Santa Lays His Eyes On A Little Grassy Knoll.

by Serge Bielanko


It took a fucking while but I got it in the end. Twelve bucks. That's what I paid. For the Santa suit, for my daughter. I tried buying one last year before she was even born but that dashing waving Sweet Idea was assassinated in that front quadrant of the Babies-R-Us down in Sandy by Lee Harvey Monica. That was one miserable dude left standing there in all that proverbial Dream Blood, too. Flecks of Dream Scalp on my sweatshirt sleeves. Dream Brain hunks in my hair. Fighting back curse words if not tiny tears. Her words/her rifle's report hunk in the air around my face like summer cigar.

"You don't need that yet, Serge. Christ, the kid's not even born yet."

So?

What...you need to be "born" to have a goddamn cute-ass tiny Santa Claus suit bought for you in a future-safe size?

"It's on sale/LOOK!," I held out the price tag, meekly. I knew I was steering this little convertible toward her book depository. But this made sense to me. I'd been waiting all my life really.

"Put it back," she sighed. Bitch. She wasn't even looking at me anymore. She wasn't even thinking about the Dream. To her: the whole thing at been a chewed-up gob of Big Red she ran over in the Honda. No bump. Impossible to even notice.

"No," I garbled. I knew I wasn't getting it. And I knew I couldn't argue my case in any sane court. There was no such thing. Pregnant Lee Harvey Monica was a cornucopia of emotional winds, rational thought spread thinly over whole-grain fucking crazy. To push my case would be to dangle bacon by the cave entrance. To stare hard into a darkness that would sooner or later expunge a saber toothed beatdown on me: on my lack of money/my lack of family protection planning/my insatiable foolhardy need to buy costumes for the Unborn. I closed my eyes.

The shot boomed through my bones, though I knew it was coming. I kept my eyes closed and let the fat ropes of sweet death smoke curl up my nostrils. I didn't need to see the Assassin escape across distant streets/aisles. I knew she was going before she'd even goddamn gone. Before that hollow point Holiday Spoiler rammed home into the skull of my working man's vision. Sure enough, when I forced my eyes to take in the carnage, Lee Harvey Monica was gone. And the Santa suit in my clammy fist was limp and sagged and more dead than all the people in all the grave holes in all the world.

I hung it back on the rack and started looking at mini Chuck Taylors.

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Saturday at WalMart, I put one in the cart. The suit. It was the last one in Violet's size and I wasn't taking any chances. Though, truth be told, there are probably people fucking making them out of the back of every single WalMart there is huh? Just sitting there listening to classic rock or Mariachi radio, sippin' Mountain Dews, making little Santa suits: Dollar-A-Mile felt and white flimsy cotton whirled at breakneck speed; fingers like lighters flicking; the snipping snapping immolated hummingbirds of industry.

Whatever. I wasn't taking any chances. I put it in the cart.

I was decked out in six suits of armor too, in case you're wondering. Six iron skins of Assassin-proof reasons why I needed to purchase the suit that day. I didn't need them though. I just used my oldest trick: Original Sticker Shock Denial. When Lee Harvey Monica appeared at the end of the aisle, something ominous poking from her long Columbine coat, I held up the suit with a weak-ass grin, feigning only partial interest.

"How much," she asked, warily, her words cooly sliding down the aisle past the feet pajamas and the discounted Halloween onesies, like bb's down tilted sheet metal.

"Thirty-six dollars," I whispered dejectedly.

"HOW much?," again.

"THIRTY SIX BUCKS," I said, louder. But still with hints of hopelessness.

She whipped out the rifle from under the coat, like Jesse James, aimed it over top our Violet sitting in the cart, and fired without blinking a lash. The shot rained deaf down on everything from purses to beer.

I stood my ground, the suit injured but undead.

I smiled.

"Psyche. Its just twelve bucks!"

I could see this, this very own bullet of mine, this peaceable nugget of undeniable information, as it waddled through the air, a fat duck drunk on confidence.

I watched as it whizzed around Lee Harvey Monica's bubbling mind, making laps around her denial. I saw her financial guard stick his handsome hot little fucking face out of her ear. And I watched my return bullet take his head off next to a rack of small mittens.

She looked away.

"Git it." She mumbled, the ice water in her veins rushing out of her eyes and nose, running down onto the filthy cheap tiles in raging rivers of lost reasoning, rising to our ankles/to our knees/ripping away the Assassin's rifle and ruining it with Holiday Flood. We were all three swept up and tossed about on the waves of a new wild storm. We managed to hold onto one another as we blasted past the frozen foods and the fake silk scarves and the huge cardboard forts of avocados, out through the automatic doors, over SUVs and pimped out Mazdas and work trucks, under the shadow of the parking garage roof we were swept over the once frozen land, now thawed by a melted heart hurricane of Christmas Spirit!

We somehow, miraculously, washed up on the roof of our own Honda. Sort of stunned.

Violet looking around/chewing on her jacket sleeve.

Me, holding the Santa Suit high above my head, screaming, screeching, through gumdrop tears," I'M THE KING OF THE WOOOOOOOOOOOORLD!!!!!!!!!!"

And Monica, wild haired and naked, wrapped around my muscular thigh, her bugging eyes picking apart that raging torrent, watching ever so closely for her lost gun.


The Walkin' Talkin' Melted Dinosaur Shit Blues.

by Serge Bielanko


The door to the waiting room swings open.

"Owner of the Honda Pilot," says the guy in the uniform. I'd say he's 40/42. Reddish hair. Freckley.

"Yeah," I rise up out of my chair and follow him. We both end up standing in front of a computer.

"So how we doing today, sir?" he asks.

"Doing great," I lie. Its really never 'great' now is it?

"That's good. So we here for the Super Standard Sense of Change today?"

I am a little dazzled.

"Uhmmm, just uh...just, you know, the regular oil change. Whatever is cheapest, to be honest."

He is staring into the depths of his screen. I don't feel like he is registering me all that much.

"Ok, lets get started then: just a few points I'd like to run through with you. You can see here in our Comprehensive Oil Life Planner Guide that your car is going to require 5 quarts of oil today, sir. Now, The Magnificent-Cheapo-Does-Nothing-Service comes with up to 4 quarts of oil, so would you like me to go ahead and just charge you for the additional needed lubrication?", he stares at me. Actually, as he spiels this, he stares through me. He stares through me and into something Out There in the world, something fleeting and brittle. The wind maybe?

"Uhmmm..., yeah, I guess. I mean I want the oil changed. So, uh, yes, yeah."

What else would I say? No? No, I don't believe I want that fifth and final quart today, Buckaroo. No siree. You go ahead and put your four in there and in a few weeks time I'll just stare that highway engine fire right in the eyeball and be happy with that, ok?

"Right," he says and snaps a button on the computer with a swift finger shot. It clacks.

"Now, we check all fluids and lubrications as well as tire pressure and the sanctity of the soul of your vehicle. That's all included but let me ask you: do you drive up many hills, sir?"

Do I drive up many hills? Seriously?

"Well, yes, I suppose I drive up my share. Same as everyone else, I guess." I crack a little laugh to maybe show him I'm comfortable with the weirdness of his questions, even though I'm not.

"Well, the torque required to conquer inclines and declines day in and day out really ravages the specific totality of the cylinders. So we recommend a lite fragrant dusting of the ramrods with STP Liquid Life once every three oil changes. I can see here on your file that you haven't had that yet, so go ahead and do that for you and your vehicle today, sir?" He raises an eyebrow in question and shifts his focus to my face.

"Hmph. Ummm, how much is that?" I ask.

"That's an additional $22 today, sir."

I answer fast. Lightning flashing from my teeth. "No, that's ok." He is unsurprised, I notice, as he clacks his finger to the keyboard.

I remember I have a coupon. I have this coupon, I say.

"Ok, great. We'll tally that in at the end," he replies without looking at the crumpled shard I've fished out of my back pocket.

"Ok," I say. The end? The end of what? What exactly are we working towards here?

"Now, sir, Bay Agent McMichaels has discovered a noticeable amount of static electricity built up in your car's carpets and that in turn can really hack away at the overall performance of your vehicle's ability to fly. So what we usually recommend is our One-Time-Only-Invisible-Wings Treatment, and what that does is it penetrates deep into your vehicles subconscious and convinces it that it is a massive iron bird GO AHEAD AND PERFORM THAT SERVICE FOR YOU AND YOUR BELOVED VEHICLE TODAY, SIR?"

Here I notice that my friend is now not just staring through me and out into the streets beyond, but that he is actually mentally climbing the mountains off in the sparkly distance. His mind is very far away from here. Yet he speaks clearly, pitching me things, foolish things. Snake oil. Parking lot rocks spray-painted cheesy gold.

"How much is that service then?," I ask. Out of politeness. Out of sheer awe.

"That's $47.50, sir." He clacks the board before I even answer. I think he is ahead of me here.

"I"ll pass on that one today, thanks."

For a moment he reads/pretends to read something on the screen. I just stare at him now, this red-headed master of ceremonies, this Valvoline Witch. I secretly think he is kind of badass.

"Ok." He finger-pops the keyboard. Looks intense. "Ok." Again, same thing. He's reading/pretending to read important facts about my car. MY car. Information is gushing into his data port and its critical and its pivotal.

"Ok, sir, now: do you use the gas pedal more than three hours a month?"

Holy fucking hell.

"Do I use the GAS pedal? In a month? Yeah, I guess so. Is that a lot? Three hours...is that too much?"

"Well, we like to recommend that for pedals used over three hours we service them with our patented Black-Magic-BayBoy-Shooter. And what that does is it connects directly into your exhaust pipe and uses over 55,000 PSI to propel one of our Uniformed Bay Agents into the very guts of your cherished family vehicle. Once inside, provided he survives the brutal body morphing and squeezing, he is then able to use a beeswax'd candy sledge hammer to bash away at all the cancerous sludge and corrosion that builds up on your motorized blood-brother's drive shaft. Plus it really negates nearly all the pinging within your vehicles psyche."

I stand stunned. My face is blank. We eyeball one another. He arches a red brow.

"We highly recommend this service to all our customers who ever drive in rain or on bridges or past fields full of hungry deer."

I barely eek it out of me. "How much?"

"346 million dollars. That includes up to four cups of transmission fluid and a dollop of Butter Sauce."

We both hurl through space. Together. Him: not here really. Me: drunk on his baffling babble.

"I have this coupon," I say and hold it up for him.

He stares into that screen of his. Both of us are exhausted.

He clacks the keys with the quickness.

He rings me up.