Thursday, October 3, 2019

Story 309: Horse Actors on Break


            (In a stable: the bar is a trough)
            Horse 1: (Trots over to the Bartender) Hey, what’s on tap today?
            Bartender: The usual water.
            Horse 1: What about grub?
            Bartender: Well, we’ve got oats… and that’s about it.
            Horse 1: I’ll have some of those, please.
           Bartender: (Uses hoof to depress a tap, releasing oats down a chute into a bucket) So, how was it out in the field today?
            Horse 1: (While devouring oats) Slurp – snort – neigh – don’t get me started!
            Bartender: All right.
            Horse 1: (Swallows first course) OK, it went like this –
            Bartender: Oh, so you are getting started, then?
         Horse 1: They’re filming some sort of retro piece of what they think happened way-back-whenever, where we have to wear these old saddles and they use spurs to make us start moving –
            Bartender: (Shudders) Spurs.
         Horse 1: Yeah, I mean, you guys already have me choking on a piece of skin from my neighbors and you’re yanking my head around until it almost falls off, you also need to jab me in the sides with knives to tell me where you want to go?  I get the picture.
            Bartender: Oh yes, what they do for “historical accuracy” and to be “period appropriate.”
          Horse 1: (Slurps some water from the trough as Horses 2 and 3 trot over) Yeah, and if that wasn’t enough, I had a double role today as “Wild Mustang #4,” which was another fun romp.
            Bartender: (While serving Horses 2 and 3) Why, what did that entail?
            Horse 1: Oh, not much – my direction was just to act “free.”
            Horse 2: (Head and ears perk up) Sorry, what was that word you just used?
            Horse 1: What, free?
            (The three customers and the Bartender laugh uproariously)
           Horse 3: Those two-legged freaks really have some nerve.  So’d you at least make a run for it?
          Horse 1: Nah, how could I?  Guards were all around – they just kept signaling at me to basically run in a circle until one of them “heroically” lassoed me to fall hard on the ground, thereby breaking my wild spirit.
            Horse 2: Oh come on, you’re a horse, you love to run, don’t we treat you so well?
            Horse 1: You keep telling yourself that.
            Horse 3: Did you bite `em when they took the lasso off?
            Horse 1: (Sighs wistfully) No, but I left them a nice mess to clean up afterward.
            Bartender: Sweet.  Make them work for it, I always say.
          Horse 1: I think they’ll be wrapping up this bit of old timey dress-up tomorrow, so I might get a little break before the next go-around.  What about you two?
            Horse 2: Ugh, they have us reenacting the last really big kerfuffle they had where they used us to run straight into their projectiles.  My great-great-great-great-great-grandmare was in that one, you know.
            Horse 3: Really?
            Horse 2: Well, we think she was – she was taken away and never heard from again, so it was either the front lines or the glue factory.  At least this version has her going down fighting.
            Horse 1: Is the reenactment dangerous, then?
            Horse 3: Depends on how you define “danger.”  They’re not shooting projectiles to kill us this time, but with all the forced falls, eardrum-shattering explosions, and horrific fires flaring up all around us, it’s a toss-up whether a broken leg, flying object, or heart attack’ll do us in first.
            Horse 2: My guess is a broken leg, but I think a heart attack would be the easiest.
            Horse 1: Unbelievable.
          Horse 2: Still, suppose it could always be worse.  Some of these weirdos do try to fix the broken leg now, instead of just being all “Too bad for you, it’s better this way,” and projectile right to the head.
            Horse 1: I guess.
            Horse 2: And I have to admit, my current rider’s not that bad.
            Horse 3: Shut your mouth – he’s a rider.
          Horse 2: Believe me, I’ve had some beauts.  The last one on that fake farm we were sent to tried to make me go across that fake lake, even when his trainer was yelling at him to stop, just because he wanted to prance around in front of some filly.  We almost both went under, but guess who would have been the one who drowned, what with all that unnecessary equipment strapped to their body?  Not him, let me tell you.
            Horse 3: Oh yeah, I remember when that happened.  That was a close one.
           Horse 2: Yeah, so at least this one sneaks me sugar cubes and brushes my hair at the end of the day and pats my head soothingly every time he makes me fall down next to exploding ordinance.
            Horse 1:  Aw.  That’s almost sweet.
            Horse 2: Yeah, it’s slightly less of an ordeal.
        Horse 1: Well, I guess we shouldn’t complain too much – I have three cousins who’re racehorses.
            (The others shudder)
            Bartender: How are they holding up?
            Horse 1: Let me put it this way: I used to have eight cousins who’re racehorses.
            Horse 3: Ouch.  Maybe their luck’ll hold out and they can retire to have some foals.
            Horse 1: Foals who’ll be trapped in the same lives.
            Horse 3: Good point.
           Horse 2: Guess there’s nothing for it but to enjoy the small perks that come our way and hope we can grow old enough to relax on a real farm.
            Horse 3: Isn’t a farm just as bad?
            Horse 2: Nah, by the time we get there we’ll be too old for them to make us do anything really strenuous, and from what I’ve heard, at least there everyone works for their daily oats, know-what-I-mean?
            Horse 1: (Gasps) You mean the two-legs work with the horses?
            Horse 2: Out in the fields and everything.
            Horse 3: OK, then we’ll let those guys think they treat us so well.

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Story 308: Tour Guide Tribulations


            (Outside Vatican City)
          Tour Guide: All right, everyone stay together and try not to lose me in the daily crowd of millions.  You all have your radios?
            Tourists: Check!
            Tourist 1: No.
            Tour Guide: Where is the one my assistant gave you?
            Tourist 1: I don’t know.
           Tour Guide: …OK, go grab another one and hold on tight: none of you will be able to hear a word I’m saying without it.
            Tourists: Check!
            Tour Guide: Right.  Now keep an eye out for my banner.  (Raises aloft a golf club with a full-size Italian flag attached to it).  Memorize this – you don’t want to start following another group and wind up in St. Peter’s Basilica’s crypt, now do you?
            Tourist 2: [Gasps] The crypt was an option?!
            Tour Guide: Not in this package – and away we go!
            (The group huddles together through the innumerable crowds outside the mile-high walls and goes through security to enter the foreign country of Vatican City)
            Tourist 3: Oh no, you didn’t tell us we needed to bring our passports!
            Tour Guide: You don’t need them to get in.
            Tourist 3: But we’re technically entering an independent nation!
            Tour Guide: Just keep moving – you’re holding up the line.
          (The group huddles together through the innumerable crowds to enter the Vatican Museums)
            Tour Guide: And in this section of artwork dating back centuries, here are some pagan statues of heathens.
            Tourist 4: Such heresy in the Holy See!  And all that unseemly marble flesh!
            Tour Guide: I know, isn’t it awesome?
         (The group huddles together through the innumerable crowds in the rest of the Museums)
            Tour Guide: Wait a minute – did we lose somebody back there?
            Tourist 5: (Two rooms back) Wait for meeee….
            Tour Guide: Everybody else stay here – I have never lost a paying customer in the 23 years I’ve done this tour, and I’ll be blazed if I break my record now.  (Swims upstream to drag Tourist 5 back to the rest of the group)  Pick a buddy and stay with them.
            Tourist 5: But I came by myself.
            Tour Guide: Until the tour ends, we’re all family now!
        (The group huddles together through the innumerable crowds outside the Sistine Chapel)
          Tour Guide: So, only two rules: no photos, and for the love of all that is literally holy, shut the… heaven up in there.
            Tourist 6: But what if – ?
            Tour Guide: No photos and no talking!  Why can no one ever just say “OK” and do it?!
            (The group huddles together through the innumerable crowds in the Sistine Chapel)
            Overhead Speaker: (In every language) SHUT THE ---- UP!
          Tourists: I’m hungry – I’m tired – I got a good picture of the ceiling – My feet hurt – Where’s the Pope? – Where’s our guide? – What are they yelling about? – I can’t hear you –
          Tour Guide: (In head) Forgive them, for they know not what they do.  Except they probably do and just don’t care, but I’m being generous.
            (The group huddles together through the innumerable crowds in St. Peter’s Basilica)
           Tour Guide: Admire the artwork, admire the holiness, admire the wedding that’s going on in that side chapel over there –
            Tourist 7: Whoa, how much did that cost?
           Tour Guide: I’m afraid to even think about it.  (Looks around) For crying out loud, did we lose somebody again?!
            Tourist 5: (Trapped by at the high altar) Wait for meeee….
           Tour Guide: Nobody move!  I am not tripping at the finish line here!  (Swims upstream to drag Tourist 5 back to the rest of the group) You’re lucky I’m never seeing you ever again after this.
            (The group huddles together through the innumerable crowds in St. Peter’s Square)
           Tour Guide: (Facing the group) All right, take in the view.  (They admire the view)  OK, tour’s over, you can disperse now.
          Tourist 8: (Handing over a tip) You’re the best tour guide we’ve ever had, and we’ve been to every country on this continent!
           Tour Guide: Thank you; it’s good you did the morning one and not my 3:00 – that’s when this place really gets crowded.

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Story 307: Probiotic vs. Antibiotic


           (Scene: A battlefield, temporarily inactive.  There is a large tent for the commanding officer, who is inside writing a letter)
            General Antibiotic: “Dear Host, I hope this missive finds you well, or at the very least, on the mend.  I wish to report that our first round of troops met with limited success: we cleared the outer perimeter of the wound and have made several inroads, but if we are going to have any sort of lasting impact then I am afraid another round is needed, and perhaps the dosage increased to twice daily.  Then, I am confident, we will have the proper numbers to sufficiently overwhelm the destructive invaders and KILL THEM ALL.  On a side note, there are a several rabble-rousers in their midst who seem to have clashed with us in other venues and are now unable to be destroyed; however, by the time we have completed our mission there will be too few of them to cause any significant trouble, I should think.  To be on the safe side, though, best keep an eye on the state of your digestive tract going forward, if you take my meaning.  Affectionately Yours, General Antibiotic.”
            Soldier: (Enters the tent) Sir!  Someone here to see you!
            General Antibiotic: One of the enemy?
            Soldier: Not exactly – says they’re practically a resident.
            General Antibiotic: All right, send `em in.
            (Soldier holds open a tent flap to let in a disheveled visitor)
            General Antibiotic: Welcome!  Have a seat.  (They both sit)  And, you are…?
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Lactobacillus Acidophilus.
            General Antibiotic: Of course, of course, how could I have forgotten?
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: You know me?
         General Antibiotic: Not personally, but I know that your kind and the Host have a lovely mutually beneficial living arrangement.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: That we do.
            General Antibiotic: So.  What brings on this visit?
          Lactobacillus Acidophilus: First of all, I have to say you and your regiment certainly achieve results.  I mean, when you come in, you really come in, if you know what I mean – take no prisoners, wipe them all out, etc.  Very efficient.
          General Antibiotic: Why, thank you – we take great pride in our work.  Leave no organism alive, and we stick to that motto, yes indeedy.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Yes, well, the flip side of that work ethic is a bit of a problem.
          General Antibiotic: How so?  We’re designed to wipe them all out, so we wipe them all out, end of story.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Exactly: the “all” part of that sentence.  (General Antibiotic stares blankly)  You’re killing all of us, too, dude!
            General Antibiotic: Well, we don’t discriminate.
          Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Then how do you expect the Host to survive after you’ve completed your carnage?  We’re the ones keeping the really bad guys at bay; once you’ve finished demolishing us and go wherever it is you disintegrate to, those jerks are gonna move right in!  En masse!
           General Antibiotic: I must say, you didn’t do such a great job keeping out this current lot we’re taking care of now, you know.
          Lactobacillus Acidophilus: That’s not our department!  We’re maintenance; this was a failure in wound repair!
        General Antibiotic: Look, my figurative hands are tied.  We’re not from nature, and our specifications are not advanced enough to target individual types of your kind and let the rest of you be, so right now it’s either deal with the unfortunate collateral damage or find yourself a new Host as this one destroys itself trying to destroy the enemy.
          Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Can’t you just, I don’t know, not kill as many of us each time?
          General Antibiotic: Quite impossible: we strive for 100% with each and every foray.  We know we will not achieve 100%, but as a matter of professional pride, strive we must.  We usually manage to hit 99%.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Yeah, 99% of us, too!  What are we supposed to do?!
            General Antibiotic: That’s not our department.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Clearly!  Your department is death!
          General Antibiotic: Exactly.  We’re doing what you folks obviously couldn’t; it’s regrettable that these scenarios are always all-or-nothing, but the best I can advise is that you send a request to the Host for backup in the form of yogurt, soy milk, or pills like the ones that transported my regiment.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Send a request?  The Host doesn’t listen to us – they barely know we exist!  I can’t even get the nervous system to relay a message; every time I do it just crashes up against the cerebrum and dissipates!
            General Antibiotic: Oh.  Then who I have been sending reports to this whole time?
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Yourself, apparently!
            General Antibiotic: (Shakes self out of reverie) No matter; they’ll figure it out.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Figure what out?
            General Antibiotic: My request for more troops.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: More?!
         General Antibiotic: Oh yes, this is just the beginning – it’s hard to tell at the start of any campaign how many waves of destruction will be needed, but it seems now that at least one more week’s onslaught should just about finish these hooligans off.  Although, I suspect it might be another two weeks, since they’re being especially stubborn.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: And also finish us off!  (Stands) It seems my kind and I have no choice but to join the enemy and fight with them against you!
          General Antibiotic: (Starts writing another letter) I wouldn’t advise it: you’ll be destroyed either way, so you’re better off focusing your remaining energies on keeping the Host alive until you’re obliterated.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: You –
          General Antibiotic: (Looks up again) Ooh, here’s an idea: why not make yourself and your crew resistant to us, like some of those nasties we’ve seen out there – that way at least some of you just might make it to the end, yes?
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Oh, make ourselves antibiotic-resistant just like that, huh?
          General Antibiotic: Uh-huh – who knows, you might even be so already, seeing as you’re still here and I haven’t killed you yet.
            Lactobacillus Acidophilus: Haven’t killed – ?
        General Antibiotic: (Hears skirmishing outside and heads for the tent entrance to listen) Speaking of which, you’d best be moving along now – sounds like the games are starting up again and we wouldn’t want to be caught in the crossfire, would we?
          Lactobacillus Acidophilus: (Opens the tent flaps and sees a battle raging outside; while running away) I hate you so muuuuuuuuuuccccchhhhh….
            General Antibiotic: (Smiles before plunging into the fracas) I love a job well done.