The lighthouse bathroom was the only one available for miles at Cheney Park. Not a good night to have overstuffed intestines…and an even worse night to be trapped in the men’s room with Johnny Lockwood. The black hoodie-wearing youngster sat in the middle stall with his knees to his chest and amber-colored magic swirling in his hands. His wide grin counted as a bold attempt to stifle his laughter, a low bar to clear for a man with an immature mind. “This is going to be good…this is going to be so good…” A tiny chuckle escaped his throat, but he quickly suppressed it when he heard the steel door burst open and business loafers tapping across the tile floor.
Judging from what Johnny could see underneath his stall door, the thick legs filling out business slacks suggested that whoever burst into the bathroom had a lot of…ammunition to work with. He put his non-magic-wielding hand over his mouth to keep his giggles in check. The corpulent corporate rushed into the stall next to Johnny and pulled his pants around his ankles long before the door could lock. Johnny’s giggles were laced with spitting noises as he saw a yellow stain in the front of the man’s white briefs.
The scatomancer went to work right away, forming symbols and gestures with his hands to cast his first spell. On cue, the stranger’s bowl movements sounded like a bomb going off, the splatter of toilet water suggesting the same. The man’s moaning didn’t deter Johnny from casting another spell, this time shooting feces from his pudgy cheeks like a fire hose. The poor bastard’s grunts and groans sounded more like a dying opera singer performing his magnum opus. Johnny held his aching ribs while struggling to keep his laughs under control.
For his final trick, Johnny pointed his fingers upwards and trembled as the amber magic did its work. The man screamed and hollered as he tried to give birth to a rock-hard wrecking ball, causing little droplets of blood to tap the floor. “Get out of my ass!” he shouted, causing Johnny’s laughter to make him lose control of the spell. The intestinal boulder collapsed into the toilet and completely destroyed it, spreading muddy water all over the floor and moistening its sticky surface. The man wiped his ass with toilet paper, but not without crying out like a torture rack victim. He didn’t even stop to wash his hands. He got out of there as fast as his hulking body could take him.
Johnny howled and hooted with laughter as he exited his own stall, holding his spine the entire time. “Ouch! Ouch! Oh my god, that was gold! Holy shit!” Even after seeing his scatomancy teacher standing across the bathroom with his arms folded in disgust, the hee-haws never stopped. They slowed down, but without making a complete stop. “Owen, did you see that? I got him good! Come on, man, laugh!”
Owen Murphy, a dark-haired middle-aged gentleman with a cloak covering his body (but thankfully not touching the floor) spat back at his protégé. “Multiple generations of potent magic has all come to this, it seems. The lost art of scatomancy has been reduced to a goddamn JOKE!”
Johnny’s laughter abated and his smile sagged into disappointment. “Joke? You mean it wasn’t a joke before? I’m literally a shit wizard! Most wizards like to shoot lightning bolts and fireballs from their fingertips. I control shit!”
Owen slapped Johnny across the face and killed the last remnants of laughter remaining. “You do more than just control shit. You have the power of life and death in your hands. Your little middle school prank could have killed him! Losing that much weight within seconds could have dehydrated him to death!”
Johnny waved him off. “Don’t worry, Master Murphy, he’ll gain all the weight back after he stuffs down a couple more chocolate-covered pork roasts.”
“So not only is lethal diarrhea funny to you, but also obesity. You truly have the mind of a toddler, Johnny. If your father didn’t have so many goddamn connections, you would have been fucked off a long time ago!”
With wide eyes and a hunched spine, Johnny said, “Dude! I’m a shit wizard! You taught me how to manipulate shit! Those jokes pretty much write themselves! So an army of dragons comes breathing down our necks. So what are we supposed to do about it with all of this cosmic knowledge we have? Do we make the dragons shit themselves to death? Oh, that’ll go over like a fart in church! See what I did there?”
Owen death gripped Johnny’s shoulders and made him hiss in pain. The master’s face oozed with anger, seriousness, and a little bit of psychopathy. In a gravelly whisper that could force giants to quiver in fear, he said, “I don’t have time to re-teach you the applications of scatomancy. You’ve had years to process it in your head. It’s more than just shit magic, Johnny. It’s biology. It’s pathology. It’s a pathway to information we wouldn’t otherwise have. So excuse me if I don’t share your immature sense of humor over magic that shouldn’t be toyed with!” Owen gave an extra tight squeeze and Johnny yelped.
He swatted his master’s hands away. “Alright, jeez, you don’t have to bite my head off! I’m sorry, okay! I won’t do it again! Like you said, I’ve had years to process this.” Owen’s mask of rage softened. “But then again…Fudge Tunnel McGee had years to process his string cheese and hotdogs and look how that turned out. Phew! Smells like chemical warfare in here!” Owen face-palmed. “Hey, there’s another useful application for shit magic, I mean, scatomancy: chemical weaponry! More powerful than a nuclear bomb and more radiation cancer! Huh? Yeah!”
Still with his face in his hands, Owen said, “I have lost all respect for you, Johnny. You could have been the chosen one of our sacred order. You could have lived up to your potential as the greatest wizard of your generation. All that time teaching you…it went to waste.”
“You’re damn right it went to waste! It’s all over the goddamn floor!”
“Goodbye, Johnny. I never want to see you again. If your father gets nepotistic on me, I’ll be sure to tell him that you’re a bigger piece of shit than what came out of…no, I’m not giving you comic fodder. You don’t deserve to laugh. I’d tell you to give up magic and get a job making pizzas at a gas station, but…”
“But my hands are too dirty for the job?”
Owen sighed, tucked his chin in disillusionment, and trudged out of the bathroom, dragging his wizard’s slippers across the murky floor. Johnny shrugged his shoulders before Owen poked his head in again. “Oh, and by the way…that gentleman you just pranked? He’s on the Board of Magic Education. His name is Bill Grass. If you want to laugh about how his last name rhymes with a certain expletive, be sure to tell him that to his face.” Owen slammed the door behind him.
“What does he mean by that?”
Somebody behind Johnny cleared his throat and the magician got a lump in his as he slowly turned around to face him. There he was: Chairman Bill Grass, complete with hands on his wide hips and a gorgon death stare on his bearded face. Needless to say, he wasn’t in the mood for comedy.
“Hey, Chairman…” Johnny looked down as he twiddled his fingers and thumbs. “How’s it going?” Bill tapped his foot with impatience. “Eh, I already know how it’s going, if you know what I mean.” Johnny placed his hands over his own mouth, as if trying to put the joke back where he got it from.
“You like jokes, Mr. Lockwood? You like making people laugh? Here, let me help you out with that.” Bill scooped Johnny off the ground, the young wizard begging and pleading to be put down. And so Bill did as he body slammed his attacker onto the scatomantic sludge. Johnny’s back and ribs pulsated with pain as he struggled to take even the simplest of breaths. He wouldn’t have wanted those breaths anyways since they all tasted and smelled like an intestinal plutonium rod.
“Go ahead, Johnny. Get up! Leave the bathroom! I dare you! You’ve got an entire student body gathered outside. You want people to not be so sensitive and have a sense of humor? Well, they’ll be laughing at you for years to come, my friend. Enjoy the attention! You’ll never shake it off again. Oops! I said shake it off in a men’s bathroom. Silly me!” Bill horse-laughed as he exited the bathroom, leaving Johnny in a painful heap on the ground.
Johnny had the choice to punch up with his sense of humor rather than punch down. He could have made something of himself. After that body slam by Chairman Grass, he’ll be the stuff of legend for as long as he lives, but not in the way that Owen Murphy had envisioned for him. Johnny rolled over onto his knees and pounded the ground in frustration, shouting a few curses for good measure. The splash of the toilet water got into his mouth and he immediately puked his guts out all over the floor, becoming an even bigger legend in the process. The best he could have done was laugh with his contemporaries, but his ribs and spine were too sore for that. In a way, his bones were one in the same with his spirit: broken down and never to be fixed again. The only question of the evening was…who’s laughing now?
Showing posts with label Feces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Feces. Show all posts
Saturday, October 3, 2020
The Scatomancer
Labels:
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Thursday, September 12, 2019
Characters Going to the Bathroom
***CHARACTERS GOING TO THE BATHROOM***
When I was little enough to think that piss and shit were
funny, I watched movies and TV shows with one burning question in mind: “Why
don’t these characters ever go to the bathroom?” Or a more appropriate question
for my age group would have been, “Why don’t these characters ever make pee-pee
and doo-doo?” This question would continue to burn like an asshole after eating
too many spicy wings, something I have too much experience with. It’s true,
though, even after all these years of maturing (somewhat): characters never
seem to have to go to the bathroom even after eating questionable food. You
know why? Because nobody wants to see it, that’s why!
It’s like George Carlin once said: “I’ve never really
understood it nor have I really cared for it.”
“I’m going to the bathroom to take a shit.”
“NEVER MIND! Do what you have to do in the bathroom and
leave me out of it! And don’t describe it when you come back!”
“Boy, you should have seen it…”
“NEVER MIND!”
“It set off the smoke alarm.”
“NEVER MIND!”
If a character is going to make pee-pee and doo-doo, there
better be a plot-related reason for it. Sure, constantly visiting the john
would make for realistic storytelling, but not necessarily good storytelling.
For instance, let’s say in my rewritten novel Beautiful Monster, Shelly had Windham shackled to her
bed and suddenly had the urge to take a wee-wee tinkle. Let’s say she drank too
many of her signature milkshakes, without the sedative drugs, of course. How
exactly would her urinary needs be met in a way that moves the plot along
quicker than her digestive system moves things along? Let’s say she relieves
herself over Windham ’s
face like a Russian prostitute. Does this help the story? No, it doesn’t. Does
it turn the reader off and not take Shelly seriously as a femme fatale?
Absolutely!
I can only think of a handful of times where bathroom trips
helped advance the story along without being disgusting as fuck (most of the
time). Quentin Tarantino used bathroom trips as a plot device for Pulp Fiction
at least three different times. Vincent had to go to the bathroom when he took
Mia Wallace home, leaving her all alone to OD. Had he not gone to the bathroom,
the overdosing could have been prevented and therefore, there’d be no infamous
scene where Vincent stabs Mia in the chest with an adrenaline boost. Vincent
also happens to be on the toilet when Butch goes back to his apartment to get
his father’s watch. Had Vincent not been in the bathroom, he would have killed
Butch and there’d be no infamous dungeon scene later on. And finally, Vincent goes
to the bathroom during the restaurant robbery scene. Had he stayed at his
table, he would have thwarted the robbery and Jules wouldn’t have his come to
Jesus moment of clarity.
Another example of bathroom plot devices being used to full
effect comes from Tales From the Hood. No, I’m not referring to any scene where
Crazy K shits himself on the spinning table, because that never happened. I’m
talking about the first story, which deals with racist cops. One of the cops
urinates on a civil rights activist’s grave. Had he not done that, the zombie
wouldn’t have risen from the grave to rip the cop in half and therefore,
there’d be no comeuppance for the rest of the cops.
In short, the whole reason why you never see characters
going to the bathroom at inconvenient times is because nobody wants to see it.
Nobody wants to see Gimley from Lord of the Rings taking a massive dump nor do
they want to smell it. Nobody wants to see WWE wrestlers have accidents in the
ring, which has happened before, regrettably. Stone Cold Steve Austin once shit
his trunks while getting body slammed by Yokozuna in a match in South Africa .
Good thing his trunks were black.
Are you sick and tired of all of this middle school toilet
humor? If so, you’ve just confirmed your own reason why you don’t want to see
toilet breaks in movies and TV shows unless they serve a bigger purpose. Rarely
does it serve that bigger purpose, though. If bathroom breaks were as random and
haphazard as they were in real life, it would border on Deus Ex Machina
storytelling and that’s a big no-no. Suppose Darth Vader had food poisoning at
Taco Bell right before his light saber fight with Luke Skywalker in The Empire
Strikes Back. If Vader went to the bathroom, Luke could get an easy kill and
wouldn’t lose his hand nor learn that Vader is his father.
I feel disgusted for having written this blog entry, but
it’s a topic that I’m sure was on everybody’s mind at some point in life,
whether in middle school or adulthood. We’ve all thought it, but we’ve never
actually dug deeper into the question. Maybe it’s best that we haven’t. Maybe
this controversy should be put to bed once and for all. I’m Garrison Kelly!
Until next time, try to enjoy the daylight!
***SONG DIALOGUE OF THE DAY***
NURSE: Excuse me, doctor? Do you have a moment?
DOCTOR: A moment? What’s the question?
NURSE: More like a situation. A gentleman in exam three.
DOCTOR: What’s the problem?
NURSE: That is the problem: we’re not sure.
DOCTOR: Do you have the chart?
NURSE: Right here.
DOCTOR: Hmm…not much here, is there.
NURSE: No, doctor. No obvious physical trauma and vitals are
stable.
DOCTOR: A name?
NURSE: No, sir.
DOCTOR: Did somebody drop him off? Maybe we can speak to
them. Let’s get some background on this fellow.
NURSE: No ID. Nothing. He won’t speak to anyone.
DOCTOR: Well, let’s go and say hello.
PATIENT:…
DOCTOR: Good morning, I’m Doctor Lawson. How are you today?
PATIENT:…
DOCTOR: How are you today?
PATIENT:…
DOCTOR: Look son, you’re in a safe place. We want to help
you in whatever way we can, but you need to talk to us. We can’t help you
otherwise. So what happened? Tell me everything.
-“Lost Keys (Blame Hofmann)” by Tool-
Labels:
10000 Days,
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Vincent Vega
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