Showing posts with label Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiction. Show all posts

Monday, September 18, 2023

Karl's Dilemma

Forewarned Is Forearmed
By Rish Outfield
A True Story

Karl Galen didn't believe in premonitions, although his mother had once had a dream that Mitt Romney would be elected president and overcome a vampire insurgence.  But today, right before leaving for work, he had a strange and sudden urge to go to his underwear drawer and open it.

Karl squinted at the bueruaeueo, wondering why he was looking at it, since he was already dressed and two minutes late for work.  But he had a feeling that he was forgetting something, so he crossed back through the room, opened the drawer, and looked inside.  There were several pairs of underwear, as well as an errant sock.  But nothing more.

Even so, Karl picked up the first boxer shorts on the pile and gripped them in his hand . . . as though they held significance.  "But what?" he heard himself say.

The answer was not forthcoming.  It was just a striped pair of underwear, one he'd had for a couple of years.  Nothing special.

"I don't have time for this."  Twice he had talked to himself today, which was not his habit (though, of course, neither was feeling like he was missing something vitally important about a pair of shorts).  But he couldn't put the underwear back in the drawer, even though his brain told his hand to do so.

He needed the underwear.  For some reason.

"Alright, alright," he said, thinking aloud for the third of four times that day.  And he closed the drawer, and headed out of his room, through his apartment, and out the door, the extra pair of underwear still in hand.

He drove to work, and made pretty good time, the lights seemingly working with him for a change.  At the one light he missed, at the corner where the Der Weinerschnitzel faced the First Communion/QuinciƱera dress shop, he looked over at the truck's passenger seat, and the underwear that still sat there.  It was strange, but he still felt like it needed to be there.

He got to his job on time, which was nice, and drove around to the main office trailer to start work and find out today's assignment.  On his way in, he glanced back at the extra boxer shorts there on the seat, and grabbed them out of the truck, just in case someone came by and noticed him and, I dunno, made fun of them or something.  After clocking in, he stuck the underwear in his half-sized work locker.

JonJon, his boss, told him to go over to the site on Sica and Nicolas, where they were building a Target (one that had been scheduled to open almost six months ago and was still at least two months from finished).  He'd have to inspect all the ceiling tiles, which had been installed over the last week, making sure they were all there, all secured, and all undamaged.

It turned out that two of them were missing, in the far corner of the employee restroom, and he'd had to physically accompany the junior workman who'd marked it off as done from location to location to make sure it was finished.  "You hear that?" the workman asked, as he was coming down the ladder.

"Hear what?" Karl asked, though he'd been a little distracted by his stomach gurgling to listen for anything out of the ordinary. 

"I think one of the pipes might be backed up," the kid said.  "It was a sloshy water sound."

"Are you able to check on that yourself?"

"Not my department," said the kid.  But hey, the ceiling tiles had been his department, and look how well that had been done.

"But you think that a pipe was--" Karl began, and then his stomach made a wet, ominous rumble.  "Oh."

"Huh.  It was you, not a pipe," the workman said, rather obviously.

"Right," Karl said, trying to see the humor in it.

"But I guess that's kind of like a backed-up pipe, isn't it?"

"I guess so," Karl said, and signed the inspection certificate, tearing off the top sheet and holding it out to the kid.

"Oh no, you're supposed to give this to my supervisor, not me," said the workman, who'd wasted an hour of Karl's day by not having the keys to get into the trailer where the ceiling tiles were stored, despite having driven over there for that exact purpose.

"And where can I find him?"

"Her.  It's the twenty-twenties."

Karl thought that, if it truly were the 2020s, the operative pronoun would be They/Them, but didn't say it out loud.  "Okay, where can I find her?"

"She's probably with the forklift guys.  She likes to yell at them."

"Can you find out?  You have a walkie talkie," Karl said, though that should have been obvious.  It's how the workman had been called to accompany Karl on this irritating little errand in the first place.

"I turned it off," said the kid.

Karl was able to control himself enough not to yell at the guy to turn it back on and help him do his job.  "Could you find out where she is, please?"

She turned out to be outside of the building, on the other side, which Karl only found out after trying the wrong side first.  She was indeed shouting at the forklift driver, but shouting at him to go faster, since she was timing him in a race from the loading ramp to the fence.  She seemed irritated at the interruption, but was happy to have the inspection passed.  "Now, why couldn't you have this yesterday?" she asked, smirking.

"I don't know, were those last two restroom tiles done yesterday?"

She gave him a scowl and told him to have a nice day, smartass.  Karl walked to his truck, got inside, and started back toward the office, making sure he had the other two copies--both signed and stamped--that proved the inspection was done.  And then his stomach made that sound again.

He didn't feel sick, and he hadn't had lunch yet, so nothing he'd eaten had disagreed with him, but that sound was a scary one, like the growl of an angry dog, or a rumbling cloud before a baseball game.

He was back on the road and headed back when his stomach suddenly clenched up.  His body announced that he had to go to the bathroom . . . and then some.

He found it difficult to keep driving--he felt like a stick of dynamite, like in a Western movie, one with a long, long fuse . . . which had been lit.  

Karl had been in this situation a time or two before, though usually when he was at home.  He had to get to a bathroom soon, maybe within the next two or three minutes.  If not, he would be in the most awful kind of trouble.

But wait.  There was a Walgreens right at the end of Nicolas Avenue.  He'd used the ATM a month or so previously.  It was right up the road, only two blocks, three blocks at the most.  He could make it.

The lights, this time, were not with Karl.  His stomach made that ghastly, storm-threatening sound again, and he felt sweat appearing on his brow and at the back of his neck.  But there was the Walgreens, right there on the next block, and a car was pulling out of the spot right across from the doors.

He took the turn a little too fast as he pulled from the street to the parking lot, the truck thumping onto the corner of the curb, which did his overworked bowels no favors.  He made it to the spot and shifted into Park just as his stomach made a new sound, accompanied by an ugly, unbearable heave.  Shame and anger--in equal parts--flooded through Karl as his hands, on autopilot, undid his seatbelt to get out of the truck.

There was the building with the public restroom in front of him, so close he could touch it.  But he hadn't made it.

This was what his premonition had been about this morning.  But the extra pair of shorts he'd been so wise to bring along today were sitting in his locker at work.  "Oh no," he thought aloud.

the end

Sunday, April 25, 2021

My Story "Troubled Child" On Journey Into...

So, a year back, Marshal Latham held a story contest on his Journey Into... podcast, and I sent him a story called "Troubled Child."  Now, somehow, it's been presented as one of the winners on his show.  Wish the story were as good as the song, kids.*

So, a married couple discover that their baby daughter is drawn to unhappiness, and seems to draw it into herself, like food or something.

The madman Marshal has once again produced it with full-cast, including a real childe to voice the child in the story.  Check it out HERE.

*By the way, not one of Journey's best.

Monday, July 13, 2020

Video - "Rest Stop"

I had been talking to Big about doing a couple of video readings of my stories, maybe for a Dunesteef episode, so I dug out two--one I could do myself and one that we could do together.

The first time I went up to the family cabin this year, I sat down next to the pile of the last of the winter snow (except it ended up snowing again the next week and the pile got way bigger) and did this reading of my short story "Rest Stop."  Of course, my intention was to film the whole thing, rather than only a couple of minutes, but my phone is consistent, if not reliable.



It was a learning experience:
1.  The wind affects a phone way more than a microphone.
2.  Next time (if there is one), I'll have a phone with a lot more recording time. 
3.  And hey, try not to sit down in the snow for a half an hour.

Sunday, May 26, 2019

Rish Outcast 140: Closet Case

In this episode, I share my short story "Closet Case," and ponder its worth.


It's another of those stories I wrote for an online contest . . . another contest I did not win.

But let's ponder it together, huh?



Hey there, why don't you download the episode by Right-Clicking HERE?

Hey there again, why don't you support me on Patreon HERE?

Logo by Gino "The Mollusk" Moretto.

Please note, Episode 141 (the next show) is one of those episodes that only the Patreon supporters get.  It's me and Big Anklevich discovering what, exactly, happens in Vegas . . .

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Rish Outcast 111: Grandpa's Prize

In an extremely noisy environment, I present a story from the Nineties about a little boy and his ailing grandfather. I talk about it being dated (and the ubiquity of cellphones), but it's up to you whether it actually is.


I tried to record this one at the lake again, and ended up getting turned away and rained on, but I hope you like it anyway.



Download the episode by Right-Clicking HERE.

Support me on Patreon HERE.

Logo by Gino "The Chimpanzee" Moretto

Sunday, March 04, 2018

It's Oscar Night(!)


"Hey, I sure appreciate y'all letting me come over and watch with you," my new coworker Tobin said, sitting down on the couch to my left. 
 
"No problem," I told him, passing the pretzels. "We love the Academy Awards in this house. Angie always likes the dresses, I like the pomp and reverence, the kids like the film clips, we all pretty much cry during the In Memorium. And nobody else in the neighborhood even cares about them."
 
"That's right," my wife said from my right. "There's always a barbecue on the street for the Super Bowl, for the Playoffs, every time Trump tweets something awful, the World Series. But not the Oscars."
 
"It's a special night for me too, every single year," Tobin said, gripping the bowl like it was something dear to him. "So, thanks for making me feel at home."

On the television, Jimmy Kimmel was just starting his monologue when Tobin muttered something under his breath.
 
"What was that?" I asked, sure I had heard him wrong.
 
"If Get Out don't win Best Picture, I'm gonna murder the whole lot of you," he repeated.
 
Oh. That's what I thought he had said.
 
He passed the pretzels on to my wife.

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Occurrence In Hall B

Big's old friend Dean once told him that, to make a living as a self-published writer, you had to have a hundred items available for sale.  Well, I've no idea if I'm even halfway there, but I really have to do better at putting stuff out there.  In the two months that I wrote every single day this year, I wrote two novellas and two short stories.  That, frankly, is astounding (for me, at least), blowing away any previous records I might have managed.

So here's another story ("Occurrence In Hall B"), one that I only wrote because I was entering a contest, came up with an idea that was acceptable but unremarkable, and forced myself to come up with something else.  It's about a young college student named Duncan (based on my buddy's kid, who works as a night janitor at the community college I also attended), who discovers that the corridor in B Hall may well be haunted.


As I've previously mentioned (over and over, I'm sure), cover art is my Achilles kryptonite, but for this one, I didn't do terribly.  I actually had Duncan take a picture of the hall where he worked, and sent it to Gino Moretto to see what he could make of it.  This time, I'm 75% sure I spelled the title right.

If you want to buy it AT THIS LINK . . . I certainly won't stop you.

Sunday, January 01, 2017

Rish Outcast 60: Stormy Weather (Part 2)

Rish presents the rest of his story "Stormy Weather," and continues to talk of his inspiration for it, while dodging low-flying planes.





Music in this episode was "Ossuary (Air)" by Kevin McLeod of Incompetech.com.

If you're in the mood to download the episode, just Right-Click right HERE.

*If you want to read the story in text form, click HERE to buy it.

Saturday, December 24, 2016

Rish Outcast 59: Stormy Weather (Part 1)

So, sometime around the beginning of spring, Rish went for a walk and presented a story set in the dead of winter.  It's called "Stormy Weather," and it's been sitting around, waiting for the snows to come again.



Please forgive the incessant clicking and planes going on overhead.  Of course, 'twouldn't be the Outcast if the sound was excellent.



*If you don't wanna wait to hear the rest of the story, go HERE to buy it, or HERE for the text version.

*Rish 'n Big's "The Spirit of Christmas" episode over at the Dunesteef.

*Music in this episode was "Ossuary (Air)" by Kevin McLeod of Incompetech.com.

If you feel up to it, go ahead and Right-Click HERE to download the episode.  And bundle up!

Thursday, December 01, 2016

Rish Outcast 57: Rest Stop

(written months back, then shelved until winter came 'round again)

Although it's easier (and takes less courage) to just produce episodes of me driving and talking about whatever comes into my head, I thought I'd present another story on the Rish Outcast.  This one is called "Rest Stop," and I highly doubt anybody will like it.  But hey, it's got a dog in it.  Dogs are cool, right?


Yes.  Dogs are cool.



If you're up to downloading the episode, Right-Click on this here link.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Rish Outcast 42: "Oh Honey, Your First Novel!"

Well, this has been a long time in coming.

This post serves as a blog entry, and as a way to present another episode of my solo podcast, both with the same goal: to announce the publication of my first novel, "Into the Furnace."  I nearly called it "A Premise With Promise," but . . . well.*

It's not a long one, but I've been working hard on it the last few weeks, to get it out there, and in a condition that doesn't mortify me on the level of naked baby photos or police stoplight footage.

"Into the Furnace" tells the story of Sheriff Will Ford, who leaves a dead wife and a struggle with the bottle behind him, and moves out to New Mexico Territory to take over as the law in Bendo's Furnace, a small mining town that just keeps getting smaller.  It turns out that people (not to mention local animals and valuable livestock) just keep disappearing out there, and if anyone knows what's happening, they're not talking.


It's what I've been told is a Weird Western, which means a genre story (in this case, a bit o' Horror and Fantasy) in an Old West setting.  The text version is available on Amazon.com right now at THIS LINK, with an audio version to follow (I'll drop another blogpost/podcast when that becomes available).

I would greatly appreciate it if you'd go buy my book, and I'll put a discussion forum link HERE, just in case.

If you'd like to listen to the first chapter of the book, as well as hear me talk about it while trying not to spoil anything, here's another Rish Outcast:



Or you can RIGHT CLICK HERE to download the episode for later consumption.

*After that, this was called "Oh George, Your First Novel!"  But I discovered Lorraine actually says "Honey," which will make the reference a bit harder to catch.

Friday, March 11, 2016

Rish Outcast 37: The Ugly Table

Okay, this one is long in coming (I was horrified when I saw the date on the finished episode).

In this episode, I'll present (some of) my story "The Ugly Table," which was previously published in a collection called "Pretty/Ugly," along with Big's "The Mirror Sometimes Lies."  Both stories had the same basic premise--that of a plain girl suddenly becoming beautiful.


I don't believe Big has ever shared or podcast his story, other than in that Amazon release, which you can purchase here, if you like.  I'll ask him about it sometime.

Warning: I believe this one has language.  Fucking foul language.



If ye want to download the tale . . . then right-click THIS!!!

(episode 36 was for donors only.  Ask me about it sometime)

Monday, January 18, 2016

Rish Outcast 33: Beggar's Canyon Part 2

So, The Force Awakens came out,* and I managed to see it on opening day, even though I was pretty tired (my boss saw it the same night, but slept through parts of it). And while I quite enjoyed it, it made me realize that I'm getting old, and that I really ought to be writing more, seeing if I can't get better before the end, maybe say something that inspires or scares or moves somebody. It's not too late.

Which brings us to the matter at hand. The second half of "Beggar's Canyon" in this episode of The Rish Outcast. Like I said last time, it's easy to relate to young Luke Skywalker, who is stuck somewhere, feeling he should be somewhere, doing something, being important, but he isn't.  I can relate, and unless you're the Alpha of your particular pack (in which case, you wouldn't waste time reading this, I'm sure), you can too.

Who accomplishes everything they seek out to do? Who gets all their bucket list checked before the end? Who leaves something that will be remembered when they're gone?

Not me.

Luke Skywalker did, though. Just not at the time this story takes place.



So, feel free to Right-Click the link here to download the story . . .

. . . or you can hear Marshal Latham's edit of it (with Big, Bria Burton, Julie Hoverson, Marshal, Johnny Feisty, Mrs. Marshal, and your mama doing voices) right HERE.

In fact, look at his kick-arse episode art for the show:


Better than mine, sadly.


Rish

*And you know, I don't remember that line "Who are you?" "I'm no one," even being in the movie.  Guess I oughtta see it again.

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Rish Outcast 32: Beggar's Canyon

(written before seeing The Force Awakens)

Today, the new STAR WARS movie comes out. Exciting, yes, but also daunting, a little scary, and potentially sad if I don't enjoy it.  J.J. Abrams did a fantastic job, though, in keeping most of the plot, action, and surprises a secret from us, and I really appreciate that.  The final trailer­­ which was the last thing I saw about the movie, purposely trying to keep myself from spoilers, ­­introduced three characters, and in the segment dedicated to Rey, a voice (Leia?) asks, "Who are you?" and our heroine's response is, "I'm no one."

For some reason, this is the thing that grabbed me hardest in the trailer (though Kylo Ren's devotion to the long-dead Darth Vader, and Han acting as some kind of Obi-Wan Kenobi really struck me as well).  That spoke to me, even though it's out of context and probably not even close to what I'm interpreting it as.

The idea of being a nobody, of not mattering, is something that is always with me. As I've gotten older and seen people around me achieve their dreams, or barring that, putting away their dreams and settling for more ­reachable goals and pursuits, it's become clearer and clearer that I've not made much of my life. That I'm not special or unique or great. That I'm no one.

Sad, sure, but what can you do?


Not long ago, I was in a conversation where I wondered what happened to Luke
Skywalker's T­-16 (the flying vehicle he mentions and you see briefly in one scene), and ultimately decided it was probably destroyed by Stormtroopers. But pondering about Luke's life on Tatooine, and what his childhood might have been like got me thinking.

"Beggar's Canyon" was the result. It's a story (probably too long) that takes place on Luke's homeworld, set before we meet him in STAR WARS.  I'm presenting it here on the Rish Outcast (in two parts), and Marshal Latham will be presenting it over on the Delusions of Grandeur podcast (in one part right here). As I say here or next time, this was probably the most pleasurable thing I've written in my adult life (a pleasure to write, not sure about listening to it), and even if it's not a particularly good story, it gave me the opportunity to write in that universe I so love: the Star Wars franchise as it existed in 1995.



I'll be back soon to present the second half of the tale. So if it's at all possible, enjoy.

Here's the link if you'd like to download the file (just Right-Click on it).

Also, ole Marshal Latham did a full-cast, music and sound effects version over on the Delusions of Grandeur podcast, after which the two of us further discuss the story.  Check it out here, boys and girls!

Saturday, October 31, 2015

The Podcast That Dares Not Speak Its Name 13: The Cemetery Tale

Since it's pretty close to Halloween, I figured I'd present some kind of scary story on here.  Barring that, I could present a story that's merely "scary."  Maybe next year I'll do better.


Oh, "The Cemetery Tale" is a story I wrote several years ago, based on (mostly) actual experience.  It is one of a trio of stories featuring the same main character, but just between us, Walter is me.



If ye care to download this awful, awful thing, Right-Click on the LINK!!

Sunday, March 08, 2015

Rish Outcast 20: Creature Feature

Rish presenta otra historia que perdió una competación hace poco.  

Rish presents another of his recent contest-losing stories, this one entitled "Creature Feature."*  One-time TV newswoman Carly Page arrives at an old lighthouse with a plan to interview the man who lives there, but actually hopes to catch a glimpse of a sea monster.

With luck, maybe Renee Chambliss will join Rish on this one, or Fake Sean Connery will treat us with a song.  Either one, but surely, not both.



To download the episode, right click HERE and save to your dee-vice.

*Aka "Lighthouse View."

Wednesday, September 03, 2014

Rish Outcast 11: Last Night of Freedom

So, here is another (overdue) episode of the show, one I meant to have drop right at the end of summer.  It includes the short story "Last Night of Freedom," as well as an explanation of its rather-convoluted origins.  Hopefully, you dig it.

If not . . . no refunds.


Right click HERE to download the episode, select Save Link As, and save the file to your hard drive.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

The Podcast That Dares Not Speak Its Name 5: The Signalman

It has been many months since I put out an episode of my original solo podcast, the one which should not be named aloud.  It's been so long that I can't remember if I used to post them here or just send them out to Dunesteef subscribers.

But, I recorded these before I ever had my Rish Outcast, so I need to release them somewhere.  In this one, I perform and discuss Charles Dickens's "The Signalman."  Hilarity does not ensue.



Right click HERE to download the episode, select Save Link As, and save the file to your hard drive.



Monday, October 08, 2012

Old Dog, New Trick

My niece has a little white dog that has gotten old, and pretty much outlived its usefulness. It used to want to play, run around, have fun, go for rides, chase a sock, bite the toddlers, but now it's about to be thirteen, and it mostly wants to sleep now. Or whine. I recognize that this is going to happen to everybody, but the dog is not so great to have around anymore, you know?*

My niece still lives in my hometown, which is a farming community forty minutes away, so I rarely see the dog. But this week, we had the dog here, because it had an appointment or a date or something, so I've had to put up with the scratching to go outside, and the whining to be let in, and the begging for whatever I happen to be eating, and the watching of "Adventure Time," which really has to stop.

Tonight, the dog wanted to go out to use the bathroom, but I was busy with something (okay, it was just wasting time, but it was my choice to waste it, you know what I mean? I didn't want that interrupted), and I resented having to walk twelve feet to let the dog out the back door. It was dark, and I put the string on the dog (it's a little rope tied to the back step so the dog can only go so far and we don't have to go hunting for it), and let it go about its business.

Not one minute later, I hear the dog barking outside the window. I understand that as a person gets older, it takes longer to go to the bathroom, but apparently this doesn't apply to dogs. I sat there for a minute or three, hoping somebody else would bring the dog back into the house. My sister had just gotten home from work, and had three hours of reality shows to catch up on, so she couldn't get off the couch.**

The dog was barking furiously, and I'll be honest, it made me furious. Finally, I got up out of my comfy chair, crossed out of my room, into the kitchen, and opened the back door. The dog wasn't at the door, but was on the lawn, still barking up a storm. It was agitated about something out there, so I flipped on the porch light to see.

It was the boogeyman. The dog was doing its best to keep it away, and it apparently didn't dare approach beyond the edge of the lawn. I called the dog up to me, took off the string, and angrily closed the door behind us. "Stupid dog," I said.

Rish Outfield

*Oh, by the way, the dog is female, and should be referred to as "she." I recognize this, but my faux hatred for the dog bit only works if I refer to her as "it." You understand.

**I say this as though I'm so much better, but I did about two hours of work this whole day (while she was off doing sickening nurse activities like medicating bedsores, changing adult diapers, and applying leeches), and I'm in no real position to complain.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Happy day-before-the-worst-day-of-the-year, kids!

In honor of tomorrow . . .

Lucky Number
By Rish Tiberius Outfield

Big and I were at Del Taco again, and the cashier gave him a hearty smile. "That'll be order number 69," she said, handing him his receipt.

He walked by me, raising his eyebrows. "My lucky number, wouldn't you say?" he boasted.

"Coincidence," I said, stepping up to the register. I gave my order and even made a little joke about the Half-pound Bean and Cheese Burrito, but she didn't smile at me like she had my friend. Too bad. She was kind of pretty. Maybe Big's number hadn't been a coincidence.

"That'll be order number 41," she told me.