot less drink stations than you use in a marathon Eliud Kipchoge, you loser. If you had of taken up running before the first transatlantic flight in 1919, maybe a sportswear company would have been impressed enough by your feats of endurance to sponsor you, but not anymore.”

“The Lucky Lady 2 flew at speeds of up to three hundred miles per hour and reached altitudes higher than Mount Everest. This momentous voyage was the last nail in the coffin for the sport of athletics. Nobody cared about pole vaulting after that Sergey Bubke. The equivalent of leaping on to the roof of a double storey house just didn’t mean anything anymore. And when Javier Sotomayor did the equivalent of jumping over the tallest NBA players head, by a big enough margin for a crow to fly through the space between them, nobody noticed. Javier Sotomayor, your high jump world record wouldn’t have been enough to leap over the grassy knoll and tackle the second gunman let alone clear Mount Everest. You never did get your act together did you.”

“Thanks to planes soaring higher than the Himalayas and racing across the sky like shooting stars, Carl Lewis couldn’t make a name for himself either. Winning every long jump gold medal at the Olympics from Lose Angeles in 1984 until Atlanta in 1996 didn’t help. Even the Wright Brothers early experiments achieved a more sustained flight than Carl. With those magnificent men in their flying machines making falcons look as pedestrian as heroine snorting slugs, Carl’s athletics career was over before it began Amelia Earhart.”

“Thanks to the Lucky Lady 2’s circumnavigation of the globe and Chuck Yeager’s shattering of the sound barrier in a jet plane, hardly anyone knows Usain Bolt’s name. A salt lake dragster obliterated the sound barrier before his career even started. No lucrative sponsorship deals awaited him. A measly thirty miles an hour is all he could manage in top gear. That’s nowhere near the sound barrier Usain. A Toyota Corolla hatchback travels faster than that within a couple of seconds of the lights going green man. Foot speed just isn’t trending anymore, it’s just so preindustrial revolution. Why be a runner? Unless you want to be as forgotten as the Tour De France, what’s the point Pheidippides?”

“Nobody remembers you Pheidippides. You thought that running all the way from Marathon to Athens, to let people know the Persians had been defeated, was a sure way to be famous forever, but those magnificent men in their flying machines went heaps further. Pheidippides, you’ve plunged into the pit of obscurity. You’re as unknown as those crazy people who brave the cold, choppy, waters of the English Channel, to swim to continental Europe. None of them can get an inch of column space in their local rag anymore, not unless they’re Brexit refugees, not with all those planes, trains and automobiles making such incredible journeys.”

“When eleven-year-old Tom Gregory said, ‘hey dad, I just swam from Britain to France,’ his father wasn’t interested.”

“He said ‘take a long walk off a short pier son.’

“But dad, I already have, that’s what I’ve been trying to tell you” Tom replied.

“Then his father said ‘go away son, I’m busy watching a documentary about submarines. They can stay the height of a skyscraper beneath the waves. They can do it for weeks at a time too, so why would I care about you swimming across the surface of the ocean for less than twelve hours? Boats have been doing better than that for thousands of years. Not even the school newsletter will want your story son.’ It’s true, that’s exactly what Tom Gregory’s dad said. I didn’t just make that up. I’m a professor of history at the University of Atlantis you know.”

“It’s not just all those fancy motor vehicles that have rendered old school excellence obsolete. Thanks to electronic computers, nobody pays attention when primary school children multiply twelve-digit numbers, without the aid of a pencil and paper, let alone an electronic calculator. Daryl, from Mr Smith’s remedial maths class, can add up faster with the help of an app on his i-phone. Never mind that he has no concept of what a million is. It was Daryl ‘how many fingers do I have again’ Dallas who had the Guinness Book of Records people knocking on his door. That boy knows how to push buttons in a hurry. Faster is better than slower, bigger is better than smaller and higher is better than lower. Marvelling over brain power is so 1950’s.”

“Computers are taking over man. Any day now, Chat GPT will compose wittier and more original pieces than William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens and Mary Shelley possibly could have written with the aid of a word processor. Eventually, AI will use our social media data to tailor epic novels to our individual taste. Don’t wait for the evidence; the AI salespeople, I.T gurus and the science fiction obsessed psychiatric patients know what they’re talking about. No doubt, when the IT prophets are proven correct, the literary flair of homo sapiens will be obsolete.”

“Nobody will care if they never read another piece of writing woven from authentic creativity, profound personal experiences and months of skilful research ever again. The complete absence of emotion behind creative writing algorithms will be irrelevant to even the most ardent fans of authors. Literature buffs won’t merely embrace AI novels, plays and scripts as one option among many. AI tomes will be infinitely more popular than cameras as an alternative to portraitists. That’s what the IT people keep saying, and everyone knows that they are the experts on what makes bibliophiles tick. What would literature professors and psychologists know?”

“The evolution of chess tells us where human creatives are headed. In 1997, when the supercomputer Deep Blue defeated world champion Gary Kasparov, human tournaments were no more. You failed to keep chess alive Gary. And you didn’t even go to its funeral did you. Thanks to you, chess has been dead for decades Gary. That’s how it all went down.”

“Multimillionaire and five times world chess champion Magnus Carlson begs to differ? What an intriguing figment of people’s imagination Magnus is. Obviously, all those videos of him on YouTube are just CGI. And whenever you think you see him live, it’s just a hologram. He’s a mass hallucination too, just like that Netflix series the Queen’s Gambit. Human chess is dead and human literature is on the brink. Any day now and human creatives of all descriptions will be redundant. Computers will leave people with nothing to do besides sit on the couch and worship them.”

“Writers, musicians, punk rockers, dancers, comedians, magicians, sculptors and painters will be as outmoded as fighting sabre tooth tigers with wooden clubs Captain Cave Man. If you’re one of those fossils who still flocks to art galleries to admire Rembrandt, Renoir, Van Gogh, Dali, Cassat, Kahlo and Picasso your ocean is about to be the Dead Sea. It’s not just the algorithms that will make human creatives redundant, it’s the robots too of course. Who will want to see human performers once robots can match their hand eye co-ordination, speed, agility, rhythm, tone, timbre and interpretation?”

“Soon, being inspired by human striving, courage, discipline, playfulness, spontaneity, humour, creativity, grace and athleticism will all be in the past. There will be robots as unconscious as marble finding everything in the marble Michelangelo. All the ladies will want those walking, talking substitutes for 3D printers for soul mates. Their plastic abs will feel so real that women will never want to take biological men to bed again. What’s that you say? Women are worried that the robots won’t be emotionally available enough? Don’t be silly. The obsolescence of human partners is inevitable. Modern automatons will learn to feel soon enough Pinocchio. Once the oblivious mimicry of artificial intelligence has been sufficiently refined, human charisma and compassion will be as obsolete as creativity Jesus.”

“Like every other claim I’ve made, that one is as plausible as my academic hero status at the University of Atlantis. Don’t you go calling me a name dropper, I really do know Jesus, Pinocchio, Usain Bolt and all the other celebrities I mentioned. They were all in the room the first time I delivered this speech. They don’t like to be left out of things, so I mention them every time I give this talk now. Every one of them is among my five hundred closest friends.”

“Do you often talk to the statues sir? Is it a good way to prepare for a live audience?”

“What do you mean statues, they’re my students. The appearance of stone is just an illusion.”

“This is a sculpture garden sir, not an auditorium in a conference centre, or wherever it is you think you are. Would you be willing to come with me to a nice shiny, disinfected place where they have lots of coffee and vending machines full of chocolate bars? There are some nice people there, who I am sure would love to talk to you. They will want to ask you some questions to see if you are okay. They’ll even take your pulse for you, to make sure that you’re nice and relaxed.”

“They won’t sneak up on me and inject me with tranquilisers will they?”

“No, of course not, why would they do that?”

“How do I know I can trust you?”

“I’m a police officer, so of course you can trust me. It’s my job to serve the community, so why would I lie to you?”

“What’s your name?”

“Roger Rogerson.”

“That sounds like an honest name.”


© Rodney Hunter, 2024

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What’s the Story God?

What kind of bread is it today Jesus? I’ve seen too many loaves like granite with a forest of mould dancing on top. It’s not the proverbial savannah in the wind JC, it’s bacteria making the mould dance. That mould isn’t having any fun son. It’s a ballet dancer told not to stop when her slippers overflow with blood. I hear blood blisters bursting like bubble wrap. There’s audible pops when those blister cushions go. And bullets in the spine if she starts to slow.

She wasn’t always mould on rocky bread. She used to be Godly fairy floss boss. The sugar free, vitamin rich, candy fluff. One man after another changed that. T’was horizontal dancing they craved. Your dad watched and did nothing JC. He watched like a dark web ghoul fool. He watched his creations treat her like a life support system for a hole.

They played eighteen holes afterwards and valued every one more than her. There wasn’t enough guilt between them to slice a single drive into the drink. After snooker, darts, trivia and steak they returned to the local presbytery. Eleven hours of peaceful sleep later they donned their hallowed robes and absolved each other of their sins.

Later, it was their lawyers who attacked. Fake journos covered the front from afar. “Look, she’s in the psychiatric ward now. Didn’t we tell you that she’s a crazy bitch” the prophets at the local pub proclaimed, with copies of the Daily Rumour in hand.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024





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Captain Controversy

It was a long time since the patrons of Cloakman Gallery had seen anything more controversial than an oil painting of a bowl of fruit, a water colour of a sun caressed bay, or a bronze statue of an affable sporting hero in their beloved cultural oasis. Croydon Clayderman was about to change that. As he unveiled his grandest masterpiece, the collective gasp of horror was even louder than he’d anticipated. It was so loud that it echoed off the dome ceiling like a bomb blast.

Clayderman’s tallest offering was a statue of Poseidon, just like he’d told the administrators to expect. He’d given them enough photos of his work in progress to keep them happy. The sketches of the sculpture to be didn’t include any fictitious details. It was the missing details that sparked controversy. Some conservative art lovers shouted angrily and gesticulated wildly at the sight of Clayderman’s God of the Sea. Others wept in anguish. A few gazed at the exhibit in stunned silence.

The trident that Clayderman’s Poseidon held was different, very different. It was so different that the entire Cloakman Gallery Board feared being ended by an aneurysm if they gazed at it for too long. The tips of the trident’s prongs were suspiciously reminiscent of Darth Vader’s helmet. The shafts were suspiciously veiny. And the mermaid balanced on one of them looked suspiciously ecstatic. It couldn’t have been more obvious what the mermaid perched on Poseidon’s personal appendage was doing.

If the Cloakman Gallery Board had known all of the details of the most prominent sculpture in Clayderman’s exhibition, he wouldn’t have been permitted to set foot in the gallery let alone exhibit his work there. Clayderman had also painted a bowl of fruit, a bowl of fruit in which a mermaid was doing something it shouldn’t have been with a cucumber. Poseidon cradled this painting in his other hand like it was a priceless heirloom.

“That’s the best evidence yet that cucumbers don’t belong in fruit salad” Royce Mercedes, the flabbergasted president of the gallery roared. Mercedes was about to put the kibosh on Clayderman’s exhibition before the rest of his sculptures had been unveiled, but a tsunami like surge of online ticket sales stopped him. The Cloakman Gallery was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, so Mercedes and his colleagues had to make a choice between respectability and existence.

Fortunately, no children were present on the opening night. The website administrators scrambled to edit the promotional material, to make it clear that the exhibition was strictly for adults only. By the time Croydon Clayderman’s other works had been unveiled the hasty alterations to the exhibition’s advertisements had been made.

Clayderman’s sculpture of Osiris, Horus and Anubis, in a game of strip poker, was chaste in comparison to his rendering of Poseidon, but extreme enough to make the regular patrons of Cloakman Gallery blush. The solid silver dioramas depicting the destruction of Carthage and the sacking of Rome were as brutal as the mermaid obsessed version of Poseidon was pornographic.

Some critics claimed that Clayderman had merged several exhibitions into one, in a haphazard fashion. Others were convinced that he was portraying the link between established empires taking military conquests for granted and the increasingly hedonistic lifestyles of the major players. In Clayderman’s universe, even the Gods dropped the proverbial ball sometimes. It wasn’t just Poseidon taking hedonism to a whole new level. Zeus was too busy getting it on with a harem of harpies with herpes to notice that he was no longer the King of the Gods. Apparently, Clayderman was stressing the importance of safe sex, among other things.

While Royce Mercedes contemplated convincing his fellow board members to cut the exhibition time from a month to a week, ticket sales doubled and doubled again. Unrealistically, Mercedes hoped that Croydon Clayderman would restrict his opening night speech to little more than “thanks for coming” but the artist had a story to tell about every sculpture. For the entire time that he was discussing his Poseidon and Zeus sculptures, Clayderman was thrusting his hips back and forth in the direction of his twenty-two-year-old girlfriend Elvira Washington, who was dressed as a mermaid. At first, she timed the blowing of a kiss with each thrust. Then she seemed to imitate the vocalisations of a dolphin.

“I’m talking in a mermaid tongue” Elvira finally explained. According to tabloid journalist Marilyn Bolt, “it was arguably one of the top one hundred strangest incidents of the evening.”

“What did Zeus do wrong when he fucked a harem of harpies with herpes, anyone? Will someone have a go at answering the question please?” Clayderman pressed.

“Shouldn’t the question be what did he do right?” Royce Mercedes ventured.

“Did nobody notice the unopened packet of condoms, sculpted in bronze, on Zeus’ bedside table? I’m glad we’re not here for a game of Cluedo people. With you lot working on the case it would never get solved.

“For your information, we’re all bona fide member of MENSA, our intelligent quotients are in the one hundred and forties” Jacqueline Mercedes the secretary of the Cloakman Gallery Board spoke up in defence of her family, whom she presumed were the targets of Clayderman’s stinging words.

“I don’t have time to discuss that glorified brain teaser club bub. I’m a magician on a mission. Before the effervescent refreshments arrive, lets talk about Ares, the Greek God of War over there. That guy isn’t noted for his bubbly personality is he. Look at him drooling at all those modern weapons he sees in his crystal ball? Like the crystal ball, his drool is fashioned from glass. In the dim light it’s hard to tell the difference between it and real saliva isn’t it Magyver. That’s right, Richard Dean Anderson, the Mr Fix It TV detective of the 1980’s, is here in the flesh. Although, he is standing so still that one could be forgiven for thinking he’s one of my waxworks figures. Returning to the topic of Ares spit, if you look closely enough you can see little demons in it. Would someone like to guess how I created that effect? Anyone? Come on…”

Ticket sales for Clayderman’s exhibition, which was titled The Takeover, continued to rise. By the fourth day it was necessary to usher gallery patrons in and out of the main exhibition room once every two hours, to avoid being in breach of fire safety regulations. After only five days the merchandise storeroom was nearly empty. The Cloakman Gallery’s procurement officer scrambled to purchase more books, posters, t-shirts and cups by the van full.

Royce Mercedes wondered why Clayderman’s exhibition was titled The Takeover. His reinterpretation of Syrian, Egyptian, Greek and Roman mythology/history had a lot to say about the rise and fall of bronze and iron age empires. Maybe it was just a reference to ancient power struggles in general.

It wasn’t until Clayderman made an appearance at the Cloakman Gallery’s Annual General Meeting that Mercedes understood what the artist had in mind when he labelled his lewd, yet brilliant, exhibition “The Takeover.” By his standards, Clayderman was dressed in sober business attire. A floral tuxedo, irridescent purple platform boots and a matching top hat was his idea of orthodox. And so was the bejewelled disco stick that he refused to stop twirling until the meeting was called to order. To Royce Mercedes utter dismay, Croydon Clayderman was duly elected president of the board. Mercedes hadn’t even realized Clayderman was a member of the gallery until moments before he’d witnessed him striding into the conference room in his ridiculous outfit.

“So, what should you expect from me as president? Yours truly is inviting the Cloakman Gallery down a more liberal path” Clayderman began his inaugural speech. After a brief pause, he continued. “From angelic to obscene, abstract to hyperreal and everywhere in between, art is for exploring not ignoring. The world has changed since the invention of photography people. Not everyone wants to acknowledge it, but it has. In our time, the post-impressionist gems of Van Gogh, which were once thought to be absurd, are as mainstream as Rembrandt. Yes, it’s true, despite the denial, they’re as mainstream as the Nile. I tell a lie, those treasures are the fucken Amazon baby. And yet for the art psychonauts among us, their consciousness altering properties are a spoonful of LSD Mary Poppins.”

A confused looking, Royce Mercedes looked around the room for a woman in Georgian era garb, with an allegedly gravity defying umbrella, but he didn’t see anyone who matched the description of Mary Poppins.

“I was being poetic Poindexter” Clayderman mocked. As he continued his speech, he drew a cartoon of Mercedes confusing a zebra with a horse and a yak with a giraffe. It was as though Clayderman had two brains. As he sketched with his left hand, he gestured theatrically with his right.

© Rodney Hunter, 2024

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Revival

No original bands
have set foot in Blandvale Pub this century.
Only hobbyists work
hangs in the cottage gallery on Main Street.
No printed books remain
in the Municipal Library three doors down.
Goats graze on the greens
where the best lawn bowlers on Earth played.
The ten pin bowling centre’s
only visitors these days are awfully large rats.
Those who cannot move out
wander Blandvale’s streets in a morbid daze.
Nothing far from the station
has survived the closure of the shoe factory.

In this metropolitan desert
‘The Tip of the Iceberg’ is a thriving Oasis.
It began as a karaoke bar
with no liquor license and milk crates for seats.
Hip hop dancing jugglers
open the show in this burgeoning island of bliss.
‘The Tip of the Iceberg’
has everything from bellydancers to mime artists.
Its yodelling magicians
compete with percussion quartets for cash prizes.
On Anything Goes night,
pole dancers vye for first place with opera singers.
It is the heart of a burb
emerging from a Rip Van Winkle scale coma.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024



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Obscurityville

My WordPress stats look like the skyline
of a modest regional centre.
Anything less than New York frustrates.
Enough readers to fill an arena please.
Everyone from Hawaiian shirt wearers
in tricorn hats and neon gumboots,
to spiderman cosplayers scaling skyscapers.
Jeans and t-shirt sorts are welcome too.
I want all the readers. I want them all.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024


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A Typical Saturday

The goblin painted on the rock face
spied sonnets in lingering chemtrails,
and luscious limericks in lava plumes.
Virile vines at heavenly harpsichords
waited for it to snarl one more request.
Their flowers were truculent trumpets
sneering at fly spray wielding sprites.
They weren’t carrying insecticides.
They lugged anti-gravity aerosols.
Nothing like flubber you flopping fool,
just drugs that induce wild jumping.
That paranoia inducing picture
had me wondering if dragon flies,
hovering above shimmering ponds,
were battle ready CIA drones.
No, it wasn’t the subject matter,
it was the unsettling colour scheme
that left me feeling so psychotic.
It was the weirdest blend of dullness
sinister darkness and irridescence
ever to assault my sensitive brain.
Traces of rationality lingered,
until that ghoulish goblin was gone.
Nobody could’ve scrubbed it away
while my bewildered head was turned.
Then I spotted that fiend in 3D.
Not a hologram, in flesh it was.
That stumpy ghoul grabbed my wallet.
It’s a trick, it’s a trick, it’s all a trick
echoed inside my stimuli soaked skull,
but it felt as real as you and me.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024

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Walter Kessler’s Worlds

Kessler’s canvases are mural size, yet his brushes would not be unwieldy in the hands of a Lilliputian. His rainbows wrestle in glamorous clouds. Turn one degree left or right, or wear thicker soled shoes, and you’ll see something different in his hyperreal swirls of icy blue, bronze, silver, gold and fire.

Kessler says he travels to these extraterrestrial skyscapes in his dreams. He’s not saying they’re inventions of his fertile imagination. He’s claiming his spirit traverses alien atmospheres while his body lies as still as the comatose. He dismisses the ridicule of skeptics with the indifference of a man mocked by preschoolers.

Kessler’s latest painting is allegedly a portion of Mars that’s never been mapped, a barren, igneous pit the size of a backyard swimming pool. The pixie high rock formation in the centre looks like it might have been sculpted. There are photographs of the region in question, but none detailed enough to confirm or deny Kessler’s unlikely story.

At the time of writing, the latest rover to roam the Red Planet is inching closer to Kessler’s Hole, as the Tabloids call it. The terrain is too treacherous for that colossal mobile science lab to traverse, but one of its helicopters is charging its batteries in preparation for flight.

Not since the first moon landing have Earthlings so keenly anticipated any moment in time. Autonomous ships from more advanced civilisations monitor the outcome from afar. Phobos and Deimos have paused mid orbit to admire the spectacle, in cartoons at least.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024


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The Portraitist

With a surf carnival of blues and greens,
Zenith depicts Lucy as a Hawaiian break.
Her portrait glows with valiant vitality.
With enough purples, oranges and reds
to outshine New Years Eve fireworks,
Zenith portrays Lucy as a burning torch.
On a mossy rock, by the curling flames,
her doppelganger plays the guitar.
Flying leaves, twigs, scrolls, quills and ink
define Lucy in his third masterpiece.
Even Zenith can’t paint the breeze itself.
On a canvas titled ‘Towering Inferno,’
his beloved Lucy is solar flares dancing.
His desperate search for the alchemy
to transform her admiration into love
is more daunting than water into wine.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024

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Underground Proclamation

Maybe I should have just stayed in the park.
The tunnels I trod were wet, dingy and dark.
The wall art was weirder than a giant quark.

It said metaverses floating in potential soup?
Chug it all down, down, down Augustus Gloop.

What’s there to see in that Metaphor Sea?
Genes spawning you, is that what you see?
Body/brain, personality just a functionary?

What is there to find in sub quantum broth?
Is my question too questionable boffin toff?

How much do I care about your ivory tower,
its publications and their persuasive power?
A few decades from today comes the hour.

The time when materialism is out of rhyme.
The day when unshackled spirits are sublime.

I’m done with explaining why I believe it’s so.
You’d just back away and claim you must go.
Maybe you would say ring a psychiatrist bro.

Integrated, not synonymous, with our brains.
They influence us, but spirits holds the reins.

That intriguing rhyme was signed the Punster.
Judging by the pics he looks like a Munster.
Is he serious, or another meddling funster?


The Munsters is an American television series that began on the 24th of September 1964 and ended on May the 12th 1966. Re-runs were shown all over the world in the decades that followed.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024

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Wilderness Sonata

Strolling through a skeletal forest.
Autumn splendour beneath my feet.
A violin piece floats on the breeze.
The source of this haunting melody
is more elusive than a silent ghost.
From one border to another I trek.
The jewel of the orchestra plays on.
In synch with songbirds and breezes.
The source of this haunting melody
is more elusive than a silent ghost.
Slopes gentle and rugged beckon.
Four strings masterfully massaged
A maestro dancing away from me?
The source of this haunting melody
is more elusive than a silent ghost.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024


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The Wafer Gliders Strike Back

Crashtopia Dongerdoppler relished her new role as the endangered species officer in the 64th Droobtumblestark sector of the galaxy. The downside was that she no longer had much time to decorate the interstellarnet with selfies or troll the most troublesome psychiatric patients on Intergalactic Tube. How dare those suicidal centre stage lovers draw attention away from her raunchiest video clips with the chronicling of their psychosis! No doubt, the star system’s collective wellbeing would plummet as a result of Crashtopia’s dwindling social media presence. She hoped she could compensate for that by expanding her contribution to science.

The Droobtumblestark sector consisted of eleven stars, all of which were orbited by multiple habitable planets. Crashtopia Dongerdoppler was born in the narrow temperate band of Quoobstumbler, a planet which was mostly a frozen wasteland. Her assignments were usually confined to her home biosphere, but sometimes she made the 4.5 million Quoobstumbler mile journey to its nearest neighbour Huzzlegoober, the place of seven moons.

On one such occasion, Dongerdoppler was headed for Huzzlegoober’s north-western continent, otherwise known as Rigglerrockerstancher. The most intelligent species on Rigglerockerstancher are semi nomadic tribes of bipedal scorpion like creatures. These arachnidesque people call themselves Blonks and refer to their homeland as Korb.

Some view the Blonks love of monosyllabic words as a sign of primitive minds. Those who have studied them more diligently realize that they are fluent in several languages with hundreds of punctuation symbols in their written forms and polysyllabic words that make supercalifragilisticexpialidocious look like an ideal opening for a haiku.

The Blonks keep herds of creatures called gobbledoopers and the gobbledoopers keep flocks of creatures known as wafer gliders. Wafer gliders are a species of tongue like creature. They glide through the Huzzlegooban atmosphere like meaty magic carpets. Wafer gliders mostly confine themselves to Rigglerockerstancher and islands nearby. They are capable of island hopping further afield, but they rarely do. These gliding tongue-like creatures are thought to be the wrigglers that gave Rrigglerockerstancher its name approximately two million Quoobstumbler generations ago, but nobody knows for sure.

Crashtopia Dongerdoppler’s superiors told her many times that these tattoo obsessed, cloud clingers, could prove to be a distraction from her mission. What was the nature of her mission? That will be revealed shortly. First, more needs to be said about the perils of abducting wafer gliders. They have been known to wriggle their way into the tightest of tunnels, usually of the rocky variety, but occasionally of the sexual or gastrointestinal sort.

Dongerdoppler, who was more experimental than the most reckless alchemist, wasn’t worried about which orifices the wafer gliders might explore, she was just curious, intensely curious. She had read all of the scientific literature on Wafer Glider STI’s. There wasn’t a single recorded case of one jumping the species barrier, not one. The Quoobstumber Bestiality Association was one of several organisations that had spent billions researching the matter.

Crashtopia Dongerdoppler’s mission was to bring back a mating pair of the scorpion people’s gobbledoopers. They were needed to add genetic diversity to the Quoobstumbler gobbledooper breeding program. For those of you who are ignorant enough of astrozoology to not know what a gobbledooper looks like, they’re an elephantesque creature with fur like a jaguar’s. There are millions of them in the thicket bordered paddocks of the semi-nomadic scorpion people, but they’re almost extinct on Crashtopia Dongerdoppler’s home planet Quoobstumbler. The zanger bushes bordering the gobbledoopers paddocks are covered in spikes the size of Tyrannosaurus Rex teeth, so there would be no need to tranquilise those lumbering beasts to prevent them from fleeing.

Although the gobbledoopers had nowhere to run to, Dongerdoppler’s mission wasn’t fail proof. Her levitation beam wasn’t strong enough to haul a pair of mature gobbledoopers into the cargo hold, so it would be necessary to coax them in. The wafer gliders would be useful as bait. Gobbledoopers, which aren’t noted for their high jumping ability, spend half their life trying to catch wafer gliders, because they love to use them as massage and masturbation implements. When one escapes they’re so highly motivated to recapture it that they can leap a Quoobstumbler unit of height higher than they are able to, to catch food.

Crashtopia Dongerdoppler’s research vessel slowed to a barely hypersonic speed as it neared Huzzlegoober’s atmosphere. The ships computer prepared the atmospheric craft for detachment. Less than a Quoobstumbler hour later, the atmospheric craft hovered silently above one of the Wrigglerockerstancher scorpion people’s paddocks. There was only eighteen gobbledoopers residing there, but Dongerdoppler was able to quickly identify a mating pair.

All but one of the gobbledoopers in the paddock below preferred chewing on reeds to gawking at the big bird that watched them from the sky. It didn’t have talons so why worry about it? Crashtopia Dongedoppler spoke into her microphone in comically simple sentences, which were translated into the rhythmic squeals of gobbledooper speech. Giant birds that spoke their language wasn’t something they encountered every night, so they were all curious now.

Dongerdoppler asked the biggest, fattest pair of gobbledoopers to stand in the light she made on the ground and to jump as high as they could when told to because a flock of the best wafer gliders were waiting for them in her pouch. This particular herd of gobbledoopers had been bred for gullibility, so Dongerdoppler’s ploy was unlikely to fail.

There are barely any words in gobbledooper languages that can be used to discuss deceit. They have squeals that translate as “happen” and squeals that translate as “not happen.” The closest they can get to saying the word lie in any of their languages is “Said happen! Not happen?” This bunch wasn’t that articulate.

The pair of gobbledoopers that Crashtopia Dongerdoppler selected leapt on command. The combination of their jump and the pull of the levitation beam provided just enough force to haul them into the front cargo hold of Dongerdoppler’s atmospheric craft. The gobbledoopers were so relaxed that they had a snooze while waiting for their wafer glider treat. The female gobbledooper dreamt of several wafer gliders massaging her from her scalp to the interior of her uterus via her lady cave. This was all as innocent as a back scratch in her mind. Her subspecies had no concept of unladylike behaviour. The male gobbledooper dreamt of several wafer gliders giving him a forehead massage and unclogging his bowels for him. The only meaningful difference he saw between those two things was that one of them happened at a higher altitude than the other.

Gobbledoopers are a very altitude conscious genus. The swarms of stinging butterfly like creatures they like to swat to death with their ears and the ones they prefer to swat to death with their tails are extremely difficult to tell apart by sight alone. Usually, the only way to distinguish between them without a microscope is to observe them in flight. These stinging butterflies have evolved to fly at the height of the shrubs they eat. Once chewed, there is no mistaking which species is which. The ones that fly within reach of the gobbldoopers viciously whipping tails taste a lot like liquorice flavoured turkey in sewage sauce and the ones that fly within reach of the gobbledoopers violently twitching ears taste more like a kangaroo marinated in raspberry juice with lumps of mould caked cheddar cheese.

Crashtopia was feeling very satisfied with herself as her captives snoozed in the central cargo hold. A flock of wafer gliders willingly flew into the rear cargo hold as soon as they were promised an opportunity to unclog the bowels of a male gobbledooper and massage the uterus of a female. They had evolved to love the work they’d been conditioned to do for the past seventy Quoobstumbler millennia, what they hated was the unwillingness of gobbledoopers to let them choose their schedule. That’s why many of them tried to escape. Sometimes, left wing wafer gliders attempted to unionise instead. Gobbledoopers aren’t smart enough to understand the concept of a union though.

The creature waiting for the wafer gliders, in one of the big metal bird’s pouches, looked nothing like a gobbledooper. It didn’t even have the same number of limbs. But when wafer gliders are in the mood to pamper they aren’t fussy, as long as they are well fed and given access to gifted temporary tattooists. Crashtopia Dongerdoppler said she was willing to provide both, on the condition that the wafer gliders gave her the most intense multiple orgasms she’d ever experienced. The freshwater jellyfish stew and the tattoo artists that the wafer gliders craved were supposedly waiting on Quoobstumbler, in Zubmuncher Zoo, an indor facility hundreds of miles beyond the icy planet’s temperate regions.

Crashtopia gave the impression that this zoo was just a few minutes away. And she neglected to mention that the only wafer gliders and gobbledoopers ever to escape from the zoo in question had frozen to death in the stomachs of gronk slugs. The gobbledoopers and wafer gliders that already lived there were forced to watch documentaries about that every day before breakfast, lunch and dinner. If they averted their eyes, or covered their ears, they weren’t fed. Crashtopia Dongerdoppler’s kind had hundreds of television channels to choose from but their captives were only ever permitted to watch Zoological Department sanctioned documentaries.

If the robot that cleaned up the aromatic splattering from Crashtopia’s projectile orgasms had of been sentient it would probably have incinerated its own microchips before it received its first pay slip. Fortunately for it, it was an automaton. Most of Crashtopia’s homo sapien ancestors, from approximately five billion generations and several universes ago, would have been equally traumatised by the job.

Unlike her distant Earthling ancestors, Crashtopia Dongerdoppler had two hearts and three breasts. When erect, her nipples were the size of cocktail frankfurts. Unlike all but the most bacteria infested frankfurts they pulsated in a manner reminiscent of twerking. Crashtopia’s nipples were one of her erogenous zones. Another was between her thighs. The pleasure centres that she had the most difficulty climaxing with were the glands in her ear lobes. They were more prone to simmering than boiling over. The orgasmic tide that stemmed from them was almost indistinguishable from fresh sweat. This was a good thing because Crashtopia liked to climax by wiggling her ears during extremely long and boring meetings. Discretion is important for that.

Where were we? Ah yes, that’s right, Crashtopia Dongerdoppler and her wafer glider and gobbledooper cargo were bound for Zubmuncher Zoo, in the frozen wastelands of Quoobstumbler. Not even gronk slugs, which have copious amounts of anti-freeze in their blood, venture much closer to the nearest pole than Zubmuncher Zoo. After the sale of the gobbledoopers and her least favourite wafer gliders to the zoo, Dongerdoppler’s bank balance was fatter than she had ever been.

Dongerdoppler’s habit of showering quarterly, to save water, had a disturbing effect on the ecosystem in her lady cave. The resulting fungal forests caused some of her pet wafer gladers to bleed from their eyeballs and die shortly afterwards. Those who had thus far proved to be immune to the hostile environment of Dongerdoppler’s tunnel of love plotted their escape.

Crashtopia had never tried to stop the wafer gliders from scrolling through the ship’s manuals. She thought nothing of it. It never occurred to her that they were translating them rather than just having fun adjusting the font and the colour scheme. No flight simulator was necessary for the wafer gliders to master the ships navigation system. This wasn’t solely because of how advanced its self-flying mode was. Wafer gliders are better at mental simulations than most creatures in their universe.

The wafer gliders weren’t just mentally miming flying the craft, they were having lucid dreams of piloting it too. Some of these dreams were collective, enabling them to correct each other’s space travel errors mid dream. It was as though they had experienced flying Crashtopia’s ship through several star systems before they had even gotten it off the ground. Despite being imaginary, these star systems were even more fraught with danger than real ones. Space junk was more common, meteor showers were vaster and asteroids more numerous.

Crashtopia awoke one day to discover that she couldn’t unlock the door between her sleep pod and the central corridor. According to the ship’s computer it was just a few Quoobstumbler miles from Huzzlegoober’s upper atmosphere. Still only half awake, Crashtopia assumed she was dreaming and shut her eyes again. Less than a Quoobstumbler hour later, the ship landed in the same paddock that Crashtopia had stolen the gobbledoopers and wafer gliders from. It was midday and the scorpion peoples gobbledooper farmers were quick to let the warriors in the village know that the metal bird had returned.

The wafer gliders accidentally relocked the ship’s doors when they fled the scene. The wildest warriors in the valley relentlessly bombarded Crashtopia’s ship with catapults until the doors finally dented, buckled and snapped. Crashtopia wept hysterically as she was dragged to the nearest lake and thrown in to make her scent bearable. She was inconsolable as the scorpion people marched her to a stone barn and shackled her to the walls. Her secretions were highly sought after as ingredients in traditional medicine. The scorpion people couldn’t understand why she was upset. They let her roam her own private paddock for four hours a day and fed her better than their other livestock. They even shipped her off to the Utopian environment of a petting zoo, once her glands frequent torrents slowed to the occasional trickle.

By the time Crashtopia was rescued, by a crew of Quoobstumblian archaeologists, she was beginning to suffer from arthritis. The candy the scorpion people’s children fed her at the petting zoo had given her diabetes. The ale their parents put in her trough, for a laugh, had given her gout. Her mind was still intact though.

It wasn’t long before Crashtopia’s bank balance was fat again, this time courtesy of the Quoobstumblian talk show circuit. As her wealth climbed, the pit of despair she inhabited off camera grew deeper. In the depths of her being a tiny voice whispered, “maybe if you had of been kinder, you would have found something more than hedonistic pleasure in life by now.” In response to this voice, Crashtopia trashed hotel rooms and the interiors of private planes. As the repair bills mounted, her appearance fees dwindled.

Finally, during a fit of unhinged rage, Crashtopia locked herself into a wolf dolphin tank at Zubmuncher Zoo, the same facility she’d transported gobbledoopers and wafer gliders to years before. Crashtopia had always fantasized about making love to a wolf dolphin. She was attempting to do so now in the hope that the novelty of the situation would calm her down.

If Crashtopia had been thinking clearly, she would have remembered that the particular tank she’d broken into contained quarantined wolf dolphins. There had been a zomp virus outbreak. The zomp virus commandeered the brains of wolf dolphins, causing them to confuse acts of aggression with mating rituals. Instead of chewing gently on Crashtopia’s face, the wolf dolphin bull tore it from her skull like a human might peel a band aid from an arm.

Faceless and naked, Crashtopia appeared on the front page of the most shameless Quoobstumblian tabloids the next day. Her surviving relatives threatened to press charges against those ghastly publications. Settling the matter out of court led to the lavish lifestyle they’d always craved.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024






Featured

The Devil’s Frisbees

Mountains of odds and ends, sources of misery and joy.
Front and centre, Palmer United DVD’s I forgot to destroy.
Get the hammer, why give them another chance to annoy?

They feature Titanic Two clips, cos sinking once isn’t enough.
It’s the ideal flagship for an org made of the shonkiest stuff.
Compilations of Clive’s ads? Just viewing the cover is tough.

Next to an Australian flag bold letters say vote for Clive.
I’d rather leap from Centrepoint Tower in a nose dive
than discover what fakery that fat fucka streamed live.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023


Featured

The Merging of Special Occasions

Although I’m not religious, I appreciate the spirit of giving associated with Christmas and the spirit of personal sacrifice associated with Easter. The numerous theological absurdities linked to those occasions don’t prevent me from enjoying the gist of them. What I am sick of is the greed inspired overlapping of these special occasions among others.

It seems that we are only a year or two away from the Easter Bunny perching himself on Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer’s back and throwing Easter eggs down chimneys like a major league pitcher. Look out florists, before you know it, that myxomotosis and calicivirus defying little fucka will start attaching a dozen red roses to those Easter eggs.

When the Easter Bunny starts pitching and sling shotting his products down chimneys, from Santa’s sleigh, it might be time to say fuck Christmas and fuck Easter. I don’t think Valentines Day has ever had any redeeming features. What good is an occasion that excludes a third of the population? Claiming that it is about love in general, rather than exaggerating the importance of “romantic” love, is thin wall paper over a rat infested cavity.

I would love to live in a society where it is taboo to commercially exploit special occasions before they’re even on the horizon, a society where there are real consequences for using every widely celebrated occasion as a selling point 365 days a year. By real consequences, I mean economic ones. Boycotting disrespectful businesses would be enough. I don’t want to see anyone burnt at the stake or hung, drawn and quartered etc. That wouldn’t be in keeping with the Christmas spirit would it.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023



Featured

West Vale’s Wild Western Frontier

To quote Garth Izzard’s kindergarten teacher “That kid wouldn’t help an old lady pick up her walking stick, not unless she guaranteed him two thirds of her pension cheque first.”

Garth didn’t grown kinder with age. He was a great admirer of former U.S Secretary of State and Nobel Peace Prize winner, Henry Kissinger. Not surprisingly his favourite Kissinger quote was “the illegal we do immediately, the unconstitutional take a little longer.” Garth’s shareholders trusted him to apply this philosophy humanely. His interest in the carbon trading scheme, reluctantly implemented by Prime Minister Jock Waffle, was assumed to be as altruistic as God.

On Garth Izzard’s latest carbon sink acquisition, in Western Sydney, native plants shielded rapidly advancing exotics from bulldozers and boom sprayers. Izzard was apoplectic with rage when he learnt this weed imperilled wilderness would need to be regenerated manually. Reality slowly forced his hand.

Eventually, he provided his army of Sunday hippies with free tools from the reject depot of his hardware chain and permitted them to dumpster dive for biscuits, at the back of his supermarkets, providing they waived their right to insurance cover for needle stick injuries.

Garth was astonished to discover his flood of generosity wasn’t enough to inspire fourteen-hour shifts of hacking into seething masses of Lantana and Morning Glory with the ferocity of a Spartan warrior in a fit of roid rage.

Impatient to rid himself of his ageing eco maniacs, Izzard fed their morning tea stockpile of stale biscuits and use by nineteen eighty-six lime green cordial to his pit bulls. They were there to chase the hordes of doddering pensioners off his land once and for all. Garth’s departure speech was brief and brutal.

“If you greenies are doing what you love why do you need me to reward you for your Olympic swimming pool of shirt saturating, eye stinging sweat? Fuck off you fucking hordes of tree hugging lemmings.” Garth’s chief accountant Niles Cash attempted to console his heartbroken employer.

“Sir, unfortunately slavery is frowned upon in twenty first century Australia. It must be hard to accept the mighty injustice that your problems can no longer be solved with your favourite stock whip or cattle prod. Don’t fret, I have the utmost confidence in Prime Minister Jock Waffle’s top-secret plan to abolish the minimum wage.”

“Niles, why do the criminal classes expect their living handed to them on a platter?”

“Left wing lunatic propaganda makes them soft sir. Should I rebook your pedicure and four hands Hawaiian massage? Perhaps what you need more than anything right now is to discuss the matter with your psychologist, to help calm your Greenie mangled nerves?”

Matt Rush, the owner of land restoration behemoth Mother Nature’s Bodyguards, was busy yelling at Southwestern Crew Supervisor Davo Davidson when he first learned that corporate tycoon Garth Izzard was seeking to get in touch with him. The red phone in his brief case was vibrating angrily, but he was enjoying himself too much to end the call with Davidson.

“Davo, we aint changing the company name to The Weed Massacre Gurus. It’s the perfect label for a heavy metal band that advocates the use of heroine laced with crystal meth but not for a bush regen company. Yes Davo, I know your Green Thumb Green Berets start screaming threats of violence at blackberry thickets before dawn, in between mumbling obscenities at the hairy extra-terrestrial goblins they claim have stolen their tools, but that’s not the kind of truth we want emblazoned on of our fleet of utes. Yes Davo, yesterday I said it’s your best idea yet, but that wasn’t a compliment Davo, it was a comparison, like comparing influenza with radiation poisoning.”

“What, you’re planning to leave the company and you’re begging me of all people to be your referee? If you leave this company in anything besides a body bag, all I’ll reveal to prospective employers is the true nature of your fixation with the rare Cumberland Plain Land Snail!”

Whenever Matt Rush wandered on to site, productivity plummeted and suicide climbed. He did the least damage when innovating from afar. His latest lunch time musings had led to the purchase of a squadron of spy drones to monitor the length of his employees breaks. Rush lapsed into a daydream about arming his surveillance fleet with low calibre weapons to shoot down Indian Mynas. It was one of his more practical ideas.

Home time was near. Davo Davidson’s elite line up of chain sawing lunatics hadn’t massacred a hectare of African olive trees yet. Assistant supervisor Laura Bogan’s treatment of the jumping ant bite on Davo Davidson’s tackle was unorthodox to say the least. She was too focussed on her work to notice Davo’s video link to his backyard Cumberland Plain land snail farm. These creatures are rare in the wild but at Davo’s place they’re in plague proportions.

“For Chrissakes, not now” Davo hissed, as his phone vibrated in his pocket. He struggled to speak normally as Matt Rush’s voice tormented his ears like a demonically possessed angle grinder.

“Davo, if your crew hasn’t smashed five hectares of African Olives by midnight, you can forget about recouping the cost of fuel this week. Nathaniel Smoke and Mirrors Daniels, our new accountant, is more creative than Leonardo Da-Vinci. He could take away all your entitlements and at the same time make it look like you’re overpaid. Don’t even think about sabotaging the spotlights. Penalty rates? ROFL muthafucka. Davo, if you approach the union, you and the snails gonna be all over YouTube.”

“Oh, I nearly forgot, HR manager Gail Wilde will be on site next week to discuss Mother Nature’s Bodyguards anti-bullying policy. Make sure ya ready for that loser, or I’ll kick you up the arse so hard you’ll be farting through your nostrils and punch you in the nose so hard you’ll be sneezing out your arse. I’ve gotta go, the CEO of Stratosphere Apartments is here to treat me to a gourmet lunch, bye Davo.”

“Yes Madam, we’ve got that former wasteland, near the National Park, looking like forest wilderness and pretty signs advertising Stratosphere Apartments sponsorship. Until the bulldozers arrive, nobody will suspect a thing. That penthouse discount is huge. Words can’t express my gratitude. Sorry, I must take this call.”

“Jonathon, of course I’ll be happy to edit that solar farm construction site threatened species report. Yes, a few commas are out of place, of course that’s all you mean. I’ve got to go, Medusa Crabtree, the CEO of Stratosphere Apartments is here for an urgent meeting.

Matt Rush was sampling the two thousand-dollar bottle of Champagne, that had mysteriously found its way to his desk during Medusa Crabtree’s visit, when Garth Izzard strolled into Mother Nature’s Bodyguards HQ. He was flanked by his most obsequious lawyers. The dollar signs in Rush’s eyes flew like fireflies in a cyclone. The tender manager, Billy giant appeared from nowhere. He brandished his pen like a flick knife in anticipation of ruthless negotiation. The participants stared at each other across the boardroom table like rival gangsters in a high stakes game of poker. By three A.M the ten year one hundred-million-dollar contract was a done deal.

“Get up ya mug” Matt Rush roared as Billy Giant collapsed from exhaustion on a crocodile hide door mat. “It’s alright, he’s out cold, he won’t feel a thing” Rush explained to Rowena the cleaner, as he used Billy for a door mat on his way back inside to get his keys.

Matt Rush, Billy Giant and HR manger Gaile Wilde embarked on a mission to assemble the greatest conservation and land management crew ever to wear Mother Nature’s Bodyguards high vis orange and forest green. Most in demand was former Western Sydney Warlords prop forward Richard Johnson. It was said that Lantana shrivelled and died in terrified anticipation of the first cloud of Metsulfuron from his lethal weapon.

Once Johnson had been poached from Weed Busters, Liverpool’s landscaping, amateur stunt car driving and mixed martial arts legend Dangerous Dylan Donovan was in Mat Rush’s sights. The man could plant trees as fast as he could get a handbag snatcher in a headlock. Dangerous Dylan Donovan’s sidekick, Jumping Giles Corkhill, was renowned for high volume spraying in places where a goat wouldn’t dare tread. High volume spraying was illegal in the sensitive environs of Izzard Reserve. As long as Garth Izzard’s favourite Henry Kissinger quote “the illegal we do imediately, the unconstitutional takes a little longer” wasn’t emblazoned on the crew’s uniforms, he wasn’t worried.

As far as ecovandalism is concerned, even Garth Izzard and Matt Rush had their limits. The unofficial reason for Dangerous Dylan Donovan’s employment was putting Richard Johnson back in his cage if he insisted on using plutonium to kill Alligator weed, like he’d allegedly done during his stint at If it’s Noxious we Nuke It. Richard was disturbingly prone to taking things literally. It was rumoured that he was under investigation by ASIO and the Federal Police, concerning alleged links to the Russian mafia. Many assumed that was how he’d ‘acquired his long since confiscated stockpile of radioactive herbicides. Johnson was still in denial concerning the illegality of lacing Metsulfuron with uranium.

Then there was Dexter Finklestein, a former botanist and master storyteller. Finklestein was like a hybrid of Grandpa Simpson, Robin Williams, and Aussie TV presenter Don Burke. You could never tell when his marathon talks on the environmentally friendly herbicides of the future would shift to how he’d once robbed a Melbourne tram, with a cap gun, while dressed as a fifteenth century Japanese bandit. His hobbies included pressing plants and telepathic communication with ducks. With Dexter on board Plant File was obsolete.

Oliver Oxford, the man who spoke of his heroics with the S.E.S, as though they were unsurpassed by the most daring exploits of the S.A.S, joined the crew as some sort of consultant. Precisely what his job was nobody knew, but he seemed to enjoy polishing tools, making sure the site boundaries had been marked, listing his qualifications, discussing the botanical dictionary he’d been working on since he was four and ranting and raving about what he’d do if he was the Prime Minister. What Oxford loved most was giving orders to those whom he imagined were his underlings.

Ricardo Hohns, the last recruit, was renowned for cutting down African Olives and privets in his sleep. Some mornings he’d wake to find himself poisoning a stump halfway down a cliff. Matt Rush bought him a tent and made him the site security guard. After all, at 3am, how many things are scarier than a guy with a zombie like stare charging at you with two bow saws in hand and a tube of weed killer between his teeth?

Laura Bogan, former member of the southwestern crew, was appointed supervisor, based on Matt Rush’s belief evil people get the job done. Aware that Matt would be onsite for the first week of the new job, Laura marked the boundaries at dawn. She even polished everyone’s tools. Oliver Oxford was slow to forgive her for stealing his favourite means of procrastination.

Laura was marking the borders when a tennis ball skipped across the shallows of a heavily polluted creek like it had been struck by Roger Federer and splashed an evil looking puddle into her face. The mouthful of water from Izzard Creek was infinitely worse than raw sewage. Laura looked about wildly for the culprit. She imagined Ricardo Hohns was responsible and wrote this down. After a few dabs of liquid paper, the tennis ball became a rock.

Laura rolled her eyes at Dexter Finklestein who was engrossed in a conversation with a non-existent koala. Shockwaves from Dangerous Dylan Donovan’s speakers had more than Laura’s coffee cup vibrating to the tune of Uptown Funk. “Too hot, hot damn, too hot for the Police and the Fireman, too hot, hot damn, make a dragon want to retire man, to hot, hot damn, say my name, know who I am……”

At first glance Dangerous Dylan Donovan looked like the best equipped bush regenerator she’d ever seen. Bogan eventually realised his trailer was merely the casing for gigantic speakers. Laura decided she would have a talk with Dangerous about his sound system affecting the breeding patterns of local wildlife, as soon as her chain saw fuel ran out. Upon noticing how incredibly good looking he was she spoke of the wonders of a nearby cave instead, a moist wonderland with countless satisfied visitors.

Jumping Giles Corkhill, somersaulted to Earth from the lounge chair bolted to the floor of Dangerous Dylan Donovan’s ute tray. “The boy knows how to make an entrance” Dangerous stated with pride; before turning his attention to Oliver Oxford.

‘Give me the run down on Golden Whistlers Oxford. That’s one over there isn’t it?

“The scientific name is Pachycephala pectoralis, Dangerous. They’re distributed throughout eastern and southern Australia as far north as Cairns and as far south as Tasmania. They inhabit rainforest, scrub and open forest. Usually solitary and deliberate in their movements, they possess a sweet and ringing song.”

“Sorry, I wasn’t listening, can you repeat that Oxford?”

“Don’t annoy me by raving on about birds, I’m busy” was Dangerous’ response to take four.

“It’s okay Oliver, it’s all good practice” Rowena, the crew’s morale and safety officer consoled.

She would’ve reprimanded Dangerous Dylan Donovan but his boulder pulverizing biceps, meteor shattering manly jaw and larrikin grin left her feeling too dizzy to speak.

The news Matt Rush was on site prompted the crew to scurry to the makeshift parking lot for a discussion on which weeds to target, the dangers of cutting down weed trees in which crew members had taken up residence and questions concerning how Richard Johnson had acquired a dozen mining helmets since signing on. Richard had a gripe of his own.

“I wanna know whose bin spreadin bullshit stories bout me and the Wussian Mafia. Whoever it is, I’m gonna knock im inta the middla next year.”

Oliver Oxford, who had been front and centre, poised to impart his knowledge on everything from Work Health and Safety laws to the likely date of the Apocalypse had mysteriously disappeared.

“What do you mean rumours? It’s all true isn’t it” Ricardo Hohns piped up.

Johnson lurched forth like Frankenstein. He swung and missed, almost uprooting an African olive tree. Hohns looked as relieved as a man who has successfully crossed Conrod Straight, during the Bathurst One Thousand, by a hair’s breadth.

“Do ya, do ya, do ya wanna dance” Riccardo sang after regaining his composure.

“I hate that song” Johnson bellowed. As he covered his ears Riccardo lunged and planted a leaping overhand left on the point of his chin. It had less effect than a marble clanging against the turret of a tank.

Dangerous Dylan Donovan barked instructions ‘Riccardo, use your speed, circle counterclockwise and unload with a right on his recently re-attached ear’

“What speed?” Riccardo asked.

“You betta find some real quick or I’m gonna havta step in for ya.” Dangerous removed his jacket faster than a Spanish bull fighter shifts his capote and flung it the length of a bowling alley into the waiting arms of Jumping Giles Corkhill. If he’d been any more accurate Giles would have been wearing that jacket.

Hohn’s taunted his Godzilla dwarfing opponent “Johnson, you look like a teletubby hybridised with a troll. You’re so stupid that when a coconut hit you on the head, you cracked it open to make a cup of cocoa.”

Riccardo ducked beneath a hay maker that might’ve decapitated him if it had landed. “You’re behaving like children” Rowena screeched, startling the combatants into standing as still as statues and shocking the cheering mob into silence. Any more of that and both of you can stand in neutral naughty corners all day without pay.” Matt Rush, who had bet Dangerous Dylan Donovan five hundred dollars on the outcome of the fight gave Rowena a nod of approval. Rush had bet that Hohn wouldn’t last more than thirty seconds. Dangerous had bet that he would, a smart move considering he was the fight’s choreographer.

The moment the fight started, Rush forgot about the miners’ helmets Richard Johnson had mysteriously acquired, coincidentally on the same day a tunnel was discovered between Izzard Reserve and Inglewood Coal Mine. A series of other distractions, such as a possibly deliberate low-speed car crash out the front of Rush’s house, saw to it that his focus never returned to the tunnel, or the stolen miners’ helmets. A case of beer was enough of an incentive to convince Richard Johnson not to talk about that tunnel ever again, or to recreate the link between it and the mine. The entrance that Johnson had discovered was filled in and a more obscure one dug elsewhere.

It wasn’t long before large Leaf Privet massacring chainsaws and Lantana annihilating brush cutters destroyed the serene atmosphere as shockingly as Dangerous Dylan Donovan’s sound system. Knap sack herbicide sprayers blanketed Moth Vine, Cape Ivy and Morning Glory patches, which were spreading so rapidly that time lapse photography was barely needed to watch their advance.

When nobody was looking, Richard Johnson, drilled and poisoned the world’s largest African olive tree with a jackhammer and a drum of diesel. He charged at the next African olive infestation with a chainsaw like a soldier going over the top at Gallipoli. Four former NFL players, seconded from the landscape construction crew, hauled fallen weed trees from his path. Johnson was supposed to be drilling and poisoning those trees and leaving them in situ, but that wouldn’t have satiated his appetite for destruction.

Meanwhile, in stark contrast to Johnson’s rampage, Ricardo and Rowena were busy extricating Erharta From a patch of Weeping Meadow Grass. What could be more enjoyable than euthanising weeds with such a fascinating Goddess, Ricardo wondered. She enthralled him with tales of everything from mushroom farming to entertaining hospitalised children with her ukulele.

“There’s a Rufus Fantail and a Yellow Robin” Rowena. Ricardo also delighted in pointing out and naming specimens of shy little native herbs such as Solenogyne bellioides and Cymbonotus lawsonianus. He was so pleased to see them, one could be forgiven for thinking they were the larvae of giant butterflies thought to be extinct for millennia.

“Out of the sun Ricardo” Laura Bogan barked with the fury of a rabid Doberman.

“I’m perfectly comfortable” Ricardo answered.

“Get the fuck out of the sun now” Laura screamed, as she aimed the nozzle of a Staraine laden sprayer at his eyes. With his hands raised in the air Ricardo did as he was told.

“I’m just thinking of your safety Riccardo.” Laura reminded him.

Rowena looked ready to flip Laura into an African Box Thorn thicket.

Laura made a note in her diary “Ricardo always seeks the shadiest spots to work, at the expense of other crew members health.”

Just a few days later, Richard Johnson was in trouble for spraying a patch of Asparagus Fern with Agent Orange.

“Who is Agent Orange? Who does he work for?” Johnson demanded to know, after Laura Bogan invited Rowena Grey, the site safety and morale officer, into the conversation on the whereabouts of Johnson’s illegal herbicide supply.

After terminating the interview, Laura gazed at a pair of red belly black snakes slithering into a hollow Grey Box stump. Ms Bogan was nothing like red bellies, the timid puppy dogs of the venomous serpent world. She longed for a cup of their venom to add to the crew’s coffee. None of them were subservient enough for her liking.

Ms Bogan’s crew damning diary contained more fantasy material than the Lord of the Rings trilogy. Ricardo Hohn was the main character. She had hated him ever since he’d informed her that the weeds she’d chastised him for ignoring were native plants. That diabolical humiliation occurred on the day that the Challenger Space Shuttle exploded. Laura had been plotting her revenge ever since. Mother Nature’s Bodyguards CEO Matt Rush said he was looking forward to reading the damning reports in her diary.

The moment Laura disappeared from site to visit her dope dealer; Richard Johnson rummaged through the bag she left behind. He was hungry. The two-litre bottle of Coke, the packet of Oreo’s and the stray goat, he’d had for morning tea weren’t enough. He felt around for false compartments, sniffing for anything that vaguely resembled food.

Eventually, Johnson pulled out an exercise book. After reading the chapter entitled Richard Johnson, he considered sending Laura Bogan’s van falling end over end into Izzard Creek. The handbrake would be no use against the one-man scrum that was Richard Johnson.

Johnson broke into everyone’s vehicle in search of sustenance. He discovered that Oliver oxford was writing his memoirs. Richard couldn’t get through the first paragraph before flinging the offending material on the ground in disgust. Oxford claimed he’d taught Johnson the art of simultaneous brush cutting and knap sack spraying.

“That Mista Puniverse bludga musta shown me howta do it with the Lego version of a brush cutta and spraya. Otherwise howda fuck coulde’ve lifted em?” he raged.

Richard Johnson went to lunch early, leaving a cloud of dust in his wake as he sped from the property. He paid little attention to the late model silver Lamborghini he nearly ran off the road. The driver got a good look at the Mother Nature’s Bodyguards logo on the side of his vehicle though.

If Office Works had of been closed it might’ve been the victim of a ram raid, for the sake of borrowing a shredder. Johnson fed the life and times of Oliver Oxford into the biggest, baddest document destroyer he could lay his hands on.

“Are you going to buy that sir? You’ve been testing it ever since I started working here” sales assistant, Melanie Tulip challenged him. He glared down at her as though she were trying to talk him into paying five dollars a minute for the air he breathed. Then he used his unbelievably good eyesight to examine her sheer, lacy underwear. Shoddy brain surgery, after Johnson’s fight with a tractor, had given him the ability to see through any clothing less opaque than a leather jacket.

“Your panties are blue” he stated, as proudly as if he’d just solved one of quantum physics most baffling mysteries. From that day forth, Melanie wore six pairs of stockings and yoga pants beneath her trousers.

Richard reread Laura Bogan’s diary as he drove back to site only twenty k’s over the speed limit, He had one hand pressed firmly on the horn, to drown out anyone who might have a problem with his latest multitasking feat.

Johnson almost side swiped Dangerous Dylan Donovan at an intersection.

Dangerous’ own lunch time escapade would prove to be more action packed than Richard’s, but he didn’t know it yet. After his lunch shenanigans, Richard hurled himself into his work with the gusto of one tank trying to stop the United States air force.

“I am King Kong’s conqueror, Godzilla fears me. I dare you to unleash your fury upon me” he roared at a patch of Inkweed as he sprinted towards it with a spray pack the size of a swimming pool on his back.

Dexter Finkelstein wandered off site to share his supply of LSD with a wombat. Laura Bogan was still on her usual three-hour break, to visit her dope dealer and to attend a few orgies, including one hosted by an extra-terrestrial from somewhere in Alpha Centauri. His claim to fame was possessing more penises than fingers.

Oliver Oxford spoke to everyone in earshot about the superior ergonomics of his loppers and his reclining camping chair. Every hour, he shifted to saw another African olive tree. He was one of those people who manages to do less work than the long term unemployed, without ever being out of a job.

Dangerous Dylan Donovan raised his middle finger as a scowling, silver Lamborghini driving, gang leader cut him off at the entrance to the service station. Dangerous was searching his wallet for cash when something slammed into his cheek bone. Had a wedge tailed eagle committed suicide on his face? Dangerous whirled around to see a shirtless body builder type shadow boxing and kissing his own biceps in triumph.

Dangerous was not amused. He grabbed his detachable driver’s side door and used it for a shield as he advanced. Luckily, the door was reinforced with titanium, and he was wearing his Kevlar body armour, because a variety of stolen weapons ranging from a crossbow to an AK-47 were trained on him. All of them were fired simultaneously. Once mirror boy’s henchman realised they’d exhausted their ammunition, there was an eerie silence.

Jumping Giles Corkhill returned from the pizza store across the street. Dangerous Frisbee’d the ute door to him and motioned for him to reinstall it, as he headed for the self-kissing show pony, with his right arm cocked. In his haste, the startled looking mirror boy crashed into the wall between the service station and the outhouse. Now he was cornered, his ailing bravado was inflated once more. Donovan’s now upright right arm reminded him of a cobra poised to strike. His left arm dangled by his side as though it were partially paralysed. As Mirror Boy prepared to counter a devastating right cross, he was knocked senseless by a left hook.

“Idiot” Dangerous remarked as he strolled back to his vehicle and refuelled.

“That’s Dangerous Dylan Donovan. Some call him the twenty first century Arthur Fonzarelli” an autograph hunting bystander proclaimed.

“I call him dead” the gangsters roared in unison. Jumping Giles Corkhill casually sipped his frozen Coke. Dangerous had gotten them into and out of situations more dire than this. He looked bored by the ease with which he flung his attackers into their vehicles. Jumping Giles slashed their tyres before they could disentangle themselves.

Two carloads of police officers pulled into the service station to replenish their donut stockpile and as it turned out to make some arrests. Nobody had reported the fight to them. The service station attendants were too preoccupied with fighting a dumpster fire and chasing away graffiti vandals to even notice it.

“Not again” Lawry, the owner, moaned as he discovered the confectionary freezer had been stolen.

If they’d watched the evening news, Dangerous and Jumping Giles would’ve seen CCTV footage of Dangerous versus the West Vale Boys and Jumping Giles standing idly by sipping a Frozen Coke. Mirror Boy and his cohorts had robbed two service stations in fifteen minutes before their stoush with the most feared weed sprayer since Genghis Khan took a dislike to the clover in his palace garden.

The story immediately following Dangerous Dylan Donovan’s kung fu movie like exploits at West Vale Convenience Store was reported in one hundred and eighty-five countries. Someone had stolen the Australian Airforce’s Hypersonic 3000 prototype. The Hypersonic 3000 could either function autonomously or with a pilot at the controls. It was the culmination of a reverse engineering project that had begun in the Nevada Desert in 1947. Inexplicably, before the final tests could be completed, one of these multi-billion-dollar aircraft went missing. Interestingly, a Hypersonic 3000 flight simulator had been stolen about three months earlier.

Laura Bogan didn’t see the evening news either. She was too busy ringing Dangerous Dylan Donovan to interrogate him about misuse of company vehicles.

“Speeding on two wheels is against company policy? Since when? I’m busy darl, the Warlords are playin. I’ve got five hundred riding on the first scorer. We’ll talk about work at work. Then again, I’ll probably be too busy then too.”

Dangerous turned the volume down, knowing Laura would yell for ages before pausing to discover he was gone. He recorded every call from Laura Bogan and sent the audio files to Ricardo to summarise the death threats.

Not content with disturbing Dangerous Dylan Donovan during a Western Sydney Warlords match the previous evening, Laura Bogan made the mistake of offending Richard Johnson again.

“What do ya mean we can’t arm drones with herbicide cannins. I could fly em by remote control from my car during an extended lunch break. I’d neva be more than two feet from an ice cold six pack.”

“Garth Izzard just isn’t prepared to pay for that kind of technology” Within moments of Laura being out of sight, Richard had stolen her diary again and sped off on another Office Works escapade. There was a strong police presence in the shredder section. Sales assistant, Melanie Tulip was wearing three pairs of yoga tights under her trousers. Richard bided his time at a café across the street while he waited for the four police cars to depart.

“If I give you that shredder for cost price, will you promise to never come back?” the exasperated manager offered as Johnson walked through the door.

“I will consider your offa after testing it a little more” Johnson replied as he headed for the car park, shredder in hand. Aware of the natural disaster proportions of a Richard Johnson tantrum, the manager paid for the stolen item himself, saving the company from the need to make a hefty insurance claim. The shredder made short work of Laura Bogan’s forty thousand words of meticulous fabrication. Richard considered shredding his copy of the Responsible Use of Herbicides Handbook too. In the end, he decided to save that one for his next book burning. Richard made a phone call to Oliver Oxford, who he hoped had taken time out from bird watching to fill up his herbicide spray pack.

Matt Rush rang Laura Bogan to request a copy of the diary she’d been discussing forever. Richard Johnson eavesdropped. According to Dexter Finklestein, eight kookaburras and five goannas suffered from strokes during his fits of laughter. The electronic copy of Laura’s diary had been mysteriously deleted from her laptop and online back up. Using her name for the password had proved to be a bad idea. Every member of the crew knew that the guillotine of rough justice was about to descend upon Laura Bogan. It was a guillotine they’d all had a hand in building, sharpening and polishing.

“Closed circuit television footage will show that since the beginning of the job, Laura has repeatedly left site before lunch time and not returned until midafternoon” read an email from Ricardo Hohn to Matt Rush. Garth Izzard backed up the accusation in a video conference call.

“It’s true Matt, it was quite cunning how Ms Bogan avoided the regular trails and built her own personal gates but not as cunning as Dangerous Dylan Donovan’s installation of extra surveillance cameras.”

Realizing she was destined for a long walk to the bus stop, Laura Bogan attempted to ring her recently estranged younger brothers for a lift and to organise a hit on Ricardo Hohns and Dangerous Dylan Donovan. In their current predicament it was surprising they’d managed to keep their phones. What was less surprising was that they were in prison for the armed robbery of two West Vale service stations and conspiring to rob a third.

Ricardo Hohns, Jumping Giles Corkhill and Dangerous Dylan Donovan were preoccupied with bigger issues than Laura Bogan’s revenge plans. The Dangerous Cave, which was somewhat like the Bat Cave, had recently been carved into the bedrock beneath Garth Izzard’s biobanking property. Although it wasn’t an earthquake prone area, Dangerous Dylan Donovan had insisted on his hi-tech hideout being more earthquake proof than any structure on the San Andreas fault.

For the past few months, Dangerous Dylan Donovan had been busy creating the impression that he was just a hardworking employee of Mother Nature’s Bodyguards. He’d actually spent more time in his new Hypersonic 3000 flight simulator below ground than planting shrubs and spraying weeds in the world above.

Learning to fly the aircraft hadn’t been the hardest part. Neither had bamboozling the Australian Airforce twice, first with the theft of the flight simulator and then the protype aircraft itself three months later. The most challenging task of all was getting the German construction crew that built The Dangerous Cave in and out of the country, without attracting too much attention. Dangerous had watched Better Call Saul enough times not to complicate matters by getting into a turf war with a Mexican drug cartel. Building The Dangerous Cave in utter secrecy had been a challenging task, nonetheless.

At first, Dangerous had merely wanted a next level computer game, but then he heard about the plight of Julian Assange, a man who was being persecuted and prosecuted by the United States Empire for exposing war crimes. Dangerous Dylan Donovan was a man who made his own rules. That was undeniable. Unlike the U.S Empire, Dangerous wasn’t hypocritical enough to break his own rules time and time again. Someone made the mistake of telling Dangerous that rescuing Assange was impossible, even for him. That was when he decided that having a Hypersonic 3000 flight simulator in his possession wasn’t enough. Why train, if you’re not going to fly the plane?

The top brass in the nearest military base at Holsworthy had no idea anything unusual was afoot as the expertly camouflaged camera shutter like door to the Dangerous Cave opened and the Hypersonic 3000 took off as vertically as a helicopter. Dangerous Dylan Donovan cleared the continental shelf long before the most cluey amongst them had cleared the sleep from their eyes.

The Hypersonic 3000 wasn’t just the fastest plane ever built, it was also the most manoeuvrable, the most versatile and the stealthiest. Perhaps the fact that it is still the only electric jet in the world that can be safely recharged by lightning says it all.

The Belmarsh Prison authorities had denied Assange winter clothing and put him in a cell adjoining an exterior wall, so that he could be tormented by the icy winter draft. Dangerous had learnt this and numerous other facts via the letters he’d exchanged with Assange. Officially, those letters had been written by musician and human rights activist, Roger Waters. If MI6, ASIO or the CIA had had the faintest clue that Dangerous Dylan Donovan was up to anything more concerning than service station fights these days those letters would have been analysed by a broader array of deciphering software.

It takes an extraordinary amount of energy to turn laser beams into steel reinforced concrete cutting tools, so Dangerous recharged the Hypersonic 3000’s batteries in a lightning storm over Indonesia. Then he flew through Chinese and Russian airspace completely undetected. He didn’t do so for any military reason. Sometimes Dangerous does things because he can.

By the time the Thames came into view, Dangerous had renamed the Hypersonic 3000. Forevermore, it would be known as the Dangerous Mobile. As he zeroed in on Belmarsh Prison, he wondered how many US embassies would be razed to the ground within 24 hours if some fool made the mistake of capturing him.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023

Featured

Update on the Uselessness of Tinder

There are many things I could say regarding how useless Tinder is in my experience. One snapshot of Tinder’s uselessness is that over the past week, I have swiped right on the profiles of 208 women, mostly because they share my love of art, writing and nature etc. During that time, a grand total of three women have swiped right on my profile. That is not a total of three matches, that is a measly total of three women who have seen my profile and indicated that they like it.

I chose to match with one of the three women. I asked her what her experience of Tinder has been like so far and she ignored my question. I asked her what her job involves and she ignored my question. If you’re wondering if there is a theme here, you are right. I answered her questions, but it was as though my questions didn’t exist. I’m not normally in a hurry to unmatch, but what can you do when someone apparently doesn’t understand the concept of a dialogue?

How else have the sparks died in Tinder land lately? One of the things I have discovered during my latest stint using Tinder is that some women have very rigid views on mythology. There I was thinking that fiction is all about making stuff up, but apparently I was wrong. If I’m going to talk about dragons, for instance, they’re not allowed to do anything they don’t do in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, or be anything that they aren’t in the Lord of the Rings trilogy. At least that’s the impression I’ve been given. Maybe the Harry Potter series is the other unofficial dragon encyclopaedia women use. I’m not sure.

I broke at least one woman’s brain with the idea of a Bohemian dragon, a free spirited dragon that roams from palace to palace sculpting all sorts of fantastical scenes from fire. Are dragons not allowed to be free spirited artists? Do they all have to be treasure hoarding war mongers? Is Gandalf going to get too jealous if a dragon’s fire sculptures are superior to anything he can create with the clouds of smoke from his pipe? What is the problem? Whether the problem is related to Bohemian Dragons, or something of this world, it often remains a mystery.

For over four months, I’ve been trying to meet someone via Tinder, someone I have something meaningful in common with. Many of the women whose brains aren’t fried by the concept of a Bohemian dragon are too ‘busy’, too tired, too sick or too popular to meet me. As for the rest, who knows.

Tweaking my profile hasn’t unleashed a flood of new matches yet. Over the past few months, I have rewritten it several times. Sometimes, I wonder if it is being shown to fewer women in an attempt frustrate me into paying an extra $500 to upgrade from Tinder Platinum to Tinder V.I.P. If there is something wrong with my profile what is it?

I have been through the verification process so people know that my photos are authentic. I have uploaded three photos of myself. All of them provide a clear, close up view of my face and are recent. Maybe my lack of smiles is frowned upon. If my eyes aren’t smiling then my mouth isn’t either. In my view, plastic smiles are for mannequins. I’ve expressed my interest in art with photos of amazing sculptures. I’ve uploaded a photo of my favourite hiking trail. What more can I do?

Apart from my photos, where might the problem lie? I have listed my occupation as ‘labourer’ because that is an accurate description of what I do. I’m not trying to attract job snobs so that shouldn’t matter. I have left the education section blank. The way I write is proof that I’m educated. If I had a doctorate, or a masters degree, I wouldn’t bother to mention that to anyone unless they asked. Tinder is supposed to be a singles site, not a job application process for highly trained professionals.

Is my diet regarded as a problem? It is usually vegan rather than vegetarian so that is the box I ticked. I have never stormed a restaurant in fake blood soaked butchers garb, to protest against cruelty towards other species. I simply minimise my participation in that cruelty. I’m not interested in the delusions of anyone who has a problem with that. If the number of women on Tinder who half jokingly refer to themselves as carnivores is any indication, my dietary choices could be a common source of irritation. If what I don’t eat is considered a problem, there is nothing I can reasonably do about that.

I’m ten paragraphs in with no satisfying conclusion in sight. What more is there left to say other than Tinder is a parasite. Over the past eight years, I’ve spent thousands of dollars on Tinder subscriptions etc. Using Tinder is too much like visiting a casino. It is presented in the form of a card game after all. The idea is to make you feel like success is just around the corner, that all you need to do is spend more money on super likes, boosting your profile, or upgrading to the VIP level and you will find that special someone, but it’s just a mirage. An illusion is more alluring than staring at the walls though. What if it is real next time? If you cancel your subsciption you might miss out. The disillusioned may be plagued by such thoughts, so they keep trying far beyond the point where they know they are almost certainly wasting their time.


P.S

Some people seem to believe that the solution is as simple as don’t be an introvert, be an extrovert. All you need to do is initiate and sustain a conversation with one random woman after another, everywhere you go, until you find the right one. Never mind how emotionally exhausting that would be and how little writing you would get done that way. Introversion is not a flaw in ones character that needs to be overcome, it is a valid approach to life. With about three quarters of people being extroverts, society isn’t designed to cater for introverts. Extroverts don’t notice that because it doesn’t affect them. Singles events, among other things, are typically designed to suit social butterflies.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023



Featured

Medium Mayhem

The semi asphyxiated cockroaches writhing around in Boris Blinkhorn’s kitchen sink wished they’d never exposed themselves to the mouldy atmosphere in his apartment for the sake of a few vegetable scraps. After yet another seventy-hour week as a sanitary engineer, Boris felt only slightly healthier than those half dead vermin.

The bottle of bourbon he’d finished the night before hadn’t helped. He was so stiff, sore and woozy he considered following his GP’s advice and resorting to mocktails, salad, yoga, acupuncture and tai chi. He wasn’t quite ready to try what he termed “that girly and eastern shit” yet though. Boris’ bath was his cure all. He filled it to the brim. By the time he’d loosened up a week’s worth of stale sweat and grime he felt almost ready to face the day. As he luxuriated in the effervescent bacterial broth he dozed off and began to dream.

The dream began much like a typical Sunday morning. Boris was browsing the pornography section of Purgatory Heights News Agency. Hugh Kramer, the elderly news agent, was sick and tired of him tearing holes in the plastic packaging of Taboo Detonator, Kink Mayhem and Atomic Scandal magazines. Boris usually dumped them in the cooking and home decorating sections once he was done with them. They weren’t exactly coffee table book material and by the time Boris was finished with them it could well be time to call the hazmat squad.

Boris’ dream began like a typical Sunday morning, but it didn’t end that way. Katrina, the sales assistant at Purgatory Heights news agency, looked uncannily like Chloe Klein, the five times centrefold in Kink Mayhem. The birthday card section of the news agency inexplicably transformed into a jelly wrestling pit. Now Boris knew he was dreaming. He used this newfound knowledge to conjure up a double of the Chloe Klein lookalike and then a triple. It wasn’t long before he was refereeing a jelly wrestling match between his creations. The original Chloe Klein lookalike sold copies of National Geographic and Women’s Weekly to elderly customers who didn’t appear to notice anything unusual going on where the birthday cards used to be.

A terribly disappointed Boris awoke when the jelly wrestling match was about to escalate into the wildest lesbian lovemaking ever witnessed at Purgatory Heights News Agency. He coughed and spluttered as his head dipped under the heavily polluted water of his bath. A mouthful of that sickening soup wasn’t enough to quell his appetite for breakfast.

A growing fear of diabetes and heart disease was yet to eclipse Boris love affair with fat and sugar. He devoured a plate of bacon and eggs like a half-starved golden retriever and washed the remnants down with a cocoa pop/thick shake combo. Brushing his teeth wasn’t high on his agenda. Boris put on his thermals, a brand-new Adidas tracksuit and an expensive pair of running shoes designed for athletes who can run marathons faster than Boris could dash to the bus stop around the corner.

After feeling the subzero chill, Boris grabbed his Adidas beanie from the glove box of his lovingly restored 1972 lime green Torana. He was intensely afraid of falling victim to brain freeze. He didn’t know that brain freeze was just the brief pain caused by the rush of blood to the roof of his mouth when he slurped down frozen cola too fast. Jack Jones, one of the regulars at Purgatory Heights Hotel, told him that the brain is often the first part of the body to be affected by hypothermia, otherwise known as brain freeze. Since then, Boris often wondered how many times he’d almost died from exposing his bald head to the elements.

Jack Jones was a doctor, everybody at Purgatory Heights Hotel said so. They weren’t lying, Jack had been a doctor of creative writing since 2017. In his thesis he’d argued that gullibility is a genre. Jack demonstrated his point by making Boris Blinkhorn the protagonist in “The Whole Warren,” a one hundred and fifty-thousand-word trilogy based on Boris’ sprawling descents into conspiracy theory rabbit holes.

Boris was sceptical of anything supernatural, but he had no doubt that chemtrails were controlling the minds of less independent thinkers than himself and that the moon landing was nothing more than a flower power era sci fi movie. Boris had been a flat Earther until the significance of always spotting the masts of sailing ships coming over the horizon first dawned on him. He was still a hollow Earther. He also told anyone polite enough to listen that the moon was an alien spacecraft in disguise, a spacecraft that would have been identical to the death star of Star Wars fame if it weren’t for its rocky, crater pocked facade.

Lately, Boris had spent most of his non-working, waking hours getting up to date on the reptilians’ efforts to secure world domination. Boris was sure that the royal family and various heads of state had been replaced by reptilians, but he wasn’t sold on the shapeshifting theory. He he had no doubt the reality was more like V, a nineteen eighties sci fi television series featuring lizard people in human suits.

On the morning of his lesbian jelly wrestling news agency dream, Boris didn’t have time to sit in front of his computer and read conspiracy theory updates. He was a man on a mission. He filled his backpack and dumped it on the back seat of his lovingly restored 1972 lime green Torana. In a hidden compartment, at the bottom of his bag, were four boxes, two of which were x-ray proof. Boris was the only living person who knew what was in them. He wasn’t expecting that to change. As he turned the key in the ignition and sped from his driveway The Trolls latest single “Miss Bucket List” blared from the speakers of his ancient car radio.

Miss Jet setter’s busy cultivating a worldly façade,
by hopping from one famous landmark to another
taking in no more than a paragraph on a postcard.


It’s first class for a first class bitch.
Give me a bucket Miss Bucket List.


Should I inform the tragic attention whore it’s unhealthy
to hang from the side of the Eiffel Tower, during winter,
in an absurdly tiny bikini, in search of the perfect selfie?


It’s first class for a first class bitch.
Give me a bucket Miss Bucket List.


Her blingtastic new travel partner Bartholomew Dench
proves she has a preference for greeting card addicts
who make puddles look as deep as the Mariana Trench.


It’s first class for a first class bitch.
Give me a bucket Miss Bucket List?


Bart is sure God’s an economist urging all to go forth
and turn every Garden of Eden into an open cut mine
but that’s just fine because the man drives a Porsche.


It’s first class for a first class bitch.
Where’s my bucket Miss Bucket List?


As the Trolls latest single faded into silence Boris ruminated on what he’d just heard “I don’t understand what’s not to like about this “Miss Bucket List.” She goes to all sorts of cool places, she’s tough enough to wear a tiny bikini during wintertime in Paris, she’s got a boyfriend who likes to piss off greenies by wiping forests off the face of the Earth by turning them into open cut mines, yet the dudes singing about her hate her guts, what’s up with them? I know I won’t be buyin their album.”

To onlookers Boris’s critique of the Trolls latest single “Miss Bucket List” appeared to be addressed to the dead rat he hadn’t gotten around to scraping from his windshield. He loved his car but lately he’d been too depressed to clean it. He’d been feeling down ever since the day he’d bet fifty dollars on the outcome of a Bankok cockroache race. Just centimetres away from victory his favourite thoroughbred decided it was time to run in the opposite direction. He’d won several hundred dollars from the next race but the parking fine he received while placing the bet wiped out his winnings.

Miss Bucket List, the dreadful song Boris had just endured, was number eight on the I-Tunes charts and just as popular on Spotify and YouTube. Other people’s success enraged Boris, especially when he couldn’t comprehend it. Speaking of Bucket Lists, Boris had one of his own. It focussed almost exclusively on who he yearned to harass before he died. The thought of expiring before he’d clipped the left wing from certain women’s rights activists, gay rights activists and climate change activists among others was too much for him to bear. He also had his sights set on those he labelled new age nutters.

As far as Boris was concerned, Celeste James, the psychic medium he was on his way to see now, was nuttier than a peanut tree and more fraudulent than Uri Geller. She was the CEO of an organization called White Crow. Boris thought it was an odd name for a business in such a fraudulent industry. Surely everyone knows there’s no such thing as White Crows? The name was of course symbolic of the exception to the rule.

Symbolism was usually lost on Boris. Among other things, he couldn’t work out why an Australian not for profit organisation that had been established to help people cope with depression called itself the Black Dog Institute. Were black dogs more likely to be miserable than white ones? What did that have to do with people? Obviously its founders should have gotten a smart person like Boris to do their marketing for them.

Out of all the psychic mediums Boris could have chosen to target that day he chose Celeste James because his ex-girlfriend Tiffany had spent the profits from his part time dope dealing on weekly sessions with her. Boris referred to Tiffany as his ex-girlfriend, but it would be more accurate to say that she was one of the few sex workers who had ever wanted his business. The eight hundred dollars that he referred to as the money Tiffany had stolen from him was the value of the gifts, he’d asked her to return. Boris only knew Tiffany had been to see Celeste James because he followed her between her home and her workplace on on a daily basis.

Boris was so fixated on his desire to humiliate Celeste James that he almost forgot to stop at the newsagent for a lottery ticket. He considered picking up a spare copy of Taboo Detonator and Kink Mayhem while he was there. Boris parked out the front of Purgatory Heights Shopping Centre. He was so eager to get to the newsagents that he almost left his ancient car unlocked with the keys in the ignition. Two strides from the automatic doors, Boris noticed something was wrong. He was unperturbed by the nearby police tape, the chalked outline of a body and the bloodstains on the footpath but the closed sign on the news agency was too much.

Upon closer inspection, Boris realized the shop was completely empty of anything someone might associate with a news agency. Shopfitters had been busy partitioning the interior into smaller rooms. Boris finally noticed the sign advertising the Thai massage parlour that was coming soon. He chuckled at the words “coming soon.”  Kramer’s News Agency had been a part of his life for as long as he could remember. He’d stolen his first copy of Kink Mayhem from there when he was twelve.

Light snow was beginning to fall by the time Boris turned the corner into Premonition Street. He scraped the gutter as he parked his pride and joy, a lime green 1972 Holden Torana, in front of White Crow Psychic Mediums. Apart from the scuff mark on the front left tyre and the dead rat still attached to the windscreen wipers that lime green Torana looked as immaculate as it had on the showroom floor.

“White Crow Psychic Mediums, here I come.” Boris boomed. He opened the icy wrought iron front gate as recklessly as he slammed it shut and took great delight in snapping branches off Grevilleas in the bird attractant garden. Throwing pebbles at the tadpoles and eels in the pond broadened his idiotic grin. White Crow was inked on the solid oak front door in gold. Boris knocked as impatiently as a man battling to exit a burning building.

“Who is it” Celeste’s muffled voice sounded from somewhere within. Who is it” Celeste repeated.

“Not very good at ya job are ya, ya can’t even use ya sixth sense to know whose at the fucken door.”

“If I relied on my sixth sense for everything that doesn’t require a sixth sense it would be my one and only sense, wouldn’t it. Perhaps you’re curious enough to further investigate my claims of psychic and psychic mediumship ability. A little respect could mean a more fruitful experience for both of us” Celeste reasoned with her uncouth customer, as she swung the door wide open to reveal a largely empty house. She was tempted to slam it shut again but with her few valuable possessions safely deadlocked in her bedroom she was far less concerned by the diminutive, smirking troll before her than most women would have been.

“A more fruitful experience ya said? Whaddya mean fruitful? What is this, a fucken orchard? Ya couln even guess who’s at the door. What good are ya?” Boris mindlessly repeated. His clumsy fingers botched a forgettable pop song on Celeste’s battered old upright piano.

Somehow Boris’ playing became even more arrhythmic and chaotic as he studied Celeste out of the corner of his eye. On that chilly central western New South Wales morning, she was dressed as conservatively as a nineteenth century nun, but that didn’t stop Boris from ogling her as though she were the star of his favourite porno ‘Smorgasbord of Smut Queens.’ With her gap tooth, short blonde hair and bold, intelligent green eyes she reminded Boris of that feminist he loathed like a roller coaster ride after a dodgy kebab, the one who had an instant comeback for all of his insults on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. No matter how many fake accounts he used she always knew it was him. If that evil feminist wasn’t as short as a jockey and Celeste wasn’t as tall as a basketballer they could have passed for identical twins.

As Celeste led Boris down the hallway, he switched his focus from her figure to the tributes to Vincent van Gogh, Judy Chicago and Kara Walker lining the walls. “So not only arya a pretend psychic you’re an art faker too, no surprises there. I’ve caught you out already I have. Ya, can’t fool me, I’ve seen that portrait of that painter dude with part of his ear missing before.”

“Those most familiar with the work of van Gogh, Chicago and Walker would never mistake my amateurish tributes for attempts at art forgery.” Boris who had only been half listening looked utterly bamboozled.

“What’s this talk of vans going to Chicago? Whadtha fuck does that havta do with art forgery?” Celeste couldn’t help but look stunned by the combination of Boris’ patchy listening and breathtaking stupidity. The couple who had come for an appointment earlier that morning spoke German, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Russian better than English, yet communicating with them had been easier. As Celeste guided Boris into the kitchen and dining area he resumed rubbishing her alleged psychic abilities.

With a mercurial man baby like Boris in the house, Celeste was glad it was only prints of her paintings on the wall. Boris was as aggressive as he was clumsy. This made him potentially destructive to inanimate objects, but easy for a lifelong martial arts practitioner like Celeste to subdue if need be. Her father was a Brazilian ju-jitsu instructor, her mother specialized in Japanese Judo and her Uncle Donovan had spent more than a decade teaching Muay Thai to tourists in Bangkok. Celeste tried waiting for Boris to stop babbling abuse but ultimately, she had to cut him short.

“Boris, are you here to utilize the services of a psychic medium or not? The clock is ticking. I have a money back guarantee for anyone who says they’re a dissatisfied customer so there’s no chance of you being out of pocket. If an allegedly disappointed customer comes looking for another appointment, they might find that I’m booked out for months though” Celeste warned.

“Ha, ha, ha, I bet you’ve never been booked out for the resta the day. You couldn’t get booked out for the resta the day if you were a hooker in an asylum for the blind.”

Celeste resisted the temptation to drag Boris from the premises and shove his face into the front pond long enough to instil some manners into him. Her spirit guide Juan urged her to be patient. For over an hour before Boris arrived, Juan had been insisting that, from a performance point of view, this was going to be her best reading ever.

“The clock is ticking Boris. How about you sit down and stop making this more difficult than it needs to be.”

“Where did you get my name from?”

“You gave me your name when you made an appointment. I’ll give you the gist of what to expect. I am merely a conduit, a proverbial telephone line between this world and the realm of the so-called dead.

“A condu what, a proverbi what? Speak English will ya.”

“In other words, all I can do is pass on whatever messages I’m given. Occasionally there aren’t any.”

“How convenient.”

“No, not really” Celeste replied as she ushered the vile vulture into a comfortable chair. She poured herself a glass of ice water and offered Boris the same. The unending onslaught of insults was as natural for him as pillaging is for a viking. Had Boris chosen to pay her for the pleasure of insulting her? If so, it was his loss not hers. As his barbs continued to bounce off her, like windblown grains of sand from a bullet proof windshield, she opened her mystical pores for the spirits who wished to communicate with Boris.

“I can see a distinguished looking, heavily built, red haired gentleman with a handlebar moustache. He’s wearing a Victorian era suit, complete with a top hat and a fancy walking cane. The cane has an octopus tip. He’s wearing modern basketball boots with his old-fashioned suit, those fancy ones with air pockets in the soles. Now he’s showing me an image of horse races out in the country, with carnival rides nearby. He says he died when he fell from an antique Ferris wheel. I’m suddenly feeling woozy. He’s communicating his inebriated state at the time. It looks like he was too drunk to realize what was happening. He hit the ground before he had time to be scared. Now he’s showing me a pack of cards and says he’s looking forward to a game of poker with you when you join him in the afterlife. He’s finally giving me his name, it’s either Darren or Derryn. I’m having a bit of trouble making it out. It’s Darren or Derryn Rowland or Rollins, one of the two.”

“When I find out who you’ve been interviewing to get that info, I’m gonna sue your ass”

“Darren says you just reminded him how you always used to stare at his wife Sue’s ass, that you thought you were doing it discretely, but your staring stood out like Uluru in the desert.”

“How the hell did you find out how Derryn talks? That stuff about me staring at Sue’s ass, it’s not true, it’s just that sometimes that perfect butt of hers happened to be right in front of my eyes, in those skintight jeans and those painted on yoga pants she wore.”

“Derryn is laughing at you. He says he found your sketch book, the one where you drew explicit nudes of Sue. He’s laughing hysterically at the way you claimed it was just a coincidence that you joined the live drawing classes on the same day Sue started modelling for them. According to Derryn it was surprisingly clever the way you stapled your most depraved drawings of her into the cover of an old fishing magazine.”

“How do you know that? Ah, that’s it, you must have been in that live drawing class too. I don’t remember all the students. Or maybe you were the teacher on one of the days when I wasn’t there and you broke into my locker and took a peek at some of my secret drawins then.”

Celeste giggled at Boris preposterous attempt at an explanation. She composed herself and continued “Derryn is rolling around laughing now. Sue is with him. She’s shaking her head.”

“Whatever, Sue is still alive darlin.”

“How long since you’ve spoken to her?”

“I’m sure that if she died that I’m one of the first people her family would’ve called about the funeral.”

“How long since you’ve spoken to Sue? Perhaps you should look into that.”

“There’s no need to check your claims, I already know you’re wrong. Where are these ghosts ya reckon you can see anyway? I can’t see a thing. And why do they look like people if it’s just their spirit?”

“It’s hard to say where Derryn and Sue are, I can’t see any signage but they’re in a place that appears to be made entirely of shimmering crystal. There are dancing lights in their sky that make the Aurora borealis and Australis look as dull as a 25 watt globe at midday.

“The aroara what? Oh, I see, they’re some kinda lights are they.”

“Yes, they’re otherwise known as the northern and southern lights. Sue is telling me how she died now. She says she was killed by a drunk driver who had forgotten to turn his headlights on. She remembers glimpsing a lime green Torana, a split second before the impact.

“How do I know you’re not making this shit up?”

“It’s unlikely that I’ll ever give a reading where I receive information to verify one hundred per cent of my observations.”

“That’s so convenient.”

“No, not at all.”

“If you’re so fucken smart get Derryn to ask God whose gunna win tha football this week.”

“As far as I’m aware God is not some all-knowing, all seeing, all powerful individual. All the spirits I’ve communicated with tell me that God is the qualities that could develop in us or the ones that already exist in us, such as love, courage, wisdom and creativity. I’m not aware of any reason to take the personification of a supreme individual literally.”

“Why would I care what the fuck God is or whether there’s a God or not?  I just wanna know who tha fuck’s gonna win tha football.”

“Personally, I haven’t encountered anyone in the afterlife who is still obsessed with who is going to win football games, horse races or anything like that.”

“What about boxing? Whose gonna win the fight of the century between Supersonic Sid Salisbury and Larry the Lethal Clown Lincoln? Whose gunna win, will it go the distance or will it end in a knockout? In which round will it end?”

“Derryn says that Supersonic Sid Salisbury should win, that the swarm of hornets like pressure Salisbury creates should take the sting out Larry the Lethal Clown Lincoln’s punches by the eighth round. He says that in the end Salisbury’s peppering left jab will obscure Lincoln’s vision and encourage him to bring his guard to the centre. Then Salisbury will surprise him with a right hook to the eardrum. It sounds as clinical as brutal doesn’t it.

That’s just guessin based on stuff boxing commentators and journos say.”

“Maybe, I could have gotten it from them, but I didn’t. I have no interest in martial arts competitions of any persuasion, including western boxing” Celeste chose her words carefully. She spent up to three hours a day on martial arts training for fitness and self-defence purposes, but had no interest in formal martial arts competitions. On the one hand she didn’t want to lie and on the other she wanted to be underestimated by her possibly dangerous customer.

“None of this shit you’re coming out with is makin any sense. If there’s a heaven or a hell, or anything like that, how tha fuck could there be nobody in those places that cares about important things like who’s gunna win world title fights and football matches?

If Boris had more than the grey matter equivalent of an Apple 2E, Celeste might have told him that the afterlife can’t be summed up with simplistic bronze age concepts of heaven and hell, that it isn’t confined to a geographical location, that it is wherever and whatever the spirits it consists of perceive it to be, with some realms being largely collective realities and others bending to the whims of the individual.

If Boris was reasonably intelligent and receptive to what Celeste had to say she might have suggested to him that in the afterlife a thousand people could be at the same party despite being in a thousand different houses. Whether an aquarium or a window lined the back wall of the ballroom would likely depend on who was looking. Whether the dancers were in tuxedos, evening gowns, their birthday suits or manifesting as swirling patterns of light could be equally dependent on the observer. Celeste’s near-death experiences and the words of Juan, her spirit guide, were consistent with that view.

While Celeste briefly contemplated the mystical journey, she could have taken Boris on if he didn’t already know virtually everything, he continued to rant about how sports results went a long way towards explaining the collective purpose of humanity. Possibly, you’ve guessed that Boris wasn’t well versed in science or philosophy etc. If he’d heard of Isaac Newton, he might’ve insisted that his laws of gravity didn’t mean anything before the emergence of test match cricket. If he knew who Socrates was, he probably would have assumed he was hopeless at sports betting? What other conclusion could he have reached about a philosopher who claims to know nothing? Would Socrates even realize the T.A.B is more than a discontinued soft drink?

Celeste attempted to draw Boris’s attention back to the reading “Derryn says that if you had been paying more attention to the finer details of recent sports history than you have been to myths about lizard people and the moon being an extraterrestrial spacecraft etc that your sports results predictions would probably be as good as his.”

“Celeste, if you knew the first fucken thing about science you’d know that if the moon was just a hunk of rock it wouldn’t have the power to meddle with the tides on Earth.”

“I’m not here to discuss how the laws of gravity relate to celestial bodies.”

“I didn’t say nuthin about your body, we’re talkin about the tide.”

Celeste somehow managed to keep a straight face as she steered the conversation back to the reading. “Derryn tells me you’ve brought a number of objects with you, that you picked some of them based on their sentimental value and that you chose the rest based solely on their uniqueness. He says that you’ve stashed these objects below the false bottom in your backpack, that you’ve put them in boxes and some of those boxes are made from an alloy of tungsten and stainless steel, in an effort to make the contents invisible to x-rays. There’s no furniture in here beside this table and the chairs we’re sitting on, so where would I hide an x-ray machine?”

“How did you even know I brought a bag with me, I left it in the car. You musta guessed all that, I bet clever people like me always hide x-ray proof boxes inside their back packs. If you’re so fucken psychic how come you don’t know what’s in it? Got ya now don’t I. Wait here while I go and get those boxes.”

“Whether you leave your concealed boxes in your car or not makes no difference to me. There is no X-ray machines within cooee and I don’t have x-ray vision, I’m not Superman, so the x-ray proofness of your boxes is irrelevant. I’m basing my conclusions on what Derryn tells me, which would be easier if you stopped interrupting.

“I’m gonna go and get them boxes.”

“If Derryn knows whats in them it doesn’t matter whether you bring them inside or not Boris.”

“If I don’t bring them inside to show ya how can I prove that you can’t see into the x-ray proof ones.”

“Seriously Boris, it doesn’t matter, I’m happy to take your word for it about what’s in the boxes.”

“Hang on while I got those boxes so I can prove to you just how ridiculous your ridiculous guesses are.”

“Boris wouldn’t my “guesses,” as you call them, be more impressive if the boxes weren’t in the room? You can always grab the boxes and show me what’s in them afterwards Derryn just mentioned a Chicago Bulls jacket signed by Michael Jordan back in 1993. He says that’s in one of the x-ray proof boxes. I think it’s safe to say, I haven’t had time to break into your car and install a computerized x-ray machine with a Bluetooth connection to my phone while you weren’t looking? Not that I would even know where to order one from. Whose Michael Jordan by the way?”

“You reckon you’re psychic and ya can’t even figure out who Michael Jordan is? What a fucken loser of a fraud you are. Winner frauds are more convincin than that.”

“I’m not omniscient, I’m merely a conduit for messages from the spirit world. I have no control over what kind of information spirits choose to share with me or whether they choose to communicate with me at all. Sometimes I misinterpret what they’re trying to tell me. Like any process, it’s not perfect.”

“There’s other things in them boxes and I bet you don’t have a fucken clue what they are.”

“Didn’t you say you wanted to go and get those boxes so you can open them later to show me how wrong my predictions are? If that’s what you want to do, get on with it.”

Boris ran to his car and wheeled the boxes in on a trolley. “Derryn says that you’ve got a Donald Bradman biography in one of them, one that was signed by Donald Bradman in 1984. He says it’s in one of the x-ray proof boxes, but he can’t remember which one exactly.”

“Tolja you don’t have a fucken clue. That biography was signed by Donald Bradman when he was 84, not in 1984”

“Derryn gave me the number eighty-four and I assumed he was talking about a year.”

“Excuses, excuses, excuses. If Derryn was really telling you stuff from beyond the grave you wouldn’t make any mistakes. Where are you hiding that x-ray machine?”

“There is no x-ray machine Boris. In addition to the Chicago Bulls jacket and the Bradman biography, I’m seeing images of a disco dancing dingo. I’m also seeing a Prince Charles and Princess Diana royal wedding commemorative cutlery set. That’s not the sort of thing I’d expect you to have in your possession.

“The royal cutlery usedta be mi grandmother’s” Boris explained.

“Now, I can see a one-eyed peach face parrot. It is trapped inside a golden cage the shape of a buxom woman’s chest. This information I’m receiving now is not coming from Derryn or anyone else in the spirit world, it’s coming from your subconscious mind Boris. I have no idea what this image might mean beyond having the feeling it’s something that you should think very carefully about when the meaning becomes apparent. I’m also seeing a cyclops floating in the background. I don’t know what that signifies either. It’s all very puzzling.

“Fucked if I know where that parrot’s from, you’re the psychic, you tell me.” Boris eventually said.

“Nothing wrong with testing me to the enth degree but perhaps I should remind you that I’m not some sort of God, that all I can do is share the information I receive, that I don’t need to be omniscient in order to prove that my ability is genuine.”

“Omni what?”

“If someone is omniscient it means they know everything.”

“Why use such fancy words ya fucken university snob? Ya still haven’t told me which item is in which box, they’re numbered you know and there’s a few items ya haven’t even mentioned at all.”

“Derryn is with us again. He’s waving goodbye now. As he’s walking away, he’s saying something about an Andre the Giant figurine that is dressed as Wonder Woman and sitting in an igloo. Clearly you were extremely careful not to put common objects in your x-ray proof boxes, to make sure it’s as guess proof as x-ray proof.”

“Derryn must’ve faked his death. I wasn’t there when he allegedly fell from the old Ferris wheel and broke his neck, I eard about that later. He could still be alive somewhere and conspiring with you to pull off his greatest ever practical joke. Either he’s not really dead and this is a conspiracy between you and him or he wrote down everything I told him I would put in them boxes and somehow you got hold of that list after his death. You’d have me believe he’s spying on me from beyond the grave though wouldn’t you.”

“Boris, Derryn is dead, and I never met or communicated with him when he was alive. I’d never even heard of him before this morning. If he left a written record of anything you’ve told him I haven’t seen it. I don’t know where he lived, where he worked or anything like that. Even if I did, I wouldn’t snoop around and rifle through his possessions. You really shouldn’t jump to conclusions without evidence, it can be extremely offensive.”

“Well bad luck for you that I’m not as guliverable as the silly old ladies that probly usually come seeya.

Celeste wanted to tell Boris that the word he was looking for didn’t originate in Jonathon Swift’s tale about a shipwrecked sailor stranded in Lilliput but was reluctant to further inflame the situation.

Boris seemed to have given up on his quest to humiliate Celeste. He was uncharacteristically silent for the remainder of the appointment. He looked like he was in a daze as Celeste relayed tidbits of information from the surprising number of spirits who could be bothered communicating with him.

Boris’ only lasting memory of the final fifteen minutes of the session, besides Celeste’s rare interpretative errors, was a mysterious image of three apples in a row on the keypad of an automatic teller machine.

He drove away from White Crow Psychic Mediums at an uncharacteristically sedate pace. As he halted at an intersection, he noticed for the first time that “how about them apples” was graffitied on a service station wall.

In the early hours of the evening, while he was walking home from the local bottle shop, Boris noticed three giant apples had been spray painted on the wall of a pedestrian underpass. Worms that looked capable of sucking a clan of tarantulas through a straw glared at him through the windows they’d fashioned in their fruity homes. Boris shook his head in bewilderment. He couldn’t remember seeing that graffiti before. Surely nobody could have created an artwork like that in the time between him exiting and re-entering the tunnel?

A week later, three women dressed as apples and a man clutching an I-pad approached Boris in a shopping centre hoping to survey him on his fruit consumption habits. Boris’ eyes were filled with paranoid terror. Before the man with the I-pad could say a word, he was sprinting towards the haven of the local pub.

Eventually, Boris was too focused on work, conspiracy theories, sports results, Martian BDSM and petty theft to remain fixated on the significance of three apples or revisit the audio recording of his psychic medium reading in his quest for clues. Naturally, he’d made that recording without Celeste’s consent. Irrespective of the topic, consent had never been a high priority for Boris.

Boris’ interest in apples was eventually rekindled. He was formulating a plan to travel to Sweden to harass a teenage climate change activist when three apples in a row, on a scratch lottery ticket, revealed that he had won a hundred thousand dollars. He’d bought it at his beloved Purgatory Heights News Agency, which had reopened in the smaller, cheaper rental space next door to the new Thai massage parlour. They still sold printed copies of Taboo Detonator, Kink Mayhem and Atomic Scandal. Boris decided to head back there to brag before contacting the Lottery office to claim his winnings.

Katrina, the nineteen year old sales assistant at Purgatory Heights News Agency, looked more like five times Kink Mayhem centrefold Chloe Klein than ever. She was wearing a t-shirt with a one-eyed peach face parrot printed on it. The parrot was trapped inside a golden cage the shape of a buxom woman. The cage reminded Boris of those wire mannequins used to display bras in lingerie boutiques. Even if he’d had a girlfriend, Boris would have been too paranoid about being labelled a crossdresser to be caught dead in one of those places, but he’d seen them in passing. That strange t-shirt seemed familiar somehow. Had he seen it before? Had someone mentioned it to him before? Boris was too distracted by the outline of the Chloe Klein lookalike’s colossal nipples to dwell on the details of her t-shirt for long. If he’d looked closely, he would’ve realized her left eye lacked the vitality of the right one. It never moved. He was too focussed on her magnificent breasts to notice.

“Chloe, if them nipples were any bigger, they’d be as famous as the Leaning Tower of Pisa” Boris quipped. Katrina, the sales assistant, smiled nervously. While she was wondering who Chloe was, Boris grabbed her enormous breasts.

“What are you doing?” she cried out in rage and disgust.

“I bet ya love that. Playin hard ta get arya.” Katrina tried desperately to stop his greasy hands from sliding beneath her bra, but to no avail.

Boris’ timing wasn’t that of a criminal mastermind. Two female police officers wandered into the news agency. It only took one of them to wrestle the clumsy, diminutive menace to the ground and handcuff him. Thanks to his refusal to plead guilty and his insistence on his legal team challenging the severity of his sentence, Boris’s legal expenses during the ensuing criminal trial amounted to approximately one hundred thousand dollars.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023

Featured

Common Name Nostradamus Vine

Arraya tanglaceae treats your small talk with dismay.
She looks like Anredera cordifolia but she’s a tad holier,
vaguely reminiscent of Monstera deliciosa they say.

Some call her a wise plant and others say she’s stoned.
Who is certain she peers through the mystics curtain,
maybe fungus in her roots left her poor mind boned.

She talks about things in your frivolous puniverse
from art gallery nudes to hatred of pruny prudes,
before expanding horizons beyond the universe.

Nostradamus vine claims to talk with Pemulway.
She says he will be reborn, without time for porn,
that he’s gonna steal his head back without delay.

Scotland Yard will not find the seed of a single lead.
He’ll fly from the midnight shade and swiftly invade,
moving with stealth and speed on his electric steed.



Arraya tanglaceae prefers clay loamy soils, with a pH of 5.4, but she can grow almost anywhere. Is she an exotic plant? Yes she is. Is she considered to be an environmental weed? No, she’s not. Why not? She is that alluring lady who hasn’t been invited, but security lets her stay anyway. No, don’t pick up your botanical dictionary, she’s not in there.

If you’re Australian, and you don’t know who Pemulway is, maybe you should ask yourself why? You’ve surely heard of Joseph Banks, the man who wanted his head in a jar. Pemulway survived bullet wounds, escaped from his colonial captors and continued to lead the resistance against his majesty’s pompous ignoramuses, who imagined they were entitled to seize the great southern land on behalf of their king. The whole situation looks as ironic as it is, if you remember that “thou shalt not steal” was among the commandments of the God that the British, among others, moulded to mimic their egos.

Eventually, Pemulway was shot, killed and beheaded. His remains were sent to England. Their current whereabouts are unknown. Hopefully the specimen of Arraya tanglaceae, I’ve been discussing the matter with, is right about the reincarnation of Pemulway storming which ever museum or private collector’s residence houses the remains of his former body, so that he can lay them to rest on Bidijigal land.



© Rodney Hunter, 2023










Featured

Frugality is Key

It seems like you’re destined to make it to old age without ever heeding the difference between the garbage and the recycling bins. Why do you go clothes shopping fifty times a year? What fraction of your purchases do you wear before throwing them out? Have you donated anything to an opportunity shop in your entire life? What does this years phone do that last year’s model couldn’t do? Electric cars still don’t have enough range for you? Have you ever towed a trailer? How often do you drive for more than an hour or two at a time?

The world is contending with melting ice sheets, rising seas, ocean acidification, bleached coral reefs, heat waves, droughts, bushfires and floods. Meanwhile, you’re still dreaming of palaces, mega-yachts, private jets and prestige car collections? Within your fantastical bubble, Super Nerd will save the day. Within your fantastical bubble, the Titans of technology will make everything okay. Frugality is the answer, don’t block your ears, frugality is the answer.

You’re a climate change denier? The thermometers are broken kind, or the people didn’t do it what would NASA know kind? What about the need for clean air? Would my non-smoking friend have died of lung cancer in a combustion engine and coal fired power station free world? Climate change isn’t the only reason to care about phasing out fossil fuels. Breathing matters.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023




Featured

Is Greed Good?

Normally, a flood of biblical proportions would have wiped out everything in its path, but Herbert’s housebout was both submersible and capable of short range flights. The onboard computer gave him enough warning to find smooth water for take off, but with a multitude of earthquakes destroying several dams simultaneously, his home lacked the range to reach a safe landing strip.

The ideal characteristics of a palatial dwelling and an aircraft just didn’t gel well. For the first time, Herbert found himself questioning the wisdom of having both a jacuzzi room and a sauna. Perhaps he should have combined his office and library too. The landing probably wasn’t going to be as elegant as a forger’s handwriting. Herbert had been claiming that greed is good for his entire career as a life coach for entrephreneurs, but now he wasn’t so sure.

The altitude of his flying amphibious vehicle was declining more swiftly than he intended. He hoped the caravan park he was about to crash into was vacant. It wasn’t. There weren’t any more people there, but some bookworms had taken up residence, bookworms of the most ferocious species the world has ever seen.

Herbert doubted he had enough leather bound encyclopaedias to feed them all. Were they connoiseurs of the world’s finest acid free paper, or accustomed enough to junk food to accept toilet paper with Richard Nixon quotes on it. He was about to find out.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023


Featured

The Banter Ray

The heat radiating from the footpath threatened to fry my eyeballs. My remedy for the blistering sun was an ocean swim. Unfortunately, I came across a creature called a banter ray.

I thought it was a mantra ray at first, one of those majestic giants that is always mumbling positive affirmations as it glides through the deep. If only my first guess was correct. It was a banter ray alright. Once I was close enough, I could tell by its smirk. A giant stingray, threatening to impale me, might have been better because that would have been over faster.

Banter rays are as obsessed with repartee badminton as the droves of twits on Tinder, who think the first thing one should do after saying hello is launch into a marathon of friendly teasing. You’ve got to have good banter, or they won’t talk to you, you see. Getting to know someone well enough to realize which jokes to steer clear of is such a waste of time. All the cool people say so. Does the banter ray have a subliminal telepathic connection with these morons? Can it hack into computers with its mind rays? It sure seems like it.

There I was just trying to keep cool and refine my ocean swimming technique when this colossal fucking loser of a cartilaginous fish started hurling all sorts of “friendly” insults at me about everyone in my family and my best friends. It was treating mental illness, car crashes and leprosy like a complete joke without spending a single second finding out what I’m willing to joke about. And how was I supposed to know if it was just joking? I’d never met the #### before in my life.

Eventually the banter ray told me in a really sooky voice that I don’t have good banter and went off looking for some other swimmer to hassle, but by that time my fingers and toes were all wrinkled from swimming for so long. I think it’s time we all got on the phone to the environment minister to let him know it’s time to cull these fucken things.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023

Featured

Chance Meeting

Shortie Pinkerton jabbed at Ben’s jaw as the smaller man attempted to walk around him for the fifth time. He managed to hit him high on the forehead. Shortie was built like a rhino, and he wasn’t an all arm and no harm kind of puncher. He waited for Ben to fall. In the back of his mind were thoughts of the wallet in his back pocket and the money it might contain.

In that split second of hesitation, Shortie saw his intended victim step back. A maniacal grin appeared on Ben’s face. That grin said you’ve ignited my rage, a rage with more than enough fuel to incinerate the planet a thousand times over. I am every bomb ever built. Shortie thought he was witnessing something he’d seen before. He was wrong, so wrong. He waited calmly for the surge of adrenaline he’d sparked to manifest as words like come on, or let’s go. Instead, Shortie’s intended victim circled him in an eerily silent fashion.

Ben’s predatory smile had melted away leaving an expression as impassive as that of a crocodile on the hunt. Nervous now, Shortie, who was actually the taller of the two men, fired straight left and rights, but this time it was like trying to hit a ghost. His intended victim was always an inch or two too far away. Shortie was quick off the mark, but his opponent was so fast he evaded him easily by moving straight back. Shortie tried everything. He even tried switching from orthodox to southpaw, something he’d never done in a real fight before.

Shortie had swift head movement, but he was dodging feints not punches. He was being as utterly dissected as a toad on a laboratory bench. His initially reluctant opponent was still more patient than any fisher. Clearly, he was waiting for Shortie to make a mistake, not just any mistake, a big one. This wasn’t clear to Shortie. If a monumental mistake wasn’t forthcoming, Ben would use the knowledge he’d gleaned from manipulating Shortie into throwing the combinations he did. It was like they’d played dozens of games of chess, and Shortie had learnt nothing. Ben continued to evade his blows with ease. He waited so long before striking that the hapless thug believed he was scared to let his hands go.

Ben was dumbfounded, Shortie slipped a right hand that was never intended to land by moving to his own right-hand side. He’d positioned himself perfectly for a left hook, set himself up for demolition in other words. Ben felt embarrassed for him as his boulder like fist cannoned into his ear drum, destroying his equilibrium. Why did he do that, the victor to be asked with a shake of his head. Shortie was on shaky legs but still a threat, until a barrage of punches sent him crashing into the shrubbery on the side of the track.

For decades, Ben had been thinking about what he’d say to Shortie Pinkerton if he ever saw him again. As he was approaching him, he’d begun to run through the words in his mind, but when he was close enough to make eye contact with the somewhat short-sighted Shortie, he felt too ill to speak. Not for the first time in his life, Ben found his path being blocked by Shortie Pinkerton in an isolated area. Before he was fully prepared for the violence destined to come his way, he’d been hit. He saw the punch coming, but not soon enough to evade it. Everything that followed was instinctive. Ben was as experienced a fighter as Michael Schumacher was a driver. Shortie was in no condition to get up without falling over again. Once he’d regained his senses, it was fear that stopped him from moving.

“You don’t recognise me do you, Shortie. I recognised you from over a hundred metres away. It was that overly impressed with yourself swagger that I recognised first. I was planning on talking to you. Then I changed my mind. The thought of talking to you made me feel sick. Despite who you are, I was prepared to let you go past, I was prepared to think of the twenty years you spent in the worst maximum security prison in Australia for other crimes as punishment enough for what you did twenty four years ago when you were fourteen and I was eight. I guess I must’ve been fucked in the head, but I was thinking about how you were just a kid yourself then, a much bigger kid, but a kid nonetheless. I was thinking maybe you’d changed for the better.”

“If I was like you Shortie, you’d be out cold right now, out cold at best. For twenty-two years I’ve been learning Brazilian Ju-jitsu, Japanese Judo and western wrestling techniques. Along the way, I’ve learnt a lot from professional boxers, Muay Thai fighters, kickboxers, karate experts, gymnasts and dancers who wanted to learn the art of grappling. The point is, I’ve only showed you a fraction of one per cent of what I can do. Escalate this situation down the track and you will die a slower, more painful death than any vermin I’ve ever shot, whether I’m still breathing or not. As sure as the sun is gonna set tonight, I can promise you that.”

“Ben, is it really you? How could it be you? How could you say those things man? I loved you.”

Upon hearing those words, Ben dry retched a few times. Somehow, he managed to avoid vomiting on the track between himself and the monster he could have easily slain there and then.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023

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Looking Back Through the Years, What Do I see? Part 1

I see the most pathetic provocateur in Sydney, posing like Napolean on his parkland stage. He says that James Hardie shouldn’t have to compensate asbestosis victims. He would have me believe, he thinks its like expecting the new owner of a fish and chip shop to compensate food poisoning victims from years ago.

If that human garbage is a comedian, who’s laughing? Who would I rather be, an asbestosis victim, or a panic attack prone scuba diver who has a choice between sudden death and remaining leagues beneath the sea? Possibly that analogy provides some insight into the daily lives of the people this attention whore happily defecates on.

Is he unaware that corporations are given the rights of people, therefore they have the responsibilities of people too? Is he too stupid to realise that when one chooses to invest in a company they are the financial beneficiary of both the joy and the misery that company has wrought, and therefore are financially responsible for both? Is he ignorant enough to imagine that none of the organisations and individuals who invested in James Hardie during the asbestos products era continued to hold a stake in the company well beyond the mid 1980’s?

Could this attention whore, who is so adept at losing people in a maze of logical fallacies masquerading as facts, be earnestly expressing his views when he argues against compensation for asbestosis victims? Of course not. Is he a joker? To call him facetious would be to flatter him. Nobody was laughing. And he never gave any indication they were meant to be. I think it’s just a kind of chess for him. I believe he’s motivated by the perverse thrill of upsetting people and getting as much attention as possible while doing it.

Have any of this sad joke of a man’s most appalling publicity grabs been captured on video? I’m not sure, therefore I won’t mention his real name, his nickname, or his favourite speaking location. I suppose it’s best not to regardless, I wouldn’t want to help build his audience.

If you already know who this oxygen thief is, because you’ve had the displeasure of hearing him speak, it’s surely best to keep walking if you see him. In hindsight, I realise that. He cannot be shamed into shutting up, he has no sense of shame. If you believe in free speech, maybe you’ve got to let him keep talking, but you don’t have to listen to him though.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023




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It Was I, DwiteDaSpriteKnight

‘I admit it, it was I, Dwite The Sprite Knight. I rolled the Pope Mobile because a keg of holy water failed to cure my sunburn. Then I decapitated one hundred and seventeen Ronald Macdonald statues. I smashed those smiling blood haired freaks. Who can justify those aberrations occupying public space? Four confectionary cafes, I bombed them, junk food is dangerous. On my way here, I turned Spice World into a firecracker. I mean that awful pop music movie, not the shop Father! I’d water down the blood of Christ if I were you.’

‘Sir this is an R.B.T unit, not a mobile confessional booth. You’ll be accompanying me to the station for a blood test.’

‘Why don’t you get your blood tested by Xavier and Bond like me Father? Besides you’re a big boy now aren’t you? Surely you don’t need me to hold your hand. Have health and safety fads robbed you of your gonads? If you were a boat, I doubt you could you cross a moat
guarded by the shadows of retreating tadpoles.


‘The blood test is for you sir!’

‘Come on now, I’ve never even been breathe tested. Father, if these police officer fantasies persist, I think you should seek professional help.

‘I doubt our mobile testing units can detect whatever it is your on. Are you going to get in the back of the patrol wagon, or do I need to drag you over there?’

‘Oh I love drag, drag racing, dressing in drag, drag racing in drag and drag racing dragons in drag, oh yeah.’

‘There will be no drag racing dragons in drag where you’re going.’

‘How can you be so sure?’

‘Sir, if you get in the back of the patrol wagon you can find out for yourself.’

‘Wow, life is so beautiful in its uncertainty isn’t it. This is such an interesting space. I love the minimalist design. Where can I rate and review it?’

‘In my fifteen years on the force, nobody has ever asked me that question before.’

‘I can’t imagine why not. Father, this room reminds me of one of the installations at the Museum of Contemporary Art. Oh, it’s so exciting.’

‘It all looks like pretty bland engineering to me, sturdy and fit for the purpose, but bland.’

‘It’s time you expanded your mind.’

‘I’d love to know more about your mind expansion techniques. Who is your supplier for instance? If you’d be kind enough to give me a few details before the testing gets underway you could save us both some time.’

‘The Lord is my supplier.’

‘What’s his real name?’

‘Jesus of course.’

‘Mexican is he, what’s his surname?’


© Rodney Hunter, 2023


It Was I, Dwite Da Sprite Knight’ is derived from a poem that I first published on WordPress in 2018. The earliest version of the poem dates back to the 1990’s. I recently decided that it works better as a short story.




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Message in a Bottle


Dear diary, I’m still stranded on my very own desert island. Well, it feels like it’s mine. Nobody has turned up demanding that I transfer rent to a real estate agent or leave. I’ve been here for exactly three months, so it’s time to recap the entire experience.

Thanks to my healthy fear of drowning and an unusually buoyant bed, I survived the wreck of the Glastonbury and made it to the only beach on this anonymous speck of land. If I’d come ashore anywhere else, I almost certainly would have been dashed against the rocks.

I have no idea why the bed that helped me make it to shore was on deck. I guess someone threw it overboard before the Glastonbury vanished into the waves. Presumably, it would have been sucked down with the yacht otherwise. Without that bed, I would have needed to swim kilometres in thick fog to avoid drowning. Instead, I merely needed to swim metres before I felt the bed brushing against my arms. How it stayed afloat when I climbed on to it, and for the duration of the journey, is beyond me.

As far as I know, I’m yet to experience drowning. During one of my lifetimes in ancient Athens, I learned what it’s like to be buried in mud, mud almost too dense to sink in. In my panicked juvenile brain it never occurred to me that attempting to run was futile. If I’d kept calm, maybe I could’ve slid or even rolled to solid ground. It’s all about keeping your weight evenly distributed. During lifetimes when that terrifying memory didn’t surface, I remained extremely wary of straying from well-trodden paths.

Being buried in mud isn’t the only type of suffocation experience I’ve endured. In an ancient Egyptian lifetime, I discovered what it’s like to be buried by the father of all sandstorms. I still don’t feel comfortable on a sand dune when the wind picks up. During the American war of Independence, British soldiers made me dig my own grave at musket point. I could go on.

I’m much more interested in collecting coins and stamps than suffocation experiences. Thanks to a lack of money and dreadful luck, my preferences have never dictated what I’ve hoarded though. Are there any humans, currently breathing or dead, with more suffocation experiences than me? I doubt it, yet as far as I know I’ve never found out what it’s like to drown. I’ve drowned before, but I was always unconscious before entering the water, so I’m only familiar with the lead up and the aftermath. Am I curious about drowning? Yes, intensely so, but it’s rather like being curious about being shot isn’t it, fear trumps all else.

Lately, I have been pondering a few questions which at first glance seem unrelated to suffocation experiences. I wonder, are there zombie scout troops somewhere in the universe? Is being bitten by a zombie the only way to get zombified? Can zombification wear off after a while, making it necessary to be zombified again to mantain the comforting mental vagueness that comes with being a zombie? Could drowning turn some people into zombies if it doesn’t go far enough for rigor mortis to eventually set in and it’s not incomplete enough for them to recover either? A twilight zone between coffin time and party time in other words. Do some members of zombie scout troops have sleeves full of suffocation badges from when they rezombified by suffocating in mud, sand and shit etc?

Why do I ask such bizarre questions? They’re all inspired by my dreams. If you had dreams like mine you’d probably pose some weird questions too. The strangeness of my dreams has only intensified since I’ve been stranded on this tiny speck of land. It must be the isolation. Are you intrigued by my nightmares and the questions they prompt?

Maybe you are more curious about how I’ve managed to survive for the past thirteen weeks. The drawers in the bed that I rode to shore were locked, so their precious contents didn’t spill into the sea. After dragging the bed beyond the high tide mark, I smashed them in and discovered that there were dozens of bags of trail mix inside, containing everything from sunflower seeds to dried bananas. I haven’t survived on bags of trail mix and dried fruit alone though. There’s an abandoned farm here. The house even has rows of solar panels behind it. The satellite dish is damaged beyond repair though.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like the farmers are merely on holidays. I believe it’s their skeletons sitting in the cellar beneath the old homestead. By the time I found them, the rats had long since stripped their bones clean. Hopefully, I won’t be asked any awkward questions about their demise by my future rescuers. Were they murdered? Their skeletons are fully intact, with no visible fractures, and I haven’t seen any blood stains, so who knows.

If they were killed, could the killer still be living on the island? I don’t think so, it’s small enough to thoroughly explore in a few days and I haven’t been able to find any signs of recent habitation. The place is a single mountain peak surrounded by a plateau. The foothills bordering the plateau tend to end abruptly at sheer cliff faces. The wooded areas are possible hiding places, but the largest is smaller than a football field. There are plenty of rock overhangs and caves, but none that lead to subterranean mazes. Surely, I would have seen campfire smoke by now if I wasn’t alone here.

Thirst is even less of a concern than the faint fear that a murderer might be lurking somewhere on the island. There are several freshwater sources, most of them stemming from the lake close to the island’s highest point. I believe water is always in abundance here. The weed choked, but otherwise healthy orchards and vegetable gardens certainly give that impression. I’ve been doing my best to restore them to their former glory.

There is even an abandoned glass factory on the island. I’d been here for a week when I discovered it. It’s likely older than the farm. It might even predate Australian federation. When the last bottle was moulded there, I have no idea, less idea than where I am. The presence of an abandoned glass factory might be a clue to my whereabouts though.

After I gave up on attempting to get mobile reception, searching for satellite phones and radios I began writing letters. At first, it was just another means of keeping my mind occupied. After a few days I started stuffing my bio and detailed descriptions of the island into bottles. There’s no shortage of corks and resin to add to the water proofness of my brittle, rudderless message delivery system. Fortunately, I downloaded lots of wonderful music to my phone long before boarding the Glastonbury in Brisbane. Sometimes, while I’m writing messages and sealing them in bottles, I listen to “Message in a Bottle” by The Police.

Speaking of The Police, last night, I dreamt that Sting arrived here in a coast guard vessel to take me to the nearest port. It sounds like a good dream right. It wasn’t. When Sting opened his mouth to speak, he sounded just like King Charles. Before I could process that nightmarish development, he underwent a metamorphosis into a bee. While I was trying to decide whether to wait for him to turn back into Sting, or to swat him with a fence post, he stung me repeatedly. It wasn’t long before I was as swollen as a Zeppelin.

Soon, I was floating so high above the island, I couldn’t see the farmhouse through the clouds. The wind nudged me in the direction of Sydney, but before I could catch a glimpse of the Opera House, I was blown all the way to the Gaza strip and hit by an Israeli missile. The missile was headed for a pre-school and colliding with me had no effect on its trajectory. My ghost watched a brown nosing Israeli journalist interview Benjamin Netanyahu on the news. He said that one of the childcare workers in the centre destroyed by the missile was secretly working for Hamas, so there was no need to worry.

It took me the best part of an hour to fully emerge from that dream, to stop shaking, and to be fully cognizant of the fact I was thousands of miles from the nearest war zone. Sunrise was fast approaching. Soon, the tide would turn towards deeper waters. It was time to stroll to the longest, narrowest headland and launch yet another message in a bottle into the ocean.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023


The emblematic photo above the short story “Message In a Bottle” was taken by yours truly. I certainly can’t say that I’m responsible for that amazing sculpture. It was on display in the Sculptures by the Sea exhibition, at Bondi, in 2012, the year that the Mayan calendar ended. I always assumed that they ran out of wall space. More esteemed experts believe that it was the end of an era. Those who think the government is using the exhaust from passenger jets as a mind control agent thought that 2012 was destined to be the year of the apocalypse. I got a bit off track there didn’t I. You’re probably wondering who the sculptor was. Unfortunately, I can’t remember. If you know, please tell me.

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The Sock Goblins

“Campbelltown Police Station”

“I’d like to report a crime.”

“What kind of crime sir.”

“It’s more of a crime spree really.”

“I need you to be more specific.”

“I’ve checked all the doors and the windows and there’s definitely no sign of forced entry. I reckon they took mi house keys from mi car while mi back was turned, went and copied em, put the originals back, waited a few days just to make sure I wasn’t suspicious and then come and burglarised the place when I was out.”

“Who is they sir? If you think you know the identity of the assailants please be more forthcoming.”

“The sock goblins of course. Not even their initials are needed. They’re so fucken infamous that they’ve unofficially got exclusive rights to the pronoun they. Would you like a list of what they’ve stolen? I don’t know why, but my pair of Andrew Tait caricature socks are still here. It looks they burnt a hole in them ones with mi cigarette lighter. Weirdly, mi special edition Prime Minister Morrison socks are still ere too. I think they slashed them ones with scissors. Them goblins are so fucken full of irrational hatred. Nearly every other pair of mi socks is gone. They even had the hide to steal mi Don Bradman and mi Marilyn Monroe memorial socks. The word on the street is they’re building a circus tent in Smiths Creek Reserve.

“Fark, them bastards hung up on mi. I betta ring em back.”


© Rodney Hunter, 2023

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The Right Words

The void left by your wife’s death was threatening to consume you. What words could’ve blunted the blades of your misery? In the restaurant of my mind, cliched waitresses sauntered in with apologetic attitudes and platters of platitudes. Certainly nothing worth ordering. Their offerings made communion wafers seem as nourishing as the corpse of Christ in the eyes of a fine young cannibal.

Why did my mind go there? “Silence of the Lambs” was on TV, and The Fine Young Cannibals were on the radio, in the background, singing “She Drives Me Crazy.” If only it were her presence, not her absence, that promised to drive you crazy. What words might’ve helped you? I could have said “I’m sorry for your loss” but that would’ve felt as inadequate as stepping from a chauffeur driven limousine to offer a homeless man a slice of stale bread.

What words could I have uttered that would’ve done more good than a handgun versus hornets? In hindsight, I wish I’d said “you’re a resilient man. I hope your agony fades to a bearable ache surprisingly soon.” Would that have helped? I’m not sure, but I believe it would’ve been better than I’m sorry for your loss, you have my sympathy, everything happens for a reason, or it must have been part of God’s plan.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023

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It’s Science Is It?

Plagiarism algorithms becoming people?
What drugs are being fed to sci-fi sheeple?
A.I authors spawned from ones and zeros,
futures stuffed with robot writer heroes?
Creative currents born from mathematics,
or forgotten adventures, past life dramatics?
A.I novels sparked by robot emo abrasions,
subjective beings reducible to equations?
Are ghosts in machines just cause for laughter,
or is mind the source before, now, after?
Emerging from Gods, neurons or computers?
All three answers the lies of sanity looters?
Just evolving, never created or destroyed,
is that idea too absurd to be employed?
Will people of science ponder this rhyme,
or are they too trapped in their paradigm?
Which perspective sees beings as they are,
which one pushes the door of reality ajar?
Does it matter who’s right or who’s wrong?
There’s no devil to burn you for your song.
We are just bald apes desperate to know
how the sparks of rhyme and reason grow.
Whether just a brain, or spirits integrated,
can we at least agree conflict is overrated.
Okay, I was too provocative, incendiary,
when I denied an Electronic Pinocchio spree.
Still something cheeky about my phrasing?
I don’t understand the point you’re raising (-:


© Rodney Hunter, 2023


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Enviro Crusaders

Rickshaw can man,
pedalling like Lance in the Tour de France.
Rickshaw can man,
in a beverage container spotting trance.
Rickshaw can man,
the star of his own recyclable romance.
Rickshaw can man,
his new dame sought a horizontal dance.
That magic muse,
found our hero’s binned photos by chance.
Upon their return,
she misplaced her bodice, dress and pants.
Rickshaw can man,
not many can imagine how he gallivants.
Rickshaw can couple,
snuffing the nothing of enviro vandal rants.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023




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Synesthesia

He fashions alien landscapes with a guitar,
chord progressions are his paintbrushes.
Beside his pulsing crystal canyons,
Aurora borealis is just a pale novelty.
His solos are choreographed supernovas,
their hypersonic loop the loops linger.
Felicity’s lenses never shrink or dilate,
her storm flecked irises are glass.
She sees his colour bombs everywhere,
they dance in brighter, gentler realms,
within and beyond our humble universe.
Haloed hues human eyes never witness,
streaking across her midnight vistas.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023



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The Storystarter

You probably thought that Drew Barrymore’s character in The Firestarter was dangerous, but that was before you were introduced to The Storystarter.

After the troll ordered his pet tapeworm Tina to bite the ogre’s testicles off, things turned ugly.

The parasite bored through the former president’s skull. The thought of laying her eggs in his brain was a boring one. Someone had already done so. She wondered what kind of mother was willing to raise her children in such a barren landscape.

“It’s an optical illusion created by the microchip the government inserted into your cerebrum,” the flat Earther explained, after I asked him why we always saw the masts of the yachts first. It was the most plausible sounding nonsense I’d heard from him yet. Just last week he was telling me…

“Every intelligent person, who does their own research, knows that the reptilians would never let Earthlings land on the moon, not in 1969, not now and not in 2025 man,” said the man who does his own research.

“Shut up and kiss me darling” the George Costansa lookalike said to Tracy’s pet ostrich. That bold romantic gesture may not end well. The surgical team are still searching frantically for his tongue.

There’s no man in the moon tonight, not unless he’s wearing a mini-skirt and waving pom poms to cheer on the dawn.

The dragon sculpted a tap dancer from flames, and the xylophone its twinkling toes played.

“Is that mayonnaise, pimple pus, or something else splattered all over your ugly face, the man with a death wish asked the hypersensitive, homophobic bikie.

The gentle moonlight turned the giant’s teardrops into glistening billabongs.

The joy ridden hearse crashed into the crematorium.


Feel free to use my list of story starters to trigger your own ideas, that’s what I wrote them for. If you quote or paraphrase my work, make sure you acknowledge the source though.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023





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The Negatives

I feel as old as
my faded moth chewed photos.
All the negatives
are so easy to locate,
but that is the problem man.

Most of them depict
a complex jigsaw of limbs
created with jigsaws.
The images of theatres
and picnics were lost in flames.

Some say I shouldn’t
tell you these things detective,
that I talk too much,
but the puzzle won’t be solved
by the people in it man.


© Rodney Hunter, 2023


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Memory Crescent

The stench of urban decay assaults my nostrils.

The house on the corner of Memory Crescent,
near the burnt out bus stop on Nostalgia Way,
was a carcass at the feet of starving scavengers.

Its stained glass windows vanished like U.F.O’s.
Magnificent Byzantine mosaics were scattered
like cardboard jigsaw puzzles of Mengele.

The federation brickwork drips with hot pink.
It’s been graffitied with Smurfs on ostrich back
and a fusion of Donald Duck and The Hulk.

Under a bridge they’d be sweet absurdities.
Here they are the most abhorrent vandalism
since skinheads mauled ambulances with augers.

Load bearing walls are the sole hint of history.


© Rodney Hunter, 2020

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Audio Muse

Opal is a wordsmith in multiple tongues,
but music is her primordial language.
Her sonatas animate fireplace phoenixes.
The finger ballet floating from her piano
melts the rage or rampaging hornets,
renders them as placid as butterflies.
Opal’s gently cascading melodies
turn work into weekend escapes.
Her digits are Eden in moonscapes.
Ivory is gold when those fingers dance.
Ancient ruins rise to their former glory.
Deserts turn to wetland wonderlands.


© Rodney Hunter, 2020



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Horace Henley

“On the downside, Horace was an arrogant, ignorant, argumentative, callous, remorseless, dishonest, manipulative, domineering, tantrum prone, violent, adulterous, greedy, upper middle-class snob” his epitaph began.

Are there any Marian cultists who chant the rosary as frequently as Horace called his kids useless? From the age of fourteen they were enslaved to Henley’s Car Wash, Henley’s Garden Maintenance, and the jewel in Horace’s entrepreneurial crown Henley’s Independent Supermarket. In Shitsville, Backwater State, Horace Henley was Mr Big.

Over the road from Henley’s Camping Supplies the unemployed and the unemployable traded rations of cigarettes, lighters, and coupons as they filed into Centrelink. Work was Horace’s drug of choice. He imagined everyone had it on tap, but the dregs of society were too lazy to twist the faucet. To his customers Horace was a lovable larrikin. Beyond the public gaze he killed the mood like a nuclear winter. “Without me, you lot would be lining up for a handout across the road”
he reminded his family daily.

Horace hired the best psychiatrists in the region to treat their “mysterious” trauma and stress related disorders. Did Horace have post-traumatic stress disorder courtesy of a torrid childhood? Those who knew him best doubted it. His wife described him as being as asymptomatic as a corpse, merely the carrier of neuroses. Horace always said that when he was growing up, the barrel of a shotgun was as familiar to him as cornflakes, but nobody recalls him looking back with a pained expression on his face. Horace didn’t use firearms. He dealt in throws, kicks, slaps and backhanders. “I’m a model of restraint” he boasted.

Horace’s tantrums and tirades were as relentless as locust plagues. Outside their eighty hour working weeks, his sons were as reclusive as Himalayan mystics and ate like sumo wrestlers.
In the 1989 Henley’s Camping Supplies Trail Run they disgraced the family name. Horace drilled into their self-esteem like an auger.

“If I sliced open those ice cream guts, I could feed an army on dripping sandwiches. You call yourself runners, you make penguins look like springboks.”

In the tens, Horace was semi-retired.  He swapped sales counters for lathes, lawn bowls and soap boxes. “Abolishing excess franking credits is a commie plot” he liked to roar in the local Labor MP’s face. With just three investment properties to his name after the divorce and compensation payouts to his offspring and siblings how would he cope without profiting from the Australian Tax Office? Greenie claims of climate emergencies
and tortured refugees had Horace dry heaving. What about the suffering of upper middle-class retirees?

During the 2020’s, Horace’s vitality seeped away like the pus from a bedsore. His witty larrikin persona lay as dormant as an Australian volcano. He was as bitter as a ricin and cyanide cocktail.
In the thirties, cancer hit him like a midnight mugger. The harvest was imminent. I donned my darkest hood. It was so black I looked like a hole in the horizon.

Horace hurled an epic novel of X rated barbs at Yours Truly. I mocked his waning strength
by challenging him to a dance fight. My moves are unparalleled in the nightclubs of hell.
I shifted from hip hop to ballroom. My scythe was my partner. As Horace dropped dead beneath a phantom disco ball, his shares in the palliative care industry skyrocketed.

In her funeral speech, Horace’s sister said “our family was like a bait ball in the presence of a sea monster. The great white shark t-shirt we gave Horace for Christmas went over his head like a pole vaulter.” Those Henley’s are a quirky bunch.

Horace left the remnants of his real estate empire to his favourite sex worker. His misplaced generosity was as unwelcome as a lampshade fashioned from human skin. Only Horace’s fetishes appalled her more. in exchange for a carton of condoms, she returned the Henley hobby farm and family home.


© Rodney Hunter, 2019




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Myrtle the Amphibious Octopoid

Jade painstakingly sculpted Myrtle the bipedal, amphibious, octopoid, from mottled marble.
The black garnet pupils of her green fluorite eyes looked ready to grow and shrink in light and shadow. Mining magnate Martin Martyn paid more for this lifelike marvel than his fully electric driverless Rolls.

Myrtle, the bipedal, amphibious, octopoid, was Jade’s lover Opal’s preferred murder weapon in Art Museum Mayhem, her latest amateur theatre gem. Jade wheeled the loan on to the cavernous studio apartment set. Just seventy-two hours away from the premiere, the cosy little venue was as chaotic as bipolar poetry.

Opal’s sister Helena was assembling kitchen cabinets without instructions. That alone was as ominous as a tsunami warning in the Maldives. Their cousin Hugo had smoked enough weed to believe a fern jungle, with a claw footed bathtub centrepiece, was a home decorating triumph. At the back of the stage, Hugo’s husband Darius bored holes for picture hooks, with a drill that hadn’t been tested and tagged since Reagan continued his acting career in the White House.

During break time, between beers and bowls of ice cream, Darius and Helena raced each other up the fire escape, giggling like toddlers as they went. They’re in a competition to see who vomits first, Hugo explained to the bath’s scuba diving gargoyle. Its autonomous animation was creepier than a haunted forensic psychiatric unit.

Amidst the madness, Jade meditated with the aid of blind folds, hermetically sealed earmuffs,
and a cork igloo as thick as the Ross ice shelf. Upon removing her blind folds and exiting the igloo, Jade noticed the sculpture trolley was as empty as a politician’s promise. Months of honing her search skills, during a stint with the Federal Police, proved to be as useless as a granite dartboard. Myrtle the bipedal, amphibious octopoid was nowhere to be found.

Out on the balcony, her one thousand litre pot plants had been toppled. Nobody remembered a mini tornado, and the beer glass pyramid perched on the balcony wall looked as stable as circus acrobats. Opal had once told her tower climbing, ex-girlfriend Jacqueline, she buried cash in pot plants. Jacqui was gullible enough to take that tale more seriously than rumours of lunar cactus swamps. She assumed many stranger stories were true.

Ecologists cameras ridiculed Jacqueline’s crime time location claim. Only an albino goanna and a graffitied turtle were recorded on the section of creek line where Jacqueline said she was during the hours in question. Opal’s thirty-year-old clock radio was found in Jacqui’s backpack. Detectives wondered if she’d dropped Mrytle, the amphibious, bipedal, octopoid into a foam rubber lined dumpster positioned almost directly below the balcony.

Shifty Shannon Shamrock, a homeless man, who camped in the shrubbery behind the nearest bus stop, was Jacqui’s suspected accomplice. He’d been filmed entering the dumpster in question, but it wasn’t possible to tell what he’d hidden in his knapsack before climbing out again. He claimed he was looking for food, but why would he look there when there were unlocked supermarket bins less than a block away? Shamrock’s other reasons for being in the bin sounded far less convincing than stories of Mars being terraformed by Saturnian cyborgs, but the evidence against him was flimsy and circumstantial. Rumours that Shifty was a pub salesman of everything from mobile phones to comic book tribute toilet paper, lead nowhere.

Multibillionaire sculpture buyer Martin Martyn had seen Jade’s masterpiece evolve from a slab to the finished form. He waited for its twin to emerge from beneath her chisels. Myrtle the amphibious, bipedal, octopoid, Mach two, was even more lifelike than the original.

When Jade returned from a book exchange adventure, Myrtle the Second wasn’t herself.
Martin Martyn was as oblivious as an oyster, but for Jade that was beside the point. After observing her sister Helena glancing nervously towards the kitchen cupboards, Jade examined them more closely. Within seconds, she found the false wall behind the pots and pans.


© Rodney Hunter, 2018



Featured

The Agony Refinery

The searing breeze and the storm collide.
Writhing branches snap and float to earth.
The man with a furnace in his eyes
brushes them aside like mosquitoes.
He treats bruised bones like bent eyelashes
Rain strikes the path like crystal bullets.
Lightning strikes the tree he used to climb.
A flood eats the path he trod last night.
Pain must be transformed into beauty.
The agony refinery must be built
before the Grim Reaper intervenes.


© Rodney Hunter, 2018

Featured

Rambo Knievel

Rambo thinks I’ve got an unnatural fixation
on boring work, health and safety legislation.
I loathe that crazy braggarts sick insinuation
leaping into lakes, from supersonic sidecars,
seconds from organ splattering annihilation,
is the perfect perforation of peaceful paradise.
Risking lacerated limbs and a leaking spleen
is not my means of creating a thrilling scene.
There is no withering of life’s bountiful fruits
in dodging Knievel’s spine shattering pursuits.
I’d rather navigate life’s labyrinth with wretches
seeking asylum from sickness in acres of sketches,
or lose myself in psychedelic swirls and twirls,
orbiting thirteen tribes of buxom Goddesses
playing hide and seek in my pools of pearls.

It’s usually those riddled with dementia,
who fail to see my craving for adventure.
Adventure minus a tailbone through the brain
risk of parachuting off the Eiffel Tower again.



© Rodney Hunter, 2018




I’m Outta Here

This is the summary of my summary.
In summation, I can’t say it’s summery.
This is no time for Christmas carols Carol.
It’s time to hit you with both barrels Carol.
Come again, you wonder what’s the matter?
Every matter’s soaked in your fecal splatter.
You have distorted all the issues from A to Z
From Mongolia to Anatolia your rep is dead.
Painting your turds gold has gotten too old.
Where’s a mold big enough to hide your mold?
I can’t believe the world has enough LPG
to fuel your ultramarathon gaslighting spree.

LPG: Liquid Petroleum Gas
LPG: Ludicrously Preposterous Garbage
LPG: Lies Propaganda ?

© Rodney Hunter, 2024


Money Versus Nature

The most majestic tree in the forest is inked upon Stan’s back.
A sunset more radiant than any witnessed this millennium
immortalises his air conditioned gym sculpted pectorals.
Stanley’s Fender Stratocaster once belonged to Eric Clapton.
The backing band he hired toured with Prince and Madonna.
He’s spent more on voice coaches than investment properties.
But he cannot compete with the waif in the second hand dress.
Radios and library CD collections are her only teachers.
With unmatched expertise, Tina tunes her opportunity shop guitar.
She treats it as lovingly as a child rescued from an orphanage.
With the unhurried swiftness of a surgeon, she replaces a string.
Stanley’s lyricists and composers can’t match her haunting ballads.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024

Murphy’s Law

There was no doubt in eighteen-year-old Wade Ellis’s mind that he had met the love of his life. His still burning flame, Chelsea Peachey was an older woman. He’d met her at her twentieth birthday party. Before he met Chelsea, Wade had never celebrated a six-month anniversary. On their night of nights, Chelsea and Wade went on what they called a fun medley.

They started at Stevo’s Ten Pin Bowling Arena. Normally, Wade was obsessed with conquering his personal record of two hundred and thirty-four, but that night it was all about the dance moves they incorporated into their run up, so much so that Stevo nearly kicked them out before they’d completed the first frame. Considering the amount of twisting, pirouetting and comical leaping about they did it was surprising that neither of them dislocated a finger. Somehow, none of their shots found their way into the neighbouring lanes. Despite all that silliness, they even managed the occasional strike.

Wade’s favourite part of the bowling alley leg of their six-month anniversary fun medley was the ultra-marathon kiss beneath the Stevo’s Ten Pin Bowling, Est in 1988 sign. Chelsea is an exceptional dancer, but according to Wade there is more rhythm in her kiss than her feet. Their tantalising tongue rumba prompted a spate of remarks from passing motorists.

“Woo-hoo” said someone who didn’t look old enough to have their driver’s license.

“Get a room.” said a balding man, who looked and sounded uncannily like the principal at the high school Wade had recently left.

“Give it to her” said the seventy-year-old bowling alley janitor as he pulled out of the carpark.

“Can we join you” enquired a middle-aged couple who looked ready to get out of their car. With the comments going from bad to worse, Wade and Chelsea decided to move on to the food leg of their funtacular medley. They went to Legendary Loaves. It used to be a bakery chain, but it had evolved into a restaurant. Legendary Loaves specialises in long sandwiches, on five kinds of bread, with centres ranging from all meat to vegan.

Wade’s sandwich featured a smashed avocado spread, three kinds of mushrooms and salmon. Chelsea’s vegan sandwich had something called eggplant, something called tofu and various other ingredients that were as foreign to Wade as the occupants of flying saucers. The closest he came to demystifying Chelsea’s choice was tasting traces of it during their after-meal kisses.

“I don’t know what you two think this place is, but last time I checked it was a restaurant and we need that table soon, real fuckin soon” a frustrated diner to be said five minutes into Wade and Chelsea’s after dinner kissing session. Worried that the situation would escalate, Chelsea picked up their fruit salad and tiramisu desserts and motioned for Wade to follow her to the door.

Wade had never been one to take a step back. Chelsea wasn’t scared of what the irate customer might do, she was worried that Wade would end up in the back of a police van. The enraged diner was five foot nothing, as flabby as a bowl of jelly and probably over forty. Although barely eighteen years old, Wade was pound for pound stronger than most twenty-five-year-old gym junkies, had viper like reflexes, and one punch knock out power in both hands.

Chelsea had seen proof of her boyfriend’s battle-ready hands when he’d chased and cornered a colossal hand bag thief, a few weeks earlier. The thief’s arms were as thick as Wade’s legs, but none of his windmilling blows came within cooee of landing. The first punch Wade threw short circuited the connection between the ogre’s brain and his limbs. After a delayed reaction, he went down. As he tried to get to his feet he fell again. His third attempt at getting up looked promising until Wade kicked him in the sternum. The fallen giant was too preocuppied with gasping for breath to protest as Wade rolled him over to retrieve an old lady’s handbag. She had fallen over as it was wrenched away from her. It was lucky she hadn’t broken any bones on the unforgiving concrete footpath.

Fearful that her gung-ho boyfriend would be on the receiving end of a bashing next time, Chelsea had been ultra cautious about which streets they walked after dark ever since. She fervently hoped that, in the not-too-distant future, Wade would be less like Chuck Norris and more like a quaker. Otherwise, Murphy’s law would surely catch up with him eventually. Chelsea’s grandfather had introduced her to the concept of Murphy’s law. The gist of it being, when things can go wrong, they will go wrong.

The third leg of Chelsea and Wade’s six-month anniversary medley was the Enigma Valley Wax Museum. They had fun getting into compromising positions for the camera with reproductions of everyone from Olivia Newton John to Elton John. It was after Chelsea decided to emulate Monica Lewinsky with the wax dummy of Bill Clinton that they were finally escorted from the premises. Maybe it was for the best, because she was planning to use her folded up umbrella as an imaginary strapon to take the Dear Leader of North Korea from behind. The security personnel at Enigma Valley Wax Museum would not have seen a funny side to the world’s most ridiculous alpha male being mocked like that.

The final leg of Wade and Chelsea’s funtacular journey was a Thai massage. The therapy centre was beautifully adorned with sculptures of everything from Buddhas to elephants. They shared the same room. After the rhythmic tapping on their backs ceased and the relaxing music faded away, Wade made a few remarks about happy endings. Both the masseuse and the masseur looked nervous. Thanks to their limited English, neither of them realised he was joking.

“Chels, if he was for real when he said full body massage, he hasn’t finished yet has he. I guess ya needta show im the colour of your money. If that doesn’t do the trick, stick some cold hard cash in his undies.” Wade’s lack of a filter only led to more outrageous statements from there.

It wasn’t until after they had gotten dressed and finished their herbal tea that Wade noticed the wedding rings on the massage therapists’ fingers. Their teenage children returned from a trip to the movies, just as Wade and Chelsea were leaving. One of them looked far too familiar. Wade couldn’t remember his name, but he was sure they’d been in the same science class in year nine.

Behind Wade’s depraved joker facade was a frustrated virgin. By the time he met Chelsea, he’d read dozens of novels about modern day Casanova’s and seen pornographic videos outrageous enough to make a God fearing wowser’s eyes bleed. He’d hoped that, on the night of their sixth month anniversary, he’d finally get the chance to put theory into practice, but when they got to Chelsea’s house both her parents were home. As usual, the spare bedroom had been prepared for Wade.

“Don’t you two dare get to know each other in the biblical sense” Mr Peachey said with some deeply suspicious glances. Too make sure he wasn’t being too subtle, he’d removed Chelsea’s bedroom door and the guest room door from their hinges before the lovestruck young couple arrived. Wade was scared of dying from frustration. It was over a fortnight since he’d “scratched the devil’s itch” as Mr Peachey referred to it in his anti-masturbation rants. Never in the history of humankind had anyone been more immune to embarrassment than his daughter. Over the years, he’d inoculated her well and truly.

Wade didn’t know it yet, but he was about to test the limits of his girlfriend’s immunity to humiliation. He’d reached the point where sexual frustration made sleep impossible. With sunrise not far away the need for rest overwhelmed all other concerns. Begrudgingly, he took matters into his own hands for the first time in weeks.

“You’re a true champion” Wade told himself, as he succeeded in making his furtive self-massage last long enough to thoroughly enjoy. Considering how long it had been since his last session, it truly was a remarkable achievement. Curious about how far he could shoot, Wade switched his phone torch on. Somehow, he managed to stay completely silent during the most enduring climax he’d ever experienced. The fruits of his labour flew high and long. “Home run man, home run” Wade whispered in triumph after his tribute to the Nike swoosh cleared the foot of the bed by a ridiculous margin.

“They’ll never suspect a thing” Wade promised himself as he buttoned up his shorts and got up to clean up after himself. “With no carpet to worry about, what could possibly go wrong?” Wade whispered as he strolled to the foot of the bed, handkerchief in hand. “What is that doing there? This cannot be happening, this cannot be happening, this cannot be happening…” Wade uttered over and over again as he discovered where the culmination of his pleasure had gone splat. His billabong of semen was fast becoming a creek. It trickled its way across one of Mrs Peachey’s evening gowns.

“What can’t be happening Wade” Mr Peachey demanded to know from the doorway. Chelsea was busy rubbing sleep from her eyes as she ambled down the hall, wondering what the commotion was all about. “Murphy’s law, when something can go wrong it will go wrong” were the words printed in black on her white satin night dress.

“What’s the matter dad”

“Why are you all up so early.” Mrs Peachey yelled from her bedroom.

“You’ve all interrupted my morning crossword puzzle, so this better be important.” Chelsea’s nana yelled from the granny flat. Even Chelsea’s dog Ballsup, and her cat Slash, seemed to want to know what was going on.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024

















The Rules

The priest really earnt his $550 dollar marriage celebrant fee. Joe could never have fit his biography into a ten-minute speech as elegantly as Father Love, who had known him since he was an altar boy sneaking sips of the blood of Christ and secretly spitting in the holy water. Joe had transformed into a sensible young adult since then.

Father Brimstone, the man in charge of Candlevale Parish, was old school enough to insist on a pre-wedding counselling session. Somehow, the aptly named Father Love had managed to keep a straight face as he skimmed through the evils of pre-marital sex with Joe and Trish a few days before the marriage ceremony. The young couple took Satan and his lakes of fire very seriously, so seriously that one could have been forgiven for thinking they were actors in a comedy, not a twenty-one-year-old couple in 21st century Australia.

“Okay people, this won’t take long. Father Brimstone told me to stick to the script he gave me. If you have any questions it doesn’t cover, feel free to ask. I’ll do my best to answer them. You two have been each other’s favourite person for as long as either of you can remember, so I’ll skip the parts about the Vatican’s views on divorce. Obviously, you’re both strict Catholics, so you know that abortion, contraception, polyamory, adultery, pre-marital sex, masturbation and homosexuality aren’t acceptable. I wouldn’t normally discuss all those things in just one sentence, but you’re educated Catholics so there’s no need to elaborate.

No doubt, you’re aware that having sex is only okay for the purposes of procreation, that God hates it if you do it for fun, so if procreation isn’t possible for you two then the church frowns upon any bedroom shenanigans. You’re probably well aware of that, but it’s one of the core parts of Father Brimstone’s script, so I thought I better mention it. There’s a few other compulsory bits. Let me see, um… Everything else in the script is very obvious to scripture teachers and youth group leaders of your calibre actually. Unless you’ve got any questions, we’ll leave it there.”

“Is God okay with fancy underwear, you know, the kind with frills, lace and see through parts and all the rest of it?”

“I wouldn’t worry Trish. As long as the purpose of the fancy underwear is to help one to procreate, I’m sure God is fine with it. It’s no worse than colourful feathers on a bird.”

“What if it’s see through in the most intimate places, or crotchless?”

“Trish, Father Love doesn’t need that level of detail to advise you darling.”

“As long as only your husband sees the fancy underwear it really doesn’t matter Trish.”

“What about during medical appointments with my GP or gynaecologist and so on, does it matter what I wear then?”

“I don’t think the catechasm, I mean the catechism, has anything to say about that, but I recommend wearing something non-descript, something plain and purely functional for occasions when anyone besides your husband needs to examine your private parts. These days, that might be a good idea when travelling through airports too. We can’t have our customs officials getting distracted from conducting body searches in the proper manner can we. Fancy underwear can cause trouble anywhere. Some parishioners have let Father Brimstone and I know that their body is their temple by sitting in the front row, during mass, wearing miniskirts and panties reminiscent of stained-glass windows. We could do without that sort of mixed messaging. It’s just not on. They should keep Victoria’s secrets secret from everyone except their husbands and God.”

“You don’t have any more questions do you Trish?” Joe said with a pleading look in his eye. He breathed a deep sigh of relief when she shook her head.

Minutes later, in the hallway of the presbytery, Father Love and Father Brimstone leapt in the air and bumped chests as they uttered the words “It’s sin Sunday Mary fucka.” It was the one Sunday of the month when Father Pious and Father Innocent conducted both the morning and evening masses, so Father John Love and Father James Brimstone were free to run amok. Normally, they went to Fantasy Land, a brothel with a back entrance that was obscured by an overgrown garden. They always travelled there by train, to make sure their cars weren’t spotted in the vicinity.

Father Brimstone’s favourite Fantasy Land roleplay involved giving Mother Mary a good seeing to in Joseph’s carpentry workshop. The son of God and his Earthly stepfather were always collecting firewood at the time. Father Love’s favourite roleplay was largely the same, but he was more of a Joseph man, so in his fantasy it was Mary and Jesus who were out collecting firewood.


© Rodney Hunter, 2024