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comedy erupts when an alien plops out of the artic |
The sun bore into the arctic ice, melting and cracking it, chipping off junks to become flotsam in an iceberg parade. If someone had witnessed the alien ice cube, plopping from its final resting place of the last one hundred thousand years, to land amidst the polar bear carcasses, they would have made the single most important discovery in human history. Proof of extraterrestrial life floated into the Chukchi Sea to the Bering Sea where it finally sank, much to the delight of a young halibut that discovered a fondness for foreign foods. Had the halibut of known a Pacific Kittiwake would drop by unannounced to pick him up for breakfast, he would not have eaten quite so much. The Pacific Kittiwake almost made it to the Juneau International airport, but internal complications forced a sudden crash landing. There were no survivors. Eskie, American Eskimo on patrol, followed closely by his partner, Darren Miller, discovered the crash site. The canine sleuth sniffed out the site thoroughly. While discovering no black box, he did offer up a one legged salute in honor of the pilot who had lost his life. Eskie wagged his tongue all day about his discovery and even kissed Darren several times in his excitement. (It's just a best friend thing.) Had he not developed a nosebleed, Darren might have shown more enthusiasm. Unfortunately, his fiancé of the last three months, Ellen Trimble, was flying in her parents. When he arrived at her place, they had just enough time for a quick romp, (It's a sex thing), before picking up Charlotte and Jonathon Trimble, and making dinner. "My Ellen tells me that you're a teacher," Mr. Trimble said, while forking the remains of his cheesecake. "What grade? How do you like it?" "Well, Mr. Trimble ..." Darren replied through a mouth full of creamed spinach. "Please, call me Dad." "Well … Dad … I have some good students -- at least a few that aren't as retarded as the rest." Darren jerked his head down , unable to believe he had let that slip. "Kids these days," Mrs. Trimble interrupted. "What in the hell is that supposed to mean?" Darren interjected. "I'm sorry Mrs. Trimble; I don't know why I said that. It's just … I … blame society. I think the kids have always been the same. Totally retarded." "Uh-huh," Mrs. Trimble replied, looking to her daughter. Darren wasn't lost on the fact that she didn't ask him to call her Mom. "Daddy … Darren likes to play golf. Maybe you guys can get a game in while you're here." Ellen offered, trying to melt Darren with her eyes. Mr. Trimble cleared his throat. "I bet being a teacher is nice in the summer … lots of time. Do you play often?" "Not as much as I like. Ellen keeps me busy with boring wedding plans most of the time. But, I make excuses to get away, mostly when she's too bitchy. Oh, I can't believe I just said that. I'm sorry. I'm not feeling well at all. I think it might be re-called spinach." Darren stood up and walked out, announcing as he left. "Yep, I'm pretty sure I'm a free man now." Ellen, left to make amends as best as she could, cried and apologized profusely, feeling almost grateful when a nosebleed gave her an excuse to get out of the room. The next day, she blamed the night before when she lost her job at the airport after asking an elderly man if he planned to check his toupee with his luggage. It's not as if she singled him out alone. After all, she had asked another man if he had another ticket for his butt, asked a woman, "why the hell she didn't slap that kid across the room," and when another woman told her it was the wrong time of the month to mess with her, didn't she cheerily say, "I didn't realize menopause ran in monthly cycles." (It's a female thing.) By mid-day the following day, Ellen snuggled onto her couch while her parents shopped and ate mint-chip ice cream straight from the carton, while watching Soaps like a good un-employee, when the president interrupted the life-threatening brain surgery being performed by the male impersonating dwarf that everyone thought died in a sky-diving accident after she shot Luke, who she now tried to save … "My fellow Americans. In light of this viral outbreak, I am forced to declare a state of emergency at home as well as abroad. I can assure you that all measures are being taken and the situation is close to being under control. My God, do you think they're buying this? Oh no! Quick, blame the liberal media, bring up the gays. No, terrorists." (It's a political thing.) Men in black escorted the president off the stage as the spokesperson announced to the press, "You sharks aren't getting any more." The commentator for CBN turned it over to Scott Reynolds, political correspondent, who announced, "I hope I don't sound like as big of a jack ass as the president." From there it went Jack Roberts with CDC, who said, "It's seems to be a virus with a Terret's effect that we're trying to isolate." He smiled and nodded assuredly then followed up with, "at least I didn't tell them that we don't have a fubleeping clue." The network now returned Ellen to her regularly scheduled programming, but by then the surgery was over and they had lost Luke, or so they thought, not realizing that he was really in a coma on the bottom floor of the hospital where his nemesis Michael Sanders stood over him laughing. The shows were not interrupted again, instead news bulletins streamed across the bottom of the screen ticker style. "Huh, tough day to be a lawyer," Ellen said to the empty room. By evening, when the news program was just anchor pictures with the same ticker feed, Ellen needed to make a run to the grocery for Pringles and Cool Whip. Just like she would three months later, only for sugar, not snacky treats -- snacky treats didn`t take the edge of like it used to, forcing her to go straight to the source. That is when she ran into Darren walking Eskie. Darren typed into a key pad and a digitized voice said, "EL LEN, WHAT A NICE SUR PRICE HOW ARE UE. YOU ARE LOOK ING WELL." "THANK UE," she typed back. "I THOUGHT AB OUT CAL HING UE." One week later, the three of them curled up in bed. (It's a happy ending thing.) |