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One Day At The Oceanaire

Friday, March 12th, 2010

(SCENE:  At the Oceanaire – a tony seafood restaurant in Downtown Minneapolis.   Representative Paul Thissen, Senator Tom “Baby Got” Bakk and Speaker of the House Margaret Anderson-Kelliher are sitting at a table with five empty chairs.  Anderson-Kelliher, bored, drums her fingers on the table.  Thissen checks his watch, and Bakk rock nervously in their seats. )

(Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak enters the room)

THISSEN, BAKK and ANDERSON-KELLIHER, SIMULTANEOUSLY:  Hello, Mayor Rybak.

RYBAK:  Hey, Margaret!

(BAKK and THISSEN, deflated, go back to gnawing on toothpicks)

RYBAK:  Thanks for calling the meeting, Margaret.  What’s up?

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  I’d like to lay out some ground rules and strategy for the campaign.

(SEN. MARK DAYTON walks into restaurant).

RYBAK: That’s a great idea.  (Notices DAYTON).  Hey, Mark!

DAYTON:  Aaaaaaagh!   (DAYTON dives to floor, rapidly low-crawls to the table, furtively sits in chair).

THISSEN:  What’s the matter, Mark?

ANDERSON-KELLIHER – Shut up, er…

THISSEN: Paul…

ANDERSON-KELLIHER: …whatever.  (Turns to DAYTON)  What’s the matter, Mark?

DAYTON:  (Affixing a lobster bib) Er, nothing.  Why?

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Just curious.  (Looks at menu, as former Senator MATT ENTENZA, with wife LOIS QUAM, enter the restaurant.

BAKK: “Hey, Matt…”

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  I said SHUT UP!

BAKK: You told Paul to shut…

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Don’t care! (turns to ENTENZA) How are you today, Matt?

ENTENZA: I’m doing…

QUAM: (A little too effusive) He’s doing just fine, Margaret!  (ENTENZA abruptly stops).

ANDERSON-KELLIHER: Ah, excellent!

(A loud belch issues from outside the entrance.  Rep. TOM RUKAVINA walks in, pounding his chest.  He shakes out another mild belch).

THISSEN:  Hey, Tom…(Trails off as ANDERSON-KELLIHER stares him down; THISSEN looks bash fully at his menu).

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Excellent!  I believe that’s everyone…(counts noses)…except…

(Harps play in the hallway.  A little dry ice fog obscures the floor.  Sen. JOHN MARTY, hands clasped as if in prayer before him, moves across the floor as if floating, and lands like a hummingbird on the remaining chair.  A golden aura briefly suffuses the room, then vanishes).

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Hey, John.

MARTY:  May the blessing of my presence bring you peace.

ANDERSON-KELLIHER: Er, yeah.  I called you all here today because voters are having a hard time telling the difference between us.  For the good of the DFL race, it’d be best if we all come up with some sort of differentiation between us before the convention.

RYBAK:  Primary.

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Convention!

ENTENZA: Yeah, convention!.

QUAM:  Primary!

ENTENZA: Er, yeah.  Primary.

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Convention!

THISSEN:  Convention, just like Margaret says…

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  For the last time, shut the **** up! (ANDERSON-KELLIHER flings a salt-shaker at THISSEN, hitting him in the face.  He falls backward over his chair, and lies on the floor, motionless.  DAYTON dives for the ground).

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Like I said, convention.  So I’d like you all to think of things we can do to distinguish ourselves to the voters…

WAITRESS (Approaches with order pad in hand):  Hello, my name is Wendy, and I’ll be your…

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  For the last ****** time, shut the **** up…

RYBAK: Er, Margaret?  She’s the waitress…

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Oh.  Go ahead, then.

WAITRESS:  Er, OK.  Any drink orders before we order dinner?”

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Boilermaker.

RYBAK: Appletini, please.  Extra tini.

BAKK:  I’ll have whatever Margaret is having.

THISSEN:  (Groans incomprehensibly)

RUKAVINA: Grain Belt Premium!

ENTENZA:  I’ll take your house chablis…

QUAM:  He’ll take the house merlot, and so will I.

ENTENZA:  Er…yeah.

DAYTON:  A diet Pellegrini.

WAITRESS:  Sir, all Pelligrini is “Diet”.  It’s water…

DAYTON:  Two diet pellegrinis.

MARTY:  I shall have a glass of water.  But please bring it in gaseous form.

WAITRESS: Er…wait – you want a cup of steam?

MARTY:  As it is said, so shall it be poured.

WAITRESS:  Er, OK.  And would you all like to start a tab?

(All at table break up into uproarious laughter)

RUKAVINA:  Baby, you ain’t seen nothing.

(WAITRESS LEAVES)

ANDERSON-KELLIHER: OK.  I’d like everyone to say, for the record, what makes you different.  Paul?

THISSEN:  (Groans, puts hand on forehead).

ANDERSON-KELLIHER: OK.  Matt?

ENTENZA:  (Looks at QUAM)

QUAM:  He will raise taxes for a better Minnesota.

(ENTENZA nods enthusiastically).

RYBAK:  Well, I’ll raise taxes for a better Minnsesota, too.

BAKK:   Well, I won’t…

ANDERSON-KELLIHER: Yes, you will.

BAKK:  Yes, I will.

DAYTON:  I will raise taxes.  For a better Minnesota.  (Eyes door furtively).  I will.  I will.  I will.

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  OK.  Not getting what I want here…

RUKAVINA:  I’ll raise taxes more for a better Minnesota!

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Better…

WAITRESS (Carrying tray of drinks):  OK, that’s two house Merlots,  a Grain Belt Premium, two Boilermakers, an Appletini, two “diet Pellegrinis” a cup of steam, and (looks at THISSEN) some smelling salts.

THISSEN:  (grunts painfullly)

WAITRESS:  That’ll be $77.

ANDERSON-KELLIHER: No.

WAITRESS:  Er, maam?  I brought the drinks.  You need to pay up.

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Shut up.

WAITRESS:  Maam?  This isn’t funny.  You wanna leave me on the look for almost $80 worth of drinks?

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  Shut up!

RUKAVINA:  Yeah.  Shut up!

WAITRESS:  I’m gonna call the police.

ANDERSON-KELLIHER:  (Stands at table)  Attention, everyone in the restaurant.  Please pay our drink tab!  It is for a better Minnesota!

(RUKAVINA, BAKK, RYBAK, QUAM, and ENTENZA applaud; DAYTON balances spoon on his finger; THISSEN groans)

MARTY:  As it is written, so shall it be done.  (MARTY disappears in a blinding flash of pure light).

And…scene.

One Day At the MNPublius Offices

Monday, November 16th, 2009

SCENE:  11AM in the editorial board room of Minnesota-based politics blog MNPublius.

ZACK: (sitting in an overstuffed leather chair, sipping from a snifter of brandy as SEAN walks into the conference room).  Hey, Sean.  How’s it going?

SEAN: (pouring a scotch as he takes a seat by the highly-polished oak table) – Hey, Zack.  Just looking at the resumes from all of Dusty Trice’s minions.  Now that he’s closed shop, they’re all looking for work.

ZACK:  Huh.  (takes a sip, as SEAN feeds a ream of  resumes into a nearby paper shredder).  Where’s Matt? 

ZACK:  He’s texted me.  He’s just coming in from the parking ramp.  He had to get the Prius fixed.

SEAN: Ah. 

(JEFF enters the room, takes seat)

ZACK:  So what’s new, gentlemen?

SEAN:  Well, I spent Friday trading emails with Paul Harris of the London Observer.  He’s doing a piece on female conservatives, and he heard we were the authorities on Michele Bachmann.

ZACK:  And he didn’t go to Dump Bachmann

SEAN:  He’s a Brit journalist, but he’s not insane.

ZACK: Excellent!  So did you send the new glossy talking point sheet?

SEAN: Yep, the one that calls ’em all crazy and dangrous.  Or dangerous and crazy.  I forget.  Anyway,  I had to break open a new box of them, but yes.  I did. 

MATT: (enters room, yelling over shoulder as he takes a seat) And Consuela?  Have all my calls and texts held.  And get me a double-skim goat chai, stat!

CONSUELA (from anteroom) Si, senor Matt!

MATT:  Hey, guys.

ZACK:  Hey, Matt.  And did you send the ugliest picture of Bachmann you could find?

SEAN:  Oh, yeah.  I had to dig deep, but I finally found one that almost was too bad to be an Avidor photoshop. 

JEFF (sotto voce to MATT): “Avidor?”

MATT: Ken Weiner.

ZACK:  And you gave him a phone interview?

SEAN:  Er, huh? 

ZACK:  A phone interview.  We always do phone inter…

SEAN: Right.  The phone interview, I know.  I thought Jeff was doing the interview?

JEFF:  Um, no – I thought Matt was doing it.

MATT:  Um, no, I was busy doing oppo research on “Ben” and “Mall Diva”.  Er, hang on – Zack, I thought you handled all foreign media…

ZACK:  Oh, crap.  That means…

CONSUELA:  (Enters room, carrying bundle of newspapers) I brought the newspapers, sirs.  (places them on table, backs from room).

ZACK: (leaps to feet, looking agitated, thrashes through pile of papers) Independent…Independent…Indep…AH!  Here it is!  (flips through paper as SEAN, JEFF and MATT gather behind him to read).

SEAN:  There it is!

MATT:  Oh, crap:

 “It is hard to think that people take her seriously. But on a national level it is happening. It scares me,” said Aaron Landry, a senior correspondent at MNpublius.com, a Minnesota-based politics blog.

ZACK:  “Senior Correspondent?” 

MATT: {{Facepalm}}

SEAN:  Who the hell told him to call himself…

JEFF: Jeezus, Landry – you’re a blogger

MATT:  Good goddess; he’s Fecke’d us.

ZACK: (yells out the door) Consuela!  Get Cartman on the line!

SEAN:  (takes long drink, puts down glass, holds head in hands) Oh, man – we’re never gonna live this down.

(And scene).

Roseville Vice

Friday, July 31st, 2009

“It’s a bad one”, Sergeant Koziolecki said; the flushed look on his face showed that he wasn’t exaggerating.

“Whadda we got?”  I clipped my badge to my belt as we walked through the abandoned warehouse in the Saint Paul Warehouse District, ducking under the yellow “crime scene” tape.

“Four vics; two hispanic males, early twenties; one black male, late twenties; one caucasian female, late teens-early twenties.  Gunned down execution style” Koziolecki recited from fresh memory.

We rounded a dirty, ratty corner to what had been the lobby of a shipping dock, and saw the CSI crew going over the scene.  Four bodies were lined up, face-down, by a grafitti-clogged block wall.  “No kidding”.

“A bullet to the back of each head” Koziolecki read off the notes, pushing his readers up to the bridge of his nose.  The acrid smell of fresh blood was fading as we stood there, replaced by the smell of death.  Death and…I thought for a moment, not quite placing it.

“Killer or killers left a calling card”, Koziolecki continued.  “May I?” he asked the CSI guy, who nodded as he dusted, fruitlessly, for prints.  Koziolecki gently rolled the body of a girl – late teens, with tattooed arms and hair that’d been multicolored even before getting sprayed with her own and her friends’ blood and brains, who looked like a tank grrl or roller-derby chick.

Former roller derby chick.

And she had something in her mouth.

(more…)

Somewhere in Middle America, 1999

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

We’ll be pushing up to the gate now. Thanks for flying Big Sky airlines, and on behalf of co-pilot Hank Bjornson and stewardess Gladys Tostengaard, I’d like to welcome you to Fargo“. The disembodied voice of the pilot sounded flat but crisp over the tinny loudspeakers.

“Wow, I thought…” she started, unwrapping her hand from its death grip on my wrist.

“…Praise Jesus“.

She stopped. “Did he just say “Praise Jesus?””

I cocked an eyebrow. “I dunno. That’s what it sounded like”.

She slowly unbuckled her seatbelt. “Wow. So do people talk like that out here…?

“Not usually”, I replied, climbing up and offering her my hand to climb out of the seat. “People out here are pretty much like people everywhere”, I said, reaching into the overhead rack to grab our carryons.

“Well, I’m tempted to hope so”, she said, putting her sunglasses on. “That flight in was turbulent as hell”.

I chuckled. “Nah”. I banished the thought from my head, and set about getting us out of the cramped 737.

As we climbed down the ladder to the tarmac, she took my arm. “Mitch”, she said, cocking her sunglasses up onto her forehead to push back her curly brown bangs, “thanks for taking me out here. It felt weird knowing you this long and not having ever seen where you’re from”.

I smiled. “My pleasure!” I said. We shared a kiss as we walked through the door into the Hector Field terminal.

A woman in a bonnet and a plain brown peasant dress stared bullets at us, her plain, un-made-up face creased with lines of anger and hate among the more mundane wrinkles. I filed that thought away for later, too.

———-

We needed to rent a car for the drive to my parents’ place, two hours west of Fargo on I94. We walked into the “Midwest Rent-O” office, at the west end of the Hector terminal. The desk was unmanned. I rang the “service” bell.

Nothing.

I rang it again.

“Wow. Slow…” Marisa started staying, stopping abruptly when a doughy man whose ratty, grease-and-mustard spotted dress shirt barely stretched to cover the spare tire around his waist, with half-hearted blond hair for whom receding was probably a merciful death, slouched into the room from the back office.

“Hullo”, he muttered.

“We’d like to rent a car for two days”.

He rolled his eyes, looking almost irritated. “Oh Kay”, he said, leaning on the “oh” hard enough to make the underlying meaning crystal clear. He walked across the room, grabbing a small stack of forms, walking back to the counter, and then walking back to grab another form he’d apparently forgotten.

“What kind of car?” he asked halfheartedly, as he shuffled his papers and pencils with a great ruffling and grunting.

“Oooh,”, Marisa piped up, smiling, “let’s rent a Jaguar!”

It would be cool having my old friends in Jamestown seeing me in a Jag with a movie star…

“…we don’t rent Jap cars”, the guy behind the counter countered, his voice clipped, his lip curling with muted anger.

“Er – Jaguar is…”, I started – but he didn’t look too interested in talking car trivia. “Look, what can we…”

“And we don’t have any low-riders for your little wetback beaner hootchie, either”, he said, pointing at Marisa.

“I beg your pardon?” she said, rearing figuratively up on her hind legs, “I am Italian American“.

“Whatever. We need two forms of ID. Three if you’re an immigrant”, he said, his speech getting more rushed, almost like he was an an anger high.

“No, man, she’s from New York“, I said, willing my voice to stay calm as I tried to reason with this…man. “And I’m originally from Jamestown“, I added, hoping he’d get the local reference, “not that you couldn’t tell by the accent”, I said, a hopeful smile crossing my face, hoping it’d be catchy.

“Yeah, whatever. People from Jamestown keep moving here taking our jobs. Should send them back where they came from, too…”

“OK – how about an Olds…”

“I’ll give you a Buick Skylark” he said with the finality, like a komissar telling a kulak it was his way or the highway.

I nodded my head. Anything to get out of this dump, I thought.

“A Skylark sounds great”.

I rolled my eyes at Marisa, and reached my hand around her waist, pulling her close. “It gets better. Honest!”

She kissed me. “I believe it”, she whispered. “You came from here”.

“You and seniorita wanna get a f*****g room?”, the doughy man yelled as he bent over the file of cars, his shirt pulling out to reveal an acne-riddled plumber’s crack that might have hidden the Jag Marisa wanted.

———-

My parents weren’t expecting us for another day. We drove the Skylark out to a little Bed and Breakfast in the valley of the Sheyenne River, on the edge of the little town of LaMoure, about sixty miles west-southwest of Fargo.

We drove through the little towns along North Dakota One – desolate little towns where farming hadn’t paid the bills in years. Women in peasant dresses and bonnets, faces lined with worry and scowl lines, tending broods of dirty children, watched from the porches. The menfolk, mostly idled for years by the farm market collapse, mostly stood around by the doorways of the ratty-looking bars, holding cans of beer and bibles, staring us down. Other men – mostly the younger ones – wandered around with hunting rifles and revolvers shooting at signs and vacant buildings and occasional small animals. I bit my tongue; these once-proud men had started out just like me, in towns just like mine. But somewhere along the way…

“This is almost spooky”, Marisa said, peering out at the umpteenth scolding gaze. She was tired from the flight.

“Take a nap. I’ll wake you up when we get there”

“You sure?” she asked, leaning her head against my shoulder.

I nodded. In a few minutes she was softly snoring.

The radio was on a station from Winnipeg. They were playing the Corries, a Scottish folk group. I listened to the lyrics:

Flower of Scotland,
When will we see
Your likes again,
That fought and died for,
Your wee bit Hill and Glen,
And stood against them,
Proud Edward’s Army,
And sent them homeward,
Tae think again.

The Hills are bare now,
And Autumn leaves
lie thick and still,
O’er land that is lost now,
Which those so dearly held,
That stood against them,
Proud Edward’s Army,
And sent them homeward,
Tae think again.

I sang quietly along on the next verse – almost a lullaby, I thought, as Marisa snuggled into my shoulder. But yet so far from one:

Those days are past now,
And in the past
they must remain,
But we can still rise now,
And be a nation again,
That stood against them,
Proud Edward’s Army,
And sent them homeward,
Tae think again.

0 Flower of Scotland,
When will we see
your likes again,
That fought and died for,
Your wee bit o’ Hill and Glen,
And stood against them,
Proud Edward’s Army,
And sent them homeward,
Tae think again
.

I looked around at my once-proud, once-prosperous home state, and felt a chill go up my spine.

An angry chill.

I shook it off and kept driving.

———-

We pulled into LaMoure and drove up to the B’nB around 2PM. A plump older lady and her stooped, seventy-something husband came out and helped us haul our stuff into the B’nB – a converted Edwardian-era house that had once belonged to a bonanza farmer. The current owners had lovingly restored it over the past decade. The place had four guest rooms. It was a beautiful place.

I slung my bag – an old Dutch navy-surplus duffel bag I’d picked up in Cote D’Ivoire during that egregious misadventure that I knew I’d never dare tell Marisa about – and led her up the hallway to the room. The owner gave me a key, eyed Marisa suspiciously and left without a word.

As I unlocked the door, I noticed the other room across the hall had its door ajar. I paused, listening:

Just you and me, baby. They can’t beat US. We’ll take ’em. You’ll never let me down. You’ll never let me down”.

I stole a glimpse through the jarred door. An obese forty-something man with a Billy Gibbons beard lay on the bed, sleep-talking loudly, his arms wrapped around a World War I vintage M1903 Springfield rifle.

“Is that saliva?” Marisa asked,referring to the moist glint around the end of the barrel, next to the guy’s mouth.

“God, I hope so”.

The door to room three opened. A youngish, African-American couple poked their heads out. “Hey – are you two from around here?”

“It’s a long story”, I said, thinking better of trying to explain my history. “Not really”.

“What’s with these people around this town – hell, everywhere we’ve been in the Midwest lately?” the man asked. He was an attractive, articulate fellow with an accent that bespoke plenty of higher education. “The guns, the anger about the economy, the fundamentalism, the bigotry…”

“For the first time in my life” said the woman, an equally-attractive woman, “I’m not proud to be an American”.

“Well…” I started as I unlocked the door, non-plussed and unsure of how to answer at all, much less defend a home state I barely recognized myself, “give it time. Things’ll change”.

They shut the door.

We stepped into the room. I started putting my stuff in the closet. “Jeez, they say you can never go home again, but this place just seems so wierd. Like, we stepped into a production of “Our Town” that nobody ever called “Cut” for…”

I heard the water start in the bathtub.

“But I promise, it’s not all this weird…”

I felt something brushing against neck – soft fabric. I looked down. It was Marisa’s blouse, wrapped around me from behind, pulling me backward.

“So are you gonna give me a sociology lesson?” she whispered in my ear – a phrase that I’d have never figured would sound suggestive up until then.

You live and learn.

———–

Knock knock.

“Get the door, hon”, she mumbled,half-asleep.

I pulled on a pair of running shorts and looked at the clock. 7PM, I thought. Wow.

And then who on earth would be knocking on my door here, a hundred miles from the edge of nowhere? “Just a minute” I said, as I fished my SIG P220 out of my suitcase. I quietly pulled the slide back; the .45 cartridge was seated in the chamber.

Good.

I held the pistol at the ready behind my leg as I opened the door…

…and relaxed as the familiar face glared impatiently at me.

“Добрый вечер, Михаил Павлович!”, Yevgenii Batiukh muttered through clenched teeth. A young woman – early twenty-something, Filipina in appearance, dressed stylishly and wearing very non-North-Dakotan stiletto heels, stood next to him.

“Здравствуйте, Евгений Борисович! Почему Вы здесь? Для того, что я в долгу удовольствие?”, I asked – and he really was the last person I’d expected to meet in a B’nB in a little town in North Dakota in 1999, truth be told.

“I hef bain praktising my Eenglish”, he said thickly. “Meets please my girlfrient, Marta Carlosovna Balakanang”

Magandang gabi po“, I said, nodding politely, hoping I wasn’t mangling my Tagalog too badly – it’d been years.

“Oh, Mista Berg – good evening to you, too!”, she said with a smile, in English that had only the faintest burr of a Philipino accent.

“Who’s there, hon?” Marisa asked from under the covers.

“Oh, you remember my friend, Gene the Crazy Ukrainian Enforcer? The one I told you about? He’s here with his girlfriend Marta”, I looked at Yevgenii and nodded at Marta.

“Oh!”, she answered, shaking fatigue from her voice, “cool!  Hi, Gene”, she said.  “Mitch has told me so much about you”.  She reached out from under the covers to start finding her clothes. “Gimme a minute!”

“Eez Plezha”, he responded.

“To what do I owe the honor, Yevgenii Borisovich?”

“Well, ees not oll plezhoore”, he said, lingering over each word like it was a sloppy cherry Varenikh. “Een fact, I vas soorprized to see you rezhistered here. Eez coincidence! But Mikhail…” he said, nodding conspiratorially, “Ve heff to talk”.

“Meet me at ze Better Days Bar, on Main Strit, in heff an hour”.

———-

Half an hour later, Marisa and I walked down a decrepit but well-maintained side street, as darkness gathered.

Suddenly, she pulled on my arm. “Look”, she said, sounding alarmed.

In front of a house – 210 Second Avenue – stood a cross. A man in a grease-spotted wife-beater with a holstered revolver was wrapping it with turpentine-soaked rags.

I shook my head to try to clear the vision from my mind – but it was real. I walked over to the guy.

“Sir – are you gonna burn this cross?”

“Hail, Yeeeah”, said the guy. “Gotta teach them thar furriners and japs and Ay-Rabs that we ain’t gunna surrender”. He grinned a mirthless grin.

“Mitch”, Marisa whispered, “look!”.

Next door, at 208, the neighbors – a man in a “WWJD” t-shirt, his wife in a bonnet and a peasant dress, and their kids, gamboling about in joy, were wrapping gas-soaked rags around a ten foot tall wooden Star of David.

“Wow”, I thought as we started walking down the street. “Swear, hon – I’ve never seen anything like this before. I lived here over twenty years, and…”

“Mitch!”, she said again, pointing across the street to 207 – where a hawk-faced woman in a bonnet and peasant dress wrapped a kerosene-soaked sheet around a large wooden crescent – the symbol of Islam.She noticed us, and grinned a venal, toothless grin. “Yieeew-all gunna stay fer the cross-burnin’ festival?” she said with a shrill Arklahoma drawl.

“Maybe”, I said, moving along, nodding as I grabbed Marisa’s hand.

The woman abruptly turned and drew a Colt Peacemaker from under her skirt, firing three shots into the air. Marisa flinched.

“Zebulon? Jedediah? Ezekiel! Dinnertime!”

I struggled to take it all in. The woman’s neighbors over in 205 – a paunchy, overall-clad man wearing a seed cap – was pouring a can of gasoline on a big wooden mockup of a Klansman’s hood.

“Sir”, I yelled to him from the sidewalk as we shuffled down the streeet – “you’re burning a Klan hood?”

“Outsahders is outsahders”, he muttered without looking at us as he continued working.

Marisa tugged my sleeve,and pointed to 203, where a group of drunken, mulletted, wife-beater-clad louts was putting the finishing touches on a huge wooden leprechaun, with a fierce, red, drunken, belligerent caricature of an Irish face and big hands clutching a big bottle of whiskey fabricated from a single elm tree stump. One man poured benzine on the wooden statue.

“I have to say”, Marisa nodded, “that, moral aspects aside, the woodworking is amazing“.

“Yeah”, I nodded, eyeing the huge Golden Gopher being rigged with dynamite across the street at 202.

Finally we turned onto LaMoure’s dirty, ratty main street, and walked to the Better Days bar, a little roadhouse that advertised “Eats”, “Beer” and “TV”.

A group of sullen men – teens through the sixties, mostly in flannel shirts and seed caps – sat on benches on the cracked sidewalk, mounds of crushed Shaefer cans piled up around them, as we walked past. They hushed as we got close, and eyed us wordlessly as we walked in.

The bar smelled of cigarette smoke and vomit. Two tables of fat, doughy people in seed caps and quilted jackets sat, wordlessly eyeing their beer; at another table, a man was cleaning a disassembled hunting rifle as two shot glasses of brown liquor jiggled in front of him. Behind the bar the usual assortment of trinkets, bottles and glasses clashed artlessly; a poster declared “Jesus Saves. You Spend”. A George Jones song played on a wan jukebox in the background.

As we walked to the bar, Yevgenii and Marta walked in. “Mikhail! I heff forst rount!”

He turned to the barkeep, a doughy, malevolent-looking man wearing a “Cheaper Crude or No More Food” T-shirt over a slowly-undulating paunch that almost-completely covered a holstered .38 revolver. “Two wodkas, and two glasses of vite vine!”

Wodka?”, said the barkeep, a malevolent scowl crawling across his wrinkled face. “WOD-ka?”

The bar got even quieter.

“You some kinda FAY-gut?” he said in the same Arklahoma accent that everyone else seemed to be affecting, looking at Yevgenii, whose bonhomie was rapidly bidding him au revoir – and I knew how dangerous that could be.

“Er, hey, bud – nah. He’s from…”, I thought, measuring my words, “Canada. Canadian. Hey – two Buds, and two Bud Lights for the ladies – and ya wanna get us some peanuts and chips?”

He shuffled away to fill the order. A disembodied older male voice muttered, sotto voce, in the background “This country was a lot nicer before we started tradin’ with them Ay-rabs and Wetbacks, and them and the Jieeews started runnin’ the place“.

I looked; a table full of doughy old men sat, eyeing us.

Yevgenii and I led the ladies to a table in the corner by the front; we sat with our backs to the wall.

“Mikhail Pavlovich – Ve came here to get aVAY vrum eet all”, Yevgenii started out, looking puzzled. “Vat is VIT zese peepel?”

“I don’t know. This place used to be – civil. Civilized. A typical small town, in a typical American part of the country, full of people with the same mix of human imperfections and dreams of improving themselves as every other place in the country – hell, the world“, I said, taking a drag off the Budweiser.

“Zo vot heppened?”, Yevgenii asked, focusing intently on a small group of young, wife-beater-clad toughs who’d come in the back door. “Eez like…”

“Like an Ingemah Bugman film”, Marta interjected, not touching her Bud Light.

“No”, Marisa said, her eyes lighting up with a sudden realization. “A David Lynch production”.

Damn, I thought. Maybe that was it.

“Yevgenii – I think that’s it! I think I know what’s happened! The stereotypical Arklahoma accents, the odd behavior, the sense that the whole town is keeping some deep dark secret…”

“Vot?” Yevgenii started – before the sound of breaking glass drew our attention.

Oh, crap.

One of the local toughs was sauntering over to us, a broken beer bottle in his hand. “Ah think we got oarselves a bunch of Fay-guts and Imm-uh-grunts heer”, said the man – average height, with a red mullet tamped down by a green seed cap, stocky in the way that people get when they start slinging hay bales at age eight. His two friends sauntered behind him, carrying pool cues even though the bar had no pool table. Two of the doughy men from the back table rose to join them. “Jee-zuz don’t like fay-guts and imm-uhgrunts”, he said. “I betcha y’all are Moozlems“.
“Left”, I muttered. Yevgenii nodded. “Hey, fellas”, I said. “Howzabout I get you guys a drink. On me”, I said, standing up, digging in my pocket as if for my wallet.

“We don’t want your faw…” he started, abruptly taking a swing at me. I slipped aside, turning his momentum against him and slinging him face-first into the wall behind me, as Marisa and Marta screamed and shuffled backward. I quickly twisted his arm behind his back until I heard a “snap”, and kicked him hard in the ribs to keep him down.

Yevgenii sprang like a coiled cobra at the man on the left, feinting and drawing his block away with his left hand before smashing him in the face with his Bud bottle.

Marta leapt to her feet, and snapped a pair of nunchucks from her purse, neatly smacking the third tough in the face, sending him sprawling over a bar stool.

I heard a metallic snick as I turned. One of the doughy guys who’d come up from the back table was drawing and cocking a Ruger Redhawk, lifting it toward my head, its .357 inch bore looking more like 35.7 inches from this angle…

…when the man screamed in pain and slumped forward, the pistol discharging into the floor in a geyser of sawdust and wood splinters; Marisa had kicked him in the giblets. I sprang forward, kicking him in the face, sending him sprawling backward as teeth and blood spewed from his mouth. He fell like a sack of durum to the floor. I stomped hard on his pistol hand as I drew my own piece to cover the rest of the people in the bar. Yevgenii, his own silenced Makarov drawn from under his jacket, moved silently, his eyes fierce and bright and calculating, toward the remaining table of sitting people. “No vitnesses, da?”

“No!…NYET!” I yelled. He instantly averted his pistol upward from the first man’s temple. “Vy?”

“It’s not their fault – I know why this is going on. C’mon! Get them outta here”, I motioned toward Marta and Marisa, “I’ll cover. Meet me at your car!”

Yevgenii led the way out of the bar, pistol at the ready, as I covered the bar with my SIG. When they’d left, I fished a $20 out of my pocket. “This should cover the beer, the chips and a tip”, I said as the four men groaned in pain on the floor in the otherwise silent bar. I backed out to the street, and ran toward Yevgenii’s rented Cherokee.

“Get out on the highway to the west – now!”

We drove past groups of people, slowly shambling their way out of town to the west – men in mullets and wife-beaters, women in bonnets and peasant dresses, diaperless children in greasy t-shirts trailing behind them. “I knew it!”

Yevgenii spun the wheel, and we turned onto a two-lane road across the flat prairie as the last streaks of sunlight in the west turned the sky a blood-hued purple.

“Zo – vot?” Yevgenii demanded, the adrenaline slowly subsiding.

“Mitch?” Marisa whispered, looking a little dizzy as her own adrenaline rush faded.

“There’s an old Coast Guard “Omega” navigation transmitter outside town”, I started. “It’s a huge old thing, a huge array of towers, from the sixties or seventies, designed to send a signal around the globe so ships and planes could navigate. It was so powerful it interfered with wildlife’s natural homing instincts, and could fry ducks out of the sky if they flew too near. Satellites made it obsolete, so it was decommiissioned in the early nineties. But…” I started – and saw the aircraft beacons at the top of the array of 600-foot-tall antennae, “if someone were to have taken them over, and run some sort of electromagnetic mind-control system…”

“…like ve – ze Sovietz – vur dewelopeeng”, Yevgenii interjected soberly.

“Exactly. The old “Коллективные мозга…”, I stopped and corrected myself, “‘Collective Brain’ system!”

Yevgenii’s face flashed recognition. “Da. Ze system vas zuppozed to make prrropagahnda obzoleet, by controllingk za peoplez minds by remote control…”

“Jeez”, I muttered. It was all coming together now. “The Russians’ – er, Soviets’ experiment failed because they never had the transmitter power at the right frequency to actually trigger the psychochemical reaction outside the lab. But with Omega…the transmitters have enough power at the right frequency to cover all of Middle America”. I calculated the numbers in my head. “Like, there’s enough power here to cover the whole country, from the Poconos to the Sierra Madre…”

I paused to let that sink in for a moment. “Someone is turning Middle America into a David-Lynch-style Hollywood caricature of Middle American life”.
“Ve heff to do someting”, Yevgenii muttered. Our eyes locked for a shaved moment. We both knew what that was going to have to be.

And it was gonna be ugly.

———-

We drove another few miles, past small knots of people sauntering to the west, toward the lights in the sky. Yevgenii finally doused the lights, and we whipped into a shelterbelt.

“Stay here”, I told Marta and Marisa. I thought about giving them the SIG, just in case, when Marta pulled a Smith and Wesson Model 29 – with the eleven-inch barrel – from her purse. My jaw must have dropped; Yevgenii explained “Zey ver free vit a full of gaz at ze WalMart in Wahpeton…”

We camouflaged the Cherokee with fallen branches, and then moved to the west edge of the shelter belt. There were lights on, and the Omega base complex was humming with activity.

Odd, since the base had been closed for most of a decade.

I nodded to Yevgenii, and we set out toward the cyclone fence that surrounded the complex. I hacked through both layers with my jackknife – and we were inside, moving swiftly and silently.

I heard voices. We froze and took cover behind a fold in the ground. Two men, dressed in all-black Soviet-pattern battledress with black ski masks and goggles, walked toward us – the outline of the curved “banana-clip” magazine of their AK-74s unmistakeable in the ambient light from the tower lights.

“음, 베이컨!” said the leader of the two men in a harsh, North Korean accent.

They both lit cigarettes. Perfect.

I signalled Yevgenii, who nodded curtly and took careful aim.

Silently, I slipped behind the trailing man; he’d just blown his night-vision to hell, lighting up the cigarette. Amateur flub, for a pro, I figured. Oh, well.

I slipped silently behind him, grabbed him around the head as I kicked his legs out from under him, and hacked at his neck with my jackknife. He struggled for a shaved moment, and then slumped to the ground, blood geysering and then ebbing. His leader was already splayed out on the sod, two 8mm entry wounds where the bridge of his nose had been. I nodded approvingly at Batiukh; for an older guy, he still had the eyes and the reflexes.

We grabbed the guards’ AKs and a few extra magazines, and set off toward the center of the compound, the concrete Control Bunker. Hunkered down, we alternated between creeping forward and covering each other.

We got into the shadow of a generator building – the last stop before the control bunker – and looked around, taking stock. We counted at least six more guards with rifles – and we knew there were more where they came from, noticing the two-story barracks block across the way. A couple of black Chevy Suburbans sat in front of the control block.

“Cover”, Batiukh hissed, signalling me that he was going in…

…until I grabbed him. There was a car coming. Batiukh held up, as the lights of another black Suburban bounced into view.

The truck ground to a halt in front of the control bunker. Two Koreans got out first, scanning the area. Then, two more men – middle eastern, I noticed, mildly incredulous – got out, pulling a handcuffed, middle-aged caucasian man. He looked familiar…

“Devvid Leench”, Batiukh hissed.

Damn, I thought. A bunch of North Koreans are in the middle of North Dakota, holding oddball American auteur David Lynch, of Twin Peaks, Blue Velvet and Dune fame, hostage?

I was right!

“Cover me”, I hissed at Yevgenii as the five men walked into the bunker. He switched to the AK – no time for subtlety now.

I got up, and dashed through the scattered shadows, silently approaching the entrance. As I got within ten feet, a guard came out, his rifle slung.

Sucks to be you, I thought, planting the knife squarely in the center of his throat. He slumped to the ground, and I moved into the entry tunnel; I sensed more than saw Batiukh moving up to cover behind me.

I slung the AK, and drew the SIG as I walked down the access hallway, signalling for Batiukh to make sure nobody came through the door behind me.

A sign above the hallway said “Control Room”. I silently slipped to the edge of the door, and peered around the corner. Two Korean guards stood watching the center of the room; one of the middle-eastern men held a gun on Lynch, while the other undid his handcuffs.

“So now you put Blue Velvet in the demoduplexor”, said the man with the gun, “and I will turn the mechanism on”. Stressing the last syllable of each sentence – Iranian. What the…?

And Blue Velvet...?

This was getting serious. Middle Amerrica was about thirty minutes away from morphing from hackneyed urbanite cliche to overwrought and psychodramatic.
I shifted the SIG to my left hand, and took my jackknife in the right. I silently sized up my aim, said a quick prayer, and threw it.

It stuck firmly in the back of the Iranian gunman’s head. He slumped to the floor. The Koreans hesitated for just a second, shocked. It was all I needed; I slid on my back across the linoleum into the room, double-tapping them both. They slid to the floor, a slick of gore on the wall behind them.

The final Iranian – the apparent leader – ducked behind a stack of transmitter gear. “You will never catch me,” he yelled.

“A cigarette”.

Lynch had spoken.

“Huh?” asked the Iranian, as I wondered about the same thing.

“Lush pomegranate smoke”, he said in an affected British accent.

Whaaaa?

The Iranian stepped out from behind the stack of transmitters. “What you say, it make no sense…”

I opened up with the AK, firing all thirty rounds in one long burst, just to clear the conceptual dissonance from my mind in one long cathartic release of tension and ammunition. The Iranian fell to the ground.

“I…never…understood…Blue…Vel…”, he said, before gurgling to a stop, dead.

“Gets them every time”, Lynch said with an enigmatic smile, dancing a wee jig.

I shook my head to clear yet more dissonance, and walked to a VCR player that was attached to a piece of equipment.

“It was playing “Twin Peaks” through the demoduplexor”, Lynch recited in a drab monotone. “The demoduplexor was attached to the transmitter. It was thus affecting the minds of everyone in the middle of the United States – simultaneously hypnotizing them into becoming adjuncts of my concept.” He stopped, then grinned cryptically. “Pretty cool”.

I hit the big red “Emergency Off” button – and with a clanking and rattling, the huge old transmitter shut down.

“They were summoning the locals to do their will”, Lynch said.

“That’d explain everyone that was slowly walking this way like a bunch of zombies”, I mused, riffling through a pile of documents that the Iranian had dropped.

“They should all be OK now”, Lynch said in a Hindu accent.

Yevgenii Batiukh backed into the room. “Come here and look”, he yelled, leading me to the door of the bunker.

From around the facility perimeter, rifles twinkled as the Korean guards fled under a heavy, accurate fire from the locals, who, freed from the mind-control beams, realized the danger that faced their families and their nation, drew hunting rifles from the backs of their pickups, and attacked, taking a heavy toll from the fleeing guards.

In ten minutes, it was over. The locals – shaking the last of the delirium clear from their heads – walked back home to nurse the mother of all psychic hangovers. Marisa, Marta, Yevgenii, Micheal Lynch and I stood in the shadow of the Omega transmitter.

“I, and all of American civilization, owes you my and our lives, respectively” Lynch sang to the tune of a New Bedford whaler’s chanty. “Please accept this as a token of my regard”.

He handed me a Raggedy Ann doll. It had had a pencil stuck through the back of its head. In place of blood was yellow Play-Doh.

“Um – thanks”. I turned to Yevgenii. “I’m trying to figure this out. This operation had Korean muscle and Iranian brains – but most of these documents are in…”

I riffled through a small stack of them, “…Hungarian”.

“Odd”, Yevgenii said. “What are they about?”

“Not sure”, I said – my Hungarian was rusty. “Something about ‘buying mind control on the cheap’? I have no idea”.

In the distance, a siren wailed – probably the county sheriff coming to investigate. Time to get out of here. I pocketed the documents, and we got into the Jeep and drove back to the hotel.

The proprietors met us at the door. “Know what happened to that there nice couple from Chicago?” the woman asked. “They seem to have taken off. Ya, sure – you bet”.

She said it in that “Fargo” accent. The Arklahoma accents were gone! My home is full of real people instead of Hollywood cliches again!

“Crap”, I said. “So the only idea those two will ever have about life in Middle America is that everyone acts like extras in a David Lynch movie, like they’re rotely reciting characterizations from Twin Peaks. Nothing but alarmist, slanderous cliches.” I shook my head. “What a shame”.

“Da”, Yevgenii said. “Good ting he’s not in government!”

I smiled. “Yeah. Whew!”

UPDATE: I’m informed that video shows I was a Human Factors guy at a local network engineering company in 1999. I misspoke – and I am sorry that you simpletons are all bitter about it.

Somewhere Near Phuket, 1991

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

The tang of cold on my cheek told me it was chilly in the apartment. But under the big quilt, it was still warm. I opened my eyes, rubbed a little sleep out with my left hand, and lightly blew a few strands of her black hair out of my face. I wrapped my hand around her waist as she slept, savoring a few more warm minutes before I began the longest three days of my life so far.

The alarm clock read 5AM; a half hour until it was supposed to ring, and I was already burning daylight. I slowly pulled my right arm from under her head, trying not to disturb her. I had…well, we both had big days coming up.

Slowly – like defusing a land mine – I drew my arm away, slowly lowering her head onto the pillow. No time like the present. I counted to three…

…as she reached behind her and grabbed my arm. I wasn’t going anywhere.

———-

The alarm clock read 6:30. I tilted my head. “Hon, I gotta meet someone. I got a job today”.

She pouted theatrically as she pulled the covers back over her shoulders. “Oh, I know. I gotta get up too…”. She didn’t move.

I stuck my foot out from under the quilt. I took a deep breath, and drawing on a reserve of strength I never knew I had, flipped the quilt off and jumped up. Then it was down on the floor, where I started my morning regimen with my first 100 pushups.

“So…what…choo…got…going…on…?” I panted between reps.

“I got a screen test”, she said, gathering the quilt tighter around her shoulders. “With Joe Pesci”.

“Wow…the guy…from…the Godfather?” I wheezed as I ground through the forties.

“Er…naw. But close. Anyway, I’m not sure what I’m going to use for my audition…”

86…87…She needs a break, I thought. She hadn’t had a good gig since she’d been dropped from the cast of some Lisa Bonet vehicle a few years earlier.

“You’ll…do…fine…”, I said, finishing off the last few pushups one-handed.
“So what you got?” she asked, grinning wistfully as I finished and started putting on my stuff for my morning six mile run.

“Talking with a guy about a job. Never met him.”

“What kind of job?”

“Probably over in Asia. The guy I’m meeting handles mostly Asia stuff, so that’s kinda how they roll”.

“It’s gonna be nasty, isn’t it?” she asked ruefully, rolling onto her stomach and turning to look at me from under the quilt, her soft brown eyes looking just a little moist.

“I doubt it”, I lied. “I’m due for a milk run. Hey – what should I wear?”

She thought for a second. “Imagine you’re a terrorist. You’re sneaking along. You get thirsty. You spot a little brook. You put your little terrorist lips down to the cool, clear water – an’ BAM. A f*ckin’ bullet rips off part of your head. Your brains are lying on the ground in little bloody pieces. Now I ask ya, would you give a f*ck what the guy who shot you was wearing?”

I looked at her, mildly stunned.

She grinned and rolled her eyes.

“Hon? Remember that bit for that audition, OK?”

We laughed as we kissed goodbye.

———-

She’d left for her screen test when I got back from running. I showered up and walked over to the little Greek cafe down on the corner. Mrs. Kiriakos was at the counter, as usual.

“Καλημερα, Μιτσελ!”, she greeted me as she did every morning, with a broad grin and a cup of Καφες ready to go.

“Καλημερα, κ. Κυριακο! Τι ειναι καλο για το πρωινο σημερα?”, I said, feeling that rumbling I usually got in my stomach this time of the morning. Of course, the answer was rarely in doubt…wait for it…

“Χαζο αγορι. Θα παρετε μια μπακλαβα για εσας”. The baklava here was to kill for. And, indeed, I very nearly had – well, not for the baklava, exactly, per se, but there’d been that unfortunate armed robber who’d tried to make off with Mr. Kiriakos’ till a few months back. He’d left the hospital for jail a few weeks later – which was why the normally-taciturn Mrs. Kiriakos was so friendly, and why I usually got a couple baklava a week for free.

I took my seat, and opened up the Times. Economy was so-so; rumblings from the Gulf. I was starting to dig into the latest…

…when my contact walked in. Nigel Worcesterhampton-Bloodnok, a dissipate leaf clinging to a far twig on an obscure branch of British royalty, was the associate case officer for MI7 in New York. Slight yet doughy, with thinning blond hair combed to a perfect peak over his pale face, usually flushed from too much clubbing and scotch and too little nutrition, framed by a foppish ascot. He’d joined the Service after the requisite stints at Cambridge and Eton. Paying for his appetite for all things Dominican – cigars, women and gambling – reportedly led him into some petty corruption when his Service salary and his bankrupt family’s resources gave out, but on the job he was all business.

“Good morning” he grunted, looking over a racing form wrapped around a manila envelope. “I hear Dominican Senorita is running at Monmouth”

“Yes”, I responded, rolling my eyes as I gave the response, “I’m thinking she’s worth $500 to win”.

Nigel sat across the table from me. “Excellent. Here are your arrangements”, he said, leaving the folder on the table and looking, theatrically, at his watch. “Oh, goodness, look at the time! I have an appointment in Manhattan” he said, getting up and making a rushed exit. Nigel was known for neither social skills nor fieldcraft. “Cheers”.

“See ya, Nigel”.

I opened the envelope. A British Airways ticket to Bankok, a Royal Thai flight to the “island paradise” of Phuket, an envelope with $20,000 Swiss Francs, a mission brief, and and an Irish passport for my assumed identity, a Hibernian woodworking machinery exporter named…

…”Nigel, you bastard“, I thought, pondering a week of traveling as “Paddy O’McFitzPatrick”. Nigel’s sense of humor was as odd as his taste in suits.

I shook my head, and turned to the mission brief. This was going to be an ugly one.
———-

I got on the train to Kennedy, on the 747 to Bangkok, and then a Thai puddlejumper to Phuket, the island paradise where the Indian Ocean and South China Sea collide.

I climbed down the ladder to the tarmac, observing the phalanxes of private jets and luxury charters, bearing tony European vacationers, Japanese sex tourists and American slackers to the warm beaches, warmer hookers, and low prices, respectively.

I would have time for almost none of the above. I climbed into the back of a Jeepney, paid the driver half a franc, and started toward Hotel row. I mentally reviewed my long-destroyed mission brief for the twentieth time.

Subject AUDACIOUS is in possession of materials that could be highly embarassing to a prominent politician and potential world leader.

Secure these materials by any means necessary. While lethal force is authorized, as usual, MI7 does not admit to your existence.

I wondered – who could this “potential leader” be? And why would British Meta-Intelligence (MI7) be involved?

Well, that question was way above my pay grade, I thought as a balmy breeze stirred the palms as I checked into my hotel, along the waterfront. MI7 wasn’t paying me contractor rates to ask questions.

Other than “how do I do this?”, I thought as I took the key from the “concierge”, a club-footed Hindu who I’m pretty sure worked for the DGSE.

“Your bag, Mr. O’McFitzPatrick”, asked the bellhop.

———-

First things first. I needed to find some tools of the trade – the kind of thing you can’t carry on international flights. And while there were any number of people in Phuket who could fix me up, there was only one that was so desperate that he’d do anything to help.

With the ongoing collapse of the USSR, the local KGB station chief, Yuri Stukachev, was at serious risk of having his decade-long idyll disrupted by the most mundane of causes – budget cuts. He’d managed to wangle being stationed in Phuket in ’80, at the height of the Cold War, when the SoPac Rim was still bleeding from the dominoes that fell in the seventies. But Phuket had been a bucolic backwater then, and was even more so, now; bucolic, and gorgeous, with the sort of lifestyle that mid-level KGB bureaucrats in the dying days of the Soviet Union couldn’t get for love, money or violence; indulgences that would have made his Leningrad cohorts drool with envy, Stukachev could get for a pittance, even on his rapidly-deflating KGB salary, to say nothing of his side trades in drugs, racketeering and prostitution.

So Stukachev was taking bids on everything.

I stopped by “Phuket Tall and Big”, a clothing store that was the front for the KGB station. A slinky Chinese-Thai girl with lively, darting eyes greeted me from behind the cash register.

“是老闆嗎?” I asked. The girl nodded, and motioned for me to follow her into the back room.

As I stepped through the door, someone grabbed me from behind and jacked me up against the wall, hard. I didn’t resist; this was about as pro forma as it got.

“Добрый день, Евгений Борисович”, I grunted as casually as one can while being jammed up against a wall and frisked for weapons. “Вы бы, по крайней мере купить ужин для меня, в первую очередь?”

Yevgenii Borisovich Batiukh, the Sevastopol-born “muscle” of the operation, wasn’t amused. He never was. He finshed frisking me, and spun me around.

“Каков Ваш бизнес с товарищ Стукачев?”, he grunted, sizing me up through the squinting slits of his eyelids.

“Я передаю грязных капиталистической “lucre”, I said, grinning at my stolid audience. ” что вы хотите остаться в Пхукете. Право? ”

His left eyebrow raised just a millimeter – and it was all the “tell” I needed. Of course he wanted to stay in Phuket, with its soft tropical breezes and its cheap Korean vodka and cheaper Malaysian floozies; the alternative, with the wheels quickly flying off the KGB, was a posting to Chelyabinsk or some such hellhole.

I had him.

“Следуй за мной”, he muttered, motioning toward the door to the back room.

———-

It took me five minutes of one-sided conversation with Stukachev – sort of a Slavic Don Knotts – to get what I needed; a Czech CZ85 9mm pistol, carefully sanitized, with no serial numbers. And, more importantly, a name.

Joshua Micah Grombacher.

In exchange, I gave him $500 in mixed bills, and a piece of legal paper on which I’d scrawled “I will be sending Yuri Stukachev the secrets to America’s defense systems, within the next two weeks. I will convey these secrets ONLY to Mister Stukachev, and ONLY if he’s in Phuket, where he can be reached. Or the Riviera. Sincerely, President George H.W. Bush”.

Stukachev told me Grombacher – a UC Berkeley dropout with contacts in a number of transnational leftist organizations – was staying in a flat above a brothel in the town’s red-light district. He gave me an address, which I memorized.

“Благодарим вас, господа”, I said, pocketing the pistol and nodding to Stukachev. I offered Batiukh a “high-five” on the way out. He ignored it with a steely glare.

I bought a couple of cuban cigars from a shop next door as I planned the rest of the evening.

———-

I waited at a bar until after dark, having a few cocktails and delightful conversation with a Japanese lingerie model who was vacationing in the area before finishing her PhD in Comparitive Literature; her opinions on James Joyce were as smoothly serpentine as her figure – before taking my leave to get on with the evening’s work. I found a jeepney and rode to a corner a few blocks from Grombacher’s flat. The evening was warm, but not unpleasant, stirred by a breeze coming from the ocean; the streets were crowded with streetwalkers, pushers, grifters, Thai sailors and the occasional tourist; this wasn’t really the tourist-friendly part of town.

There.

I walked in front of the brothel, nodding at the Mamasan as I walked past, “Enter Sandman” by Metallica wafting out through the window over the sound of the girls and their johns negotiating the evening’s contracts, and slipped into the alley. There was a rickety, rotting wooden stairway that led up to a veranda attached to a second-story flat. I pulled the pistol from my pocket and racked a round, holding it under my un-tucked, billowing Hawaiian shirt as I silently padded up the stairway.

I got to the top, and heard voices…

…and pop – pop. It sounded just like…

…a silenced pistol, I thought as a rush of adrenaline poured into my system.

I leaped up the last two stairs and through the open door, scanning the corners of the room, pistol at the ready.

Two slackers, wearing tie-died tank tops, cargo shorts and sandals, looked at me. One, with dreadlocks, giggled. The other, with longish, dirty blond hair, smiled.

“Dude”.

“Josh Grombacher?” I said, backing to the corner of the room.

“Dude!” he responded.

“And you?”, I asked the guy in the dreadlocks.

“Dude. Derek Redlock”.

You don’t come across that every day, I thought. “I’m looking for some documents…”

“…oh, yeah, Dude”, said Grombacher. “I figured somebody would come by looking for them. The ones from Barry. Dude”, he said, “You can have ’em. They’ve been a pain in the ash since I got ’em”.

“Dude”, Redlock giggled, “you said ash. I need to torch up…hey, Dude”, he said, getting vaguely serious, “why the gun? You harshed my mellow”.

“Oh, that”, I said, pocketing the pistol. “I heard that popping sound, and thought it sounded like a silenced .22 pistol, used for assassinations”. I walked to the end-table near the couch, and picked up a Glass-Pak muffler that’d been converted into a bong, turning it over in my hand, marveling at the creativity…
“Oh, no – dude, we were doing Amyl poppers…”

pop…pop…pop…

“…that was the sound of a silenced .22″, he said, slumping to the floor.

The door splintered, and two stocky, muscular Asian men in gray suits burst through. Without thinking, I spun around and smashed the first one in the face with the Glass-Pak bong, knocking him reeling into the second man, sending his pistol clattering across the floor. The second stepped sideways, and leveled a silenced pistol at me – but he was too close; I knocked the silencer aside with my forearm, and the shot went wild to my left, scorching my hands with gunpowder residue but missing me otherwise. I brought my knee up into his crotch, and head-butted him as he collapsed with a cry of pain; I stripped the pistol from his hand as he fell, and dispatched him as he reeled to the floor looking in vain for his footing. I turned and finished #2 in mid-teeth-spitting.

“Dude”, Grombacher exclaimed, wide-eyed; he’d not had time to move from his spot on the couch.

“Get up, man. We gotta get outta here”, I hissed, willing myself not to panic, grabbing for the unruly stack of documents, scanning them quickly.

It looked like a questionnaire with some hand-written notes, and it seemed – innocuous? – as I scanned random notes:

I believe handguns should be confiscated from citizens…

I think abortion should not only be legal, but a civil sacrament…

…paying taxes makes you a better person…
…Sincerely, Barry…” I couldn’t make out the last name. O’Donnell?

I’ll finish it later, I thought.

“Look, Josh, those two guys are gonna have a backup team. We gotta move”.

“Dude”, he said, nodding enthusastic agreement.

I tossed the .22 and pulled out the CZ85 – no need to be subtle. “Any other way out of here?”

“Dude”, he said sadly.

I looked in the bedroom as I stuffed the documents in my pocket. “C’mon”.

We slipped through the window, and ran along the roof of the bordello for about fifteen feet…

SHKANGGGGGGG

A bullet ricocheted off a metal exhaust pipe. I ducked and rolled…

…and saw the silhouettes of two men running behind us, and a bright muzzle flash with a loud report. Grombacher fell; “Dude!” he yelled in alarm and pain.

I turned and fired four quick shots, mainly to get the two charging men to reconsider. They took cover. I rolled behind a chimney. I quickly stuffed the documents into a crack in the brick.

“우리에게 문서, 그리고 우리가 걸어 드리죠”, one of them yelled in a clipped, guttural North Korean accent.

Yeah, right, I thought. I’ve heard that one before. I was in deep kimchi; those bastards never let anyone go.

“제 생각 넘겨줄 수없습니다 – 저는 교도소 시설이 아니합니다.”, I yelled with more bravado than I felt.

One of the men was starting to maneuver to outflank me. I had to move…

I rolled out from behind the chimney, toward a half-wall, as the other man, carrying the unmistakable outline of an AK47, ran to new cover about ten feet away.

All the opening I need, I thought, squeezing off two shots as I rolled; both rounds caught him in the forehead. Instant bulgogi, I thought grimly as I rolled behind the brick half-wall.

The other man panicked, and started backing toward the stairs, spraying shots at where I had been with a Russian-made AKR submachine gun, trying to keep my head down as he backed toward the window. I lined up a shot. One was all it took.

I slowly got up and walked over to Grombacher.

“duuuuude”, he muttered weakly. He needed medical…

…I heard a phump, and everything went black.

———-

Stars circled my field of vision. I shook my head; focus! Focus! I commanded myself. My head felt like it was going to split open.

I was lying on the roof. Gradually my eyes focused on the silhouette…

…of a woman, with long, white hair, wearing a knee-length leather trenchcoat.

“We meet again, Mista Bug”, she hissed.

Crap, I thought. Li Chuk Soon, AKA “The Black Widow”, North Korea’s most notorious “fixer”, I thought, remembering a long-forgotten briefing.

“It’s BERg, you illiterate swine”, I said.

“Where the documents?”, she said, reaching into her pocket.

“Why should you care?” I groaned, looking for an option, finding none.

She drew a nasty-looking corkscrew-shaped device from her pocket, as she covered me with her pistol. “Because these documents will enable us to play hob with your presidential election, someday, and will make Dear Leader the master of the whole wide world…”

She stopped.

“And…?”, I asked, trying to remember my old torture-resistance training, and coming up with nothing…

Her eyes dilated, and a drop of blood appeared at the corner of her mouth. After a few seconds, her knees buckled, and she fell to the ground. As she slumped forward, I saw where something – a hollowpoint pistol round, from the looks of it – had hit her in the back of the head, which was a raw salad of blood and tissue…

…and looked up, gradually focusing on the figure of Yevgenii Batiuk, a silenced Heckler and Koch automatic trained where Soon’s head had been.

“И сейчас, вы находитесь в МОЕЙ долга!”, he said, emotionless.

Yep, Yevgenii, I certainly am.

“I guess so”, I muttered, trying to clear my head, feeling sticky blood on the back of my scalp where Soon had sucker-kicked me. “How can I…”, I started, before remembering who I was talking too. “Итак, как же я буду выплачивать долг?”

And for the first time ever, Batiukh grinned. “У вас есть первый сезон “заместителей мир” по Бетамакс? В ублюдки в Москве не будет посылать их к нам.”

I rolled my eyes. “да”. I think I could find a copy.

“Не делайте мне подождать, Михаил Павлович”, he said, slipping into the darkness.

I got up, cleared my head, and walked over to the chink in the mortar where I’d stashed the documents. As the sounds of the street wafted up to me, I pulled out a cigarette lighter and lit “Barry’s” questionnaire on fire.

I remembered the Cuban cigar from earlier. I pulled it out of my pocket and lit it with the flames, taking a couple of luxurious puffs as I watched the papers burn. As they finished, I tossed the glowing flimsy embers on the roof, and went over to try to get Grombacher to the hospital.

———-

UPDATE: Damn. I miswrote again. The “questionnaire” wasn’t filled out until 1996, on the occasional of Barrack “Barry” Obama‘s first run for the Illinois Legislature. Not 1991.

UPDATE 2: I erred further; video shows that I was really working as a nightclub DJ in the fall of 1991. I wasn’t in Thailand, and I apparently had nothing to do with Marisa Tomei’s audition for “My Cousin Vinny”.

It was an honest mistake.

UPDATE 3: Hey, I think Joshua Micah Grombacher is some kind of senior policy analyst for Obama’s campaign, anyway. Honest. I do.

Somewhere in Bosnia, 1996

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

I crawled through the mud, a G3K carbine in one hand, a handful of slimy, suspect topsoil in the other, as the rain poured down.  The corner of a spare magazine cut into my hipbone as I slithered over a small clump of rocks, and back into a small coulee that led me up the slimy, festering hillside.

The ridge above the airfield at Tuzla was dotted with trees, most of them blasted bare by years of shelling and mortar fire from the Bosnian and Serb sides alike. With only scrubby, ugly shrubs to hold the soil in place, the hillside was slowly eroding down into the valley below.  It was as ugly a place as I’d seen – recently.

BANG.  A loud rifle report split the rain-drenched quiet ahead of me.  “Back on the ball, Mitch“. 

I looked down the ridge to the tarmac 1000 meters away, and my mission was re-clarified; the C130 transport plane, with the crowd of troops and civilians huddled behind a Humvee behind it, pinned down by sniper fire.  Fire from the snipers I was hunting.

Down on the tarmac, I saw a man in camouflage make a run for a dugout by the runway; a couple of SVD sniper rifles, unseen in the scrub not far in front of me, barked almost simultaneously, again and again. The man zigzagged between the geysers of mud that the 7.62mm shots spewed into the air as he dove, head-first, into a slit trench.  He made it, miraculously.

“This is Stain Six…” an out-of-breath-sounding voice yelled over the radio, “Vulture and Vulture Chick are pinned down on the tarmac. We need to get the snipers…”

The snipers’ rifles cracked again, and the voice cut off a second later.  Stain Six – the Secret Service mission leader – was pinned down hard.

I had to find the snipers, and I had to find ’em fast. I was hoping my backup would get there soon.

“Golfball Two One” crackled over the radio, in a thick scandinavian accent – Gohlfboll Turr Vonn. It was Sergeant Janssen, leader of the Danish squad that was my backup, “this is Golfball Tree Two. Ve’re pinned down. Ve can’t help“.

Crap. My backup was backed up. I was on my own.

I crawled through a shallow depression behind the wreckage of an old Serb T-55 tank whose turret had blown off and sat on its roof twenty feet away – and saw my target. Two Serb snipers, they and their long, menacing-looking rifles swathed in ghillie netting, taking their aim. Another man, serving as their spotter, peered into binoculars, muttering in guttural, clipped Serb.

One of them fired a shot, the report echoing across the valley as I used the noise to cover my movement.  I slowly crawled around the rear bogey of the wrecked tank, sizing up the Serb position. Something wasn’t..quite…right…the hair on the back of my neck stood up.

I looked around, my senses heightened by enough adrenaline to restart Keith Richards’ heart…

there. In the woods – another Serb, covering the snipers’ rear, his AK47 at the ready, turning…

toward me.

Our eyes locked. For a split second, we hesitated. I was quicker; my first round caught his AK47 right in the receiver, sending shards of stock and metal slicing into him, slamming his rifle into his stomach like Mike Tyson in his prime. He grunted in pain as he fell behind a log, his rifle twisted and useless.

The snipers and spotter turned, alarmed. The spotter lifted a WWII-vintage MP40 “Burp Gun” toward me as I spun; instinctively, I double-tapped him with two more rounds. He dropped out of sight over the lip of the hill, his peaked Serb army-pattern cap flipping crazily through the air, as I turned to the sniper on the right. Two more shots finished that business. The other sniper, overcome with panic as he tried to turn his bulky SVD toward me, rolled over the lip of the hill, chased by two more rounds that dug up big divots where his chest had been a thousandth of a second earlier, rolling out of sight.  I dove for the lip of the hill, to make sure he didn’t come back up, when every muscle from my butt to my neck clenched tight at the jarring racket of Sergeant Janssen’s squad’s MG3 machine gun, sounding like a jackhammer set to “puree”. They’d got him.

And suddenly, the hill was secure.

I ducked back behind the wrecked tank and grabbed my radio. “Golfball Two One…”, I started…

…and caught the end of another transmission. “…Jaguars eencomeeng; ten secohnds. Ten secohnds. Ten secohnds” a voice in a French accent repeated, seeming oddly disconnected.

Crap. They called in air support!

Out of the corner of my eye I saw the glint off the canopy of the French Jaguar fighter-bomber, and a yellow flash…

…which I didn’t have time to process. I leaped instinctively toward the first hole I could see, diving into a shell crater just as the air around me was rent by the impact of a dozen 2.75 inch rockets, their detonations joining together like ripping metal, thousands of steel fragments lacing the air above my boots in a maelstrom of angry metal that drowned out the French jet roaring overhead.

I poked my rifle out of the crater as the smoke roiled around me. Under cover of the smoke, the radio squawked “Vulture and Vulture Chick are safe. Good job, all”.

Sergeant Janssen“, I thought, peering over the edge of the crater and down the hill, teeth clenched in fear…

…which relaxed when I saw Sergeant Janssen and his eight squaddies; they’d ducked, too. Janssen waved. “Indskrænkette fransker!” he yelled.

I slithered down the slope to his position. “Er der en anden skrive i Fransker?” The squaddies laughed – as much from my atrocious Danish as from the release of tension – and, after they shook off the concussion and the close call, formed up to continue their patrol up the ridge.

Me? I walked back to the base. I safed my rifle as I got to the cut through the barbed wire around the Ukrainian position, waving to the Ukranian UN troops that guarded the perimeter.  One of the privates manning a machine-gun gave me a thumbs-up; they’d been taking fire from the snipers, too.  I returned the gesture as I walked toward the cluster of huts that was the Ukranian enclave, on my way back to the US area.

Their company sergeant-major, Yevgenii Batiukh, a crusty fortysomething who was hard-boiled enough a soldier to make R. Lee Ermey’s “Gunnery Sergeant Hartman” in Full Metal Jacket look like Andy Dick, who’d spent more time in Afghanistan than some Afghans I’d known, stepped out from behind a quonset hut, holding a bottle.

“Доброе утро, Михаил Павлович”, he grunted, his never-smiling face nodding approval.

” Добрbl Джин, сержант батюх”, I nodded back.  The faint outline of a grin creased his leathery jawline.

“В снайпера исчезла, и вашим “первой леди” была в состоянии ходить из самолета в аэропорт!”, he said, with the lift of an eyebrow and a quizzical, ironic smirk that seemed incongruous on his hawk-like sergeant-major face.  Batiukh poured shots of slivovitz into two tin, Russian-pattern canteen cups, and handed me one.  “Как ЧТО происходит?”, he said, eyeing the G3 that hung from its jungle sling around my shoulder.

I grinned back as I slammed the shot. “Я не знаю! Действительно!”.

“поп!”, he said, drawing his finger across his throat, smiling fully this time.

We shared a laugh, and I left him, walking back to my hooch, a converted Serb bureaucrat’s office, looking forward to clearing a couple days’ buildup of mud and worse off of me.

I unlocked and opened the door…and stopped short. Something wasn’t as I left it.  My hand instinctively reached toward my pistol, and I checked out the corners of the room.

I relaxed second later, as I noticed a silk blouse lying on the floor.

I cocked an eyebrow, and walked toward the back room. A pair of jeans hung from the doorknob. I opened the door.

“Hi, Hon”, Marisa said seductively, covers pulled up around her neck. “How’s your day?”

“Rough one”, I grinned, feeling not so rough at all.

She took a bottle of Croatian merlot, poured a glass, and dipped her finger in, licking it suggestively as she set it back on the chair. “I heard the First Lady and Chelsea had a hard time getting out of their plane today”.

I grinned. “Yeah, I heard that, too. Hey, aren’t you supposed to be filming?”, I said as I cleared my rifle’s action and reached to turn down the light.

“I had a day off.  And it looks like you’ve been a…dirty boy…”

UPDATE AND CLARIFICATION: I’m informed that video footage shows I was actually working as a technical writer at at a retail shelf space brokering company during Hillary and Chelsea’s trip to Tuzla, was not in fact a freelance “minder”, did not interact with the Ukranian or Danish armies – indeed, have never been to Bosnia – and had no involvement with Ms. Tomei.

I guess I miswrote…

My bad.

The Case Of The Diced, Spiced Ham

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

LAW AND ORDER
SPECIAL VICTIMS UNIT
EPISODE (redacted)

SCENE 1:  SMALL GREENWICH VILLAGE APARTMENT, SPATTERED WITH BLOOD AND GORE. 

A MAN IS IMPALED TO THE WALL, APPROX. FIVE FEET OFF THE FLOOR, BY A LONG PIECE OF METAL DRIVEN LONGITUDINALLY THROUGH THE LENGTH OF HIS BODY. 

DR. HUANG AND MEDICAL EXAMINER WARNER ARE ON SCENE WITH THREE CRIME SCENE (CSU) OFFICERS AND DETECITIVES MUNCH AND TUTUOLA.  DETECTIVES STABLER AND BENSON ARRIVE ON THE SCENE. 

STABLER (HOLDING HANKIE OVER FACE):  Wow.  What’s up?

MUNCH:  It’s a bad one.  Vic was shot 24 times with a .22 pistol.  We’ve got casings…well, all over the place.

BENSON:  How’d the killer get in?

CSU1:  Killer blew the lock off its hinges with three shots from a .44 Magnum.  We have the slugs here (points), there and there.  Vic was killed over there (pointing to desk with computer); see the blood pooled on the floor?

STABLER:  Yep.  Good job.  So he blows the door open with a big gun, but he kills the vic with a tiny little popgun?

TUTUOLA:  Look at this;  CSU found the gun’s magazine. 

BENSON:  (Examines metal object).  It holds eight rounds.

MUNCH: The perp would have had to have fired eight shots, reloaded, fired eight more, and reloaded again

STABLER:  Wierd.  (Ponders).  Wonder why, when he had the .44 handy?

HUANG:  He wanted to cause pain.  A single .22 hit hardly ever kills; it takes a hit to the medulla or heart, pretty much.

WARNER:   Look at this – all 24 shots hit the stomach.  All those nerve endings – it had to be incredibly painful.

BENSON:  That had to hurt!

TUTUOLA: Word.

HUANG:  What we have here is a deliberate attempt to cause intense pain. 

STABLER:  OK.  Perp comes in, confronts vic, fires eight shots, reloads, fires eight shots, reloads, and fires eight more times.  And then…

MUNCH:  Then, the perp dragged the body over there…

 BENSON:  Blood smears on the floor in a trail from the desk to the wall…

MUNCH: …took this (points at victim) nine-foot-long piece of rebar and used this mallet to hammer it down the vic’s mouth, all the way through and out the…

BENSON:  Spare me that detail, thanks…

MUNCH:  …and then nail the whole thing to the big beam along the wall, five feet up.

STABLER:  Like a pig on a spit.

BENSON:  A monster…

WARNER:  Judging by the lividity and the blood spattering on the floor below the body, I’d say he was alive while the perp put in the rebar.

MUNCH:  Ow.

CAPTAIN CRAGEN WALKS IN. 

CRAGEN:  Whadda we got?

STABLER: A real sick puppy!

CRAGEN:  I need a collar on this one.  The media’s camping out on the commissioner’s front door demanding answers.  Canvas the neighbors?

TUTUOLA: Neighbors heard nothin’.

BENSON:  What motive could someone have to kill someone like…this?

CSU OFFICER 1 (sitting at computer along the wall opposite the body):  Detectives?  Take a look at this.

DETECTIVES, CRAGEN AND HUANG GATHER AROUND, LOOKING OVER CSU1’s SHOULDER

CSU OFFICER 1:  It looks like our victim wrote spam and trojan horses for a Russo-Nigerian online “marketing” company.

BENSON:  (Reading) Get…A…$500,000…mortgage…for…$25 a month…

BENSON, STABLER, CRAGEN, MUNCH, TUTUOLA, HUANG and WARNER TRADE GLANCES.

STABLER:  I call it a suicide.

BENSON:  Me too.

CSU OFFICERS ABRUPTLY PACK UP THEIR GEAR. 

CRAGEN:  Bagels, anyone?  I’m buying.

AND…SCENE.

News Conference In The Dark

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

The media has convened in the press room at Shot In The Dark world HQ.

The reporters are taking their seats. The buzz of anticipation settles into a tense quiet as Mr. Berg steps to the podium.

Let’s join the questioning:

———-

Reporter A (Minnesota Public Radio): Mr. Berg? It’s been noted that you’ve achieved the one thing that was standing between you and the putative “big time” – you’ve actually gotten your own stalker. Would you care to comment on this? And I have a followup

Mitch Berg: Well, on the one hand, yes – it would seem that I do have a stalker. Actually, a stalker and a half – I’ve noticed the the “Lloydletta” blog names me something like 11 times in the past two weeks.

[Assembled reporters laugh politely, if uneasily]

But in fact, yes – it would seem that former porn-mag temp Ken “Avidor” Weiner has fallen into that role, using one of his twenty blogs and, apparently, his video camera and mad editing skeelz to draw the attention of his adoring public…

[more laughter]

…yes, adoring public to me. So – “good” news, I have a stalker. The bad news? He’s a piss-poor one!

Reporter A (Minnesota Public Radio): So to follow up – do you have any comment for the record?

Mitch Berg: Well, my good friend Joe Tucci – whom Mr. Weiner managed to “out” last week as the real name behind “Learned Foot”, and can I say “hey, great research skeelz, that took you almost exactly three years!’ – put it well, I think:

All Weiner knows how to do is steal off others’ websites, indulge his (erroneous) stereotypes and piddle his crap all over the internet (notice how I didn’t mention Photoshop) . Why does…

What the hell?

I feel like such a looser loser. Is this how stalkers feel all the time?

I don’t know that anyone could put it better!

Reporter B (WCCO-TV): Er, Mr. Berg? Do you mind if we call you “Mitch?”

Mitch Berg: Sure. Or “Mister Berg” if you’re nasty.

Reporter B (WCCO-TV): Mr. Berg, bloggers affiliated with your “stalker” Mr. Avidor…

Mitch Berg: …er, Miss? That’s “Mister Weiner”. “Avidor” was the name of an actual artist. It’d be like asking y’all to call me “Mister Hendrix” or “Mister Miller” after spending twenty years making a mockery of my real name. Anyway, carry on.

Reporter B (WCCO-TV): …sorry. Anyway, they have made a small cottage industry of making up nicknames for you. You’re referred to sometimes as “Blogger Berg”…

Mitch Berg: …that would, in fact, be gramatically and factually correct. I am a blogger, and my name is Berg! One adjective, one noun.

Reporter B (WCCO-TV): …and “Gasbag of the Midway”.

Mitch Berg: Given that I share this distict with Ellen Anderson and Jay Benanav, I must say that’s kind of an honor! Also…improbable.

Reporter B (WCCO-TV): So do any of those names…I don’t know, faze you in any way?

Mitch Berg: I grew up a tall, scrawny, greasy-haired, uncoordinated, athletically-inept cello-playing brainiac and a Bears fan. I got called worse than that around the Thanksgiving dinner table.

[laughter]

Next question?

Reporter C (Dump Bachmann): Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit?

Mitch Berg: I’m actually on record opposing it.

Reporter C (Dump Bachmann): But why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why, why why, Blogger Berg?

Mitch Berg: I’ve never supported it.

Reporter C (Dump Bachmann): But why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why, why why, oh Gasbag?

Mitch Berg: Nope. Never.

Reporter C (Dump Bachmann): But why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit? Why are you on record in support of Personal Rapid Transit…

[Reporter is tasered. By fellow reporters. His carried – with difficulty – from the hall.]

Mitch Berg: Next question?

Reporter D (Sixty Minutes): You make light of this purportered “stalker”…

Mitch Berg: …well, yeah, I do. This guy doesn’t have the balls to really do the job. He’s a gutless little moral, social and intellectual gimp who skulks around and makes photoshop “cartoons” and logically-and-factually-void proclamations because he can’t hold his own in a face to face…anything. Debate, discussion, fight, whatever. He’s nothing. Zero. I’ve wiped smarter opponents and bigger threats off the sole of my shoe walking through Mears Park.

Reporter E (Star/Tribune): Do you have any comment about Scott Johnson writing for True North along with Tom Swift, as our man “Avidor” reported in “Buzz.mn”?

Mitch Berg:and Black Ink, and the Daily Kos, and the Daily Mole?

Reporter E (Star/Tribune): Er…yes.

Mitch Berg: OK. Three parts to my response.

  1. Scott and Tom are both friends of mine. Ken “Avidor” Weiner isn’t fit to carry either of their gig bags, as a writer or a person.
  2. Weiner’s big “point” against Tom is that he’s “nasty” – that he hits, he claims, below the belt. It’s crap, of course. But, um, so? Welcome to the blogosphere! It’s not like Weiner is a model of detached restraint! His beef is the same one Salieri had with Mozart; he realizes he’s not as good as either – or any – of the people he stalks.
  3. Eric Black? Steve Perry? You share a local left-wing blogosphere with Ken “Avidor” Weiner and Kevin McKay and Mark “Revolutionary Gonads” Gisleson. By the standard that the Daily Mole and Black Ink are endorsing, you are guiltyi by association. Defend yourselves.

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Mitch Berg: Sure, in the same way that a three-year-old “hit a nerve” when she colors on the walls!

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Mitch Berg: [Thinks] Or maybe in the same way as Andy Milonakis…no, not quite that bad.

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Mitch Berg: Nope.

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Mitch Berg: Nope-er.

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Mitch Berg: Still no.

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Mitch Berg: I refer you to my friend John McGinley, who said it best.

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Mitch Berg: [yawns]

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Reporter F (Lloydletta): Oooh! It looks like Ken Avidor has hit a nerve!

Mitch Berg: I will give my next response in sign language:

 

 

Reporter G (Ha’aretz): You’ve been very critical of the local leftymedia…
Mitch Berg: Look, when a hack like Karl Bremer can get coverage in the Daily Mole and Black Ink, for a baldfaced “guilt by association” smear, and get it with breathless credulity to boot, it should make people ask questions.

Last question…

Reporter H (E News): Any truth to the bit we read in the Strib’s Blog House that…

Mitch Berg: Probably not.

Thanks!

[Pandemonium as reporters race for their phones]

UPDATE:  Learned Foot is doing a post-conference poll on the issue at hand.

And then, as he says, let’s finish this.

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