100%
MATCH
Patrick C. Harrison III
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This is a work of fiction. None of the people, places, or events described in
this novel actually exist or happened. Not that I’m aware of…
PC3 HORROR
Full Contact Fiction
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Copyright © 2023 Patrick C. Harrison III
All rights reserved.
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DEDICATION
For all the fellas out there in search of THE ONE
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CONTENTS
A Day in the Life
Debra
Missed Opportunity
Wendy
A Visitor
Date Day
Post Date Drama
Sara’s House
Perfect Match
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This depraved tale was originally supposed to be in an anthology published
by Macabre Ladies. For reasons I’m not privy to, that book was
permanently delayed. But without the prompting of Eleanor Merry, this
story would not exist. So, thank you, Eleanor.
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A Day in the Life
0.001752% of relationships end in homicide.
As a fast-food worker, I’m already at a disadvantage finding a life
partner. The number one—numero uno!—least desired profession women
want for their mate, is a fast-food worker. Being a fry cook and burger
flipper, like myself, is probably the worst among fast food workers, but I’ve
been unable to find studies stating this.
I’m working on upgrading my desirability, though. Statistically
speaking, elementary educators enjoy the most success in long term
relationships. That incident at the state park in Arkansas is causing some
minor delays in me being accepted into a teaching program, however. But
that was a complete misunderstanding, I assure you.
My alarm goes off at 8am, like usual, but, like usual, I’ve been lying
here awake for the last hour or so, thinking about that perfect lady—my
match—and rubbing gently on my morning wood. I don’t bring myself to
climax, though. It’s a common misconception that men are more adept at
connecting with the opposite sex after their spunk has been blasted from
their ball-sacks. In reality, they’re less likely to make the oft required first
move, such as striking up a conversation with an unfamiliar potential
partner. Thus, orgasms are relegated to just before bedtime, when the
chances of connecting with a potential mate are virtually impossible.
I turn off the alarm and get up and walk into the bathroom and take a
leak. It takes a while for my hardness to dissipate and for the pee to flow,
but eventually success is achieved. I can’t see my wienie, my little pecker,
my loving love rod, unless I lean forward. My belly blocks it from view. It’s
also not a particularly large specimen.
69% of women prefer the “dad bod” as opposed to a chiseled
physique. This is encouraging, but my living carcass is a little heftier than
the typical dad bod. On average, women prefer an erect penis size of 6.3
inches, slightly above normal. I fall far short of this, unfortunately.
After performing my function at the toilet, I flush it away and tuck my
business back into my boxer briefs (it’s well-documented that most women
prefer boxer briefs over any other male undergarment) and move over to the
counter where I grab my toothbrush and squeeze on whitening toothpaste
and begin brushing. I look at myself in the mirror as I do this, seeing the
gleam of fluorescent light on my bald head and the day’s-worth of stubble
on my double chin.
43% of women thirty-five to forty-five find bald men attractive. That
would be somewhat promising if I weren’t thirty. 83% of women prefer a
mate older than themselves. Among women younger than myself, only 19%
find baldness attractive.
After brushing my teeth, I gargle some mouthwash and spit it down the
drain, then I shave. While 60% of women in the southern United States
(where I live) prefer men with facial hair, my facial hair grows in odd
patches rather than the lush fullness favored by ladies. After shaving, I
apply lotion to my face and body, then rub a fair amount of anti-perspirant
under my arms. Though a surprising amount of women find the scent of a
sweaty man enticing, the percentage that like perspiration stains in the
armpits of a man’s clothing is so miniscule that it’s almost beyond
calculation.
My nose is clogged. Happens all the time in spring. I tear off some
toilet paper and blow my nose. The result is a yellowish-green glob of snot.
Folding the toilet paper over, I blow again and expel a little more, though
not as globby and not as yellowish-green. I retrieve a zip-lock baggy from a
drawer and place the snotty tissue inside it and seal it up and place it next to
my wallet and house keys in the bedroom.
Next, I get dressed in the required work clothes—black shoes, black
slacks, and a light-blue t-shirt that has a Jim’s Burger Joint logo on the left
breast and proclaims Mangle County’s Best Burger! on the back. After
donning my clothes, I go to the kitchen and make and consume a breakfast
consisting of one sliced tomato, two boiled eggs, a bowl of oatmeal with
blueberries, and a glass of apple juice. This combination of foods is
supposed to provide me with sufficient energy and mental acuity to start my
day, keeping me sharp in case engaging in conversation with a woman is
required. Coffee is also a suitable addition to breakfast, though I’ve
determined the tendency for this beverage to cause bad breath and stained
teeth renders it less necessary. I do drink it on occasion though.
Women prefer men that are knowledgeable in a variety of things,
especially perceived masculine things. So, after eating breakfast and
washing the dishes, I use my phone to watch a video on how to change a
fuel pump and then one on how to make a picnic table. I read a few articles
from various news websites, followed by the latest from Cosmopolitan, a
story detailing the most comfortable brands of thong underwear for women
who work on their feet.
Of course, I have to don my glasses to read all this. Women are largely
torn on the attractiveness of men with glasses. On one hand, they view men
with glasses as goal-oriented and intelligent. On the other, they see glasses
as a sign of genetic inferiority. Especially if the glasses required are quite
thick, like my own. I did, however, acquire stylish thick-rimmed glasses
that suggest a quirkiness that most ladies find alluring.
It’s time to go to work. I put my wallet, keys, and the zip-lock bag
containing the snotty tissue into my pockets. I add an empty zip-lock bag to
my pocket too. I grab my lunch pail from the fridge (women prefer men
with lunch pails over men with brown paper sacks; the paper sacks are
suggestive of childishness) and head out the door, locking up as I go.
I live in a nice neighborhood. Though it’s an older part of town, the
fact that I own my own house is extremely positive. In the eyes of a woman,
home ownership suggests I am mature, hard-working, and financially
stable. Women also consider men that own a home twice as datable. The
only reason I own my own home is because my morbidly obese mother
drank a little too much home-brewed cyanide tea on a hot summer day,
leaving her only son with the house. But the ladies don’t need to know that.
I don’t have a car, however. Well, I do—Mother’s old 1999 Buick—
but I’m not allowed to drive it. My license was suspended after an
unfortunate incident involving a raccoon, a bottle of castor oil, and a road
trip down to Galveston.
96% of women want their partner to have a vehicle. A devastating stat.
Honestly, I’m surprised it’s not higher.
Luckily, Jim’s Burger Joint is within walking distance. It’s 1.6 miles
from my house, meaning I walk 3.2 miles per day, counting only the
commute. I probably walk four or more miles if I take into account the rest
of my day. This should be beneficial to my physique and overall health,
though I’ve yet to notice any real changes to my frame.
63% of women want a man who exercises regularly. Though, this is
misleading. They don’t generally want men who spend hours a day at the
gym. They want men that are strong, but not overly muscular. They want
men that are fit, but not fat free. That being said, my walks back and forth
from work are probably not sufficient. So, during the fifteen-minute breaks
at work, I do standing hip thrusts to work my glutes and core. To work my
upper body, I sometimes throw punches—shadow boxing, I think it’s called.
I also throw things when the opportunity arises; like if a cat walks into my
yard, I’ll throw it into the street.
The late morning sun feels good on my face. It’s still early enough in
the year for the heat not to be exhausting. Walks to work in the summer
months are grueling. I have a decent tan from these walks. Regarding white
males, like myself, women prefer a medium tan over dark tans or none at
all. I guess I have what could be called a medium tan, though that’s very
nonspecific.
I’m about halfway to work when I see Miss Danbury walking from her
house to check the mail. It’s too early for the mail to have arrived, which
she should know since she’s lived in the neighborhood for over half a
century. But when you’re eighty, I suppose an extra walk or two to the
mailbox is good for the old body. Unless she were to fall and break a hip or
something. She carries a cane and walks very slow. Painfully slow.
“Good morning, Bartholomew,” Miss Danbury says as I walk by.
Yes, my name is Bartholomew. Studies have shown women prefer men
with short names, like John, Jack, Curt, and so on. I tell people to call me
Bart but, as you probably suspect, I then get compared to a popular cartoon
character. My last name is Bartley. I have no middle name. So, I have to
introduce myself to new acquaintances as Bart Bartley. It’s quite comical, I
know.
I tell Miss Danbury hello and give her a wave and move on. She was
probably a decent catch in her younger years. Seems nice enough and her
sagging face shows hints of attractiveness, marred by time. She’s a widow,
but I have no intention of making a move on her. For one thing, the age
difference. For another, studies of widows have shown that they always
hold their deceased spouse in equal or even higher regard than the mate
they replace them with.
I have masturbated to Miss Danbury three times, though. Once while I
was at work.
I leave the neighborhood and cross an intersection and am passing by a
Chevron station when a cricket goes hopping across the sidewalk in front of
me. Lunging forward, I stomp on the cricket, feeling it crunch beneath my
shoe. Turning my shoe to the side, I notice half the bug sticks to the rubber
tread, while the rest of it remains on the sidewalk. It’s gooey looking. I
scrape the cricket remains off my shoe with the end of my fingernail, then
pick up both crushed halves, at the same time removing the empty zip-lock
baggy from my pocket. As I put the cricket into the baggy, I notice a kid on
a bicycle in the gas station parking lot is watching me and chewing gum. I
smile politely and seal the bag and continue to work.
I get to work right on time and clock in. I’m always on time, if not
early. 69% of women prefer a man who is punctual, or at least able to keep
a schedule. After putting my lunch pail in the breakroom fridge and
donning an apron, I go to my work station and turn on the grill and fryers.
The grill sizzles and smokes from the remnants of old burgers. The canola
oil in the fryers smells somewhat sour and I really should change it out, but
I figure it’s got another day or two before it would be noticeable to
customers.
We open at 10:30. Too early for lunch, in my opinion, but I don’t own
the place. Jim Clark does. He’s a pompous fellow, loud-mouthed and
vulgar, with a red face, yellow teeth, and bad breath. He wears a tie to work
at his burger joint for some reason, and on more than one occasion he’s
leaned over my fryers to inspect whatever owners inspect and seared off the
end of his tie. Jim once had a week-long stomach condition that landed him
in the hospital after eating a triple cheeseburger I cooked for him. Actually,
I was surprised he survived.
“Bart, where is Hector?” Jim says, staring at me in the kitchen from his
spot at the front register.
I have no idea why he thinks I should know where Hector is. Hector is
always late. I shrug and scrape at the grill with the end of my spatula. The
black crud that comes off looks like it could’ve come from the inside of a
septic tank.
Jim groans and says something I don’t understand. Something about
“no good piece of” something or other. I’m not sure if he’s referring to me
or Hector. Not that it matters. One January, Jim slipped and fell going out
the back door of the burger joint after someone poured dishwater over the
concrete steps back there.
Five minutes later, Hector walks in. Jim yells at him for being late and
tells him one more time and he’s gone.
Hector says, “Yo, I’m here, dog. And we ain’t even got any
customers.”
“It doesn’t matter!” Jim says, a little too forcefully. “You should be
here when the schedule says you should be here!”
“You need to chill, dog.”
This is a scene that plays out almost every day. Jim always tells Hector
he’ll be fired next time, and Hector always calls Jim a dog.
“Sup, Shorty,” Hector says, giving me the ‘sup nod.
I’m not really short. I’m five-eight, shorter than the average male, but
not short. As you likely know, most women prefer men on the tall side.
However, shorter women are typically more inclined to date men who are
also of smaller than average stature. So, I don’t really consider my height a
hindrance in my quest for love.
Hector calls me Shorty because he’s six-five. Absurdly tall, in my
opinion. Hector, a Latino, has slicked back black hair, fake diamond
earrings, too many tattoos to count, and baggy clothes that I think look
ridiculous. He also smells of marijuana all the time. If his stories are to be
believed, he is a real success with the ladies. Though, we measure success
differently. All those things about his appearance are clear indicators,
studies show, of a man who is not seeking a life partner.
If they have tattoos, they screw. This is true of men and women alike.
If they smoke, they poke. Also true, studies show.
I’m not simply looking to get my man rod wet. I can just as easily
derive sexual pleasure from mayonnaise jars or crawdad holes. And have.
No, I’m looking for my true love, my life partner, my 100% perfect match.
So, when it comes to women, I stay away from tattoos and smoke. When it
comes to Hector, I’m unimpressed by his exploits.
I nod to Hector and tell him good morning and wave my spatula at
him. Some of the black gunk falls off and sizzles on the grill.
“Yo, Shorty, you should have seen this banging chick I was with last
night.”
I smile at Hector without comment. Luckily, the drive-thru bell sounds,
indicating we have a customer. Hector works the drive-thru until noon, at
which time Lacy arrives and Hector goes between helping me package
meals and helping Jim take orders from the dining area. Hector takes the
order—a double cheeseburger with all the fixings and a large fry.
I take two frozen meat patties from the cooler and toss them on the
grill. Then I throw an order of fries in the fryer. I take the squashed cricket
from my pocket and throw it in the fryer with the fries. While this cooks, I
retrieve buns, cheddar cheese, lettuce, tomato, onions, and pickles from the
bar at my work station. The customer ordered the burger with mayonnaise,
so I get one of the large mayonnaise jars. I don’t think it’s one I’ve
masturbated into before. But it’s hard to keep track.
When the patties are done cooking, I put the burger together. In
between the patties I apply the yellowish-green snot from the zip-locked
tissue in my pocket. I spread it out over the cheese, the heat of the patties
making it more liquefied and less globby, making it look like a secret sauce
of some kind. With the food prepared, I wrap the burger in paper and dump
the fries into a cardboard container. Hector takes it from there.
The day goes by about like any other. It gets busy around lunch. I
make lots of burgers and cook lots of fries. I blow my nose in a piece of
lettuce once and find a roach under the fryers, which I add to an old man’s
milkshake. I do my standing hip thrusts in the breakroom on break and Jim
comes in asking what the hell I’m doing. Lacy comes in at noon looking
slutty as ever, smelling of cigarettes and dirty diapers. She has a newborn
and doesn’t know who the father is. Not me, that’s for sure. Lacy is about as
far away from my match as a woman could be. She’s had more penis in her
than…I don’t know…a penis factory. A lot is what I mean. Not my type.
Nevertheless, she’s a nice enough person and I’ve even masturbated to her
thirty-two times, once in the dumpster behind Jim’s and another time at the
DMV. Anyway, my shift ends at 6pm and I clock-out on the dot and walk
home and throw a cat out of my yard and watch a documentary on how the
amputation of a limb affects long-term relationships.
After the show, I take a poop into a zip-lock and put it in the fridge
next to a used jar of mayonnaise and Mimi, the next-door neighbor’s dead
Chihuahua. She’ll need to be used soon, before she spoils. I take a shower
and wash myself with sandalwood-scented soap—voted the best smelling
among women twenty-five to thirty-five—then brush my teeth and wash
my mouth again.
Before heading to bed, I shoot the kid I have chained up in the
basement. 76% of women can be convinced that the sound of a gunshot was
actually a car backfiring.
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Debra
I went on a date with a blonde once. Statistically speaking, blondes are
the least likely to give you a lasting relationship. You’d think it was
redheads, but you’d be wrong. In fact, non-blondes who dye their hair
blonde instantly become more likely to cheat and otherwise see themselves
out of whatever current relationship they’re in. I’ve read the data. All the
same, I went on a date with a blonde.
Her name was Debra and she worked at a department store and had
aspirations of becoming a doctor. She would never be a doctor; I knew this
right off. Sometimes you can just tell by the way people talk that they’re not
as smart as they think. Debra would say stuff like ‘intensive purposes’
instead of ‘intents and purposes.’ And ‘pacific’ instead of ‘specific.’ Stuff
someone smart enough to get through medical school would know, in my
opinion.
Still, this didn’t mean she would make a bad mate. It didn’t mean we
couldn’t form a lasting bond.
Though I don’t put much stock in horoscopes, Debra was a Gemini
and I’m an Aquarius; they’re supposed to go good together. But I didn’t
hinge my hopes on astrological superstitions. Debra wore minimal makeup,
didn’t go to a tanning salon, had only one social media account, and, while
she exercised, she did not do so daily. All of these traits are indicative of a
person able to maintain a long-term relationship. She also didn’t drink,
smoke, or have tattoos. And she wasn’t a vegan.
100% of vegans are snooty and attention-seeking, and they’re
impossible to please.
Debra was blonde, like I said, with brown eyes and medium-sized
breasts and a bit of a frumpy midsection and droopy bottom. With the
exception of her hair, her other physical attributes were such that she
wouldn’t be a sufferer of daily romantic advances from other suitors. Given
my own physical downfalls, this was obviously preferable.
We had dinner at Applebee’s. Being the gentleman that I am, I gave
Debra the opportunity to choose where we went, but she declined. (If a
woman ever freely decides where to eat, alarm bells should immediately go
off.) So, I decided on Applebee’s, a place that isn’t overly expensive, which
would falsely give the impression that I was either desperate or financially
loaded, but also not too cheap, like Jim’s Burger Joint, which would give
the impression that my romantic interest was insufficient.
Conversation went well in the beginning. I talked about wanting to be
a teacher and Debra talked about wanting to be a doctor. I talked about a
birdhouse I built for my backyard, without divulging that I fastened a
mousetrap on the inside and rigged it weekly. She talked about the
television shows she enjoyed, none of which were reality TV.
65% of people—no matter their gender, race, or sexual orientation—
who watch reality TV have a diminished sense of self-worth and have
virtually no hope for humankind as a whole.
So, things were going fine. Then Debra asked me to tell her one secret
about myself, something no one else knew. This should have sent up alarm
bells. But so pleased with the evening was I, that I considered the question
happily and answered honestly. I told her about the time I visited a random
person at the nursing home, taking with me a bag containing a bearded
dragon, a cucumber, and a mallet.
Debra was not impressed by my escapades at the nursing home. The
night ended poorly.
Two days later, Debra would die after spraying herself with
hydrofluoric acid that had somehow made its way into her perfume bottle.
Sad. But she wasn’t going to be a doctor anyway.
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Missed Opportunity
56% of women desire a man who is innovative, self-motivated, and
willing to take risks.
Hector is late again but only by two minutes and Jim Clark’s rants are
somewhat abated. The first order of the day is for six burgers—hold the
cheese—and no fries. I use the Mimi meat to make these burgers.
Chihuahuas make a surprising amount of meat for their size. I season them
the same way as the regular patties and they smell pretty similar cooking.
Jim later eats one for lunch.
Lacy spends most of the day complaining that her baby—who she
named Xander—won’t stop crying and that she has a date tonight but is
having trouble finding a babysitter and that her mom, Xander’s
grandmother, is unwilling to watch Xander because her ex-boyfriend is
being released from prison today and they’re going to the casino in
Oklahoma to celebrate.
When I leave the burger joint that evening, I walk across the street to
the grocery store to get a few things I need—milk, canned tuna, one corn on
the cob, and mayonnaise. I hate having to carry milk all the way back home
but I do it once a week. It’s good exercise, I suppose. I grab a basket and go
to the fruits and vegetables section.
Studies have shown that women who spend five or more minutes in
the fruits and vegetables section at the grocery store are 54% more likely to
have—or want to have—a family, compared to those who spend less than
five minutes in the same section. Presently, there are two women in the
fruits and vegetables section, a young Latina woman who could be around
twenty-five and an elderly Asian woman.
93% of Asian American women are married before they hit forty. 81%
of that 93% remain married their entire lives. Thus, even though 14% of
women will wear a wedding band for the sole purpose of warding off
romantic advances, I take the wedding band on the Asian lady’s finger to be
genuine.
She’s too old anyway and appears to have arthritis, which can hinder a
woman’s ability to jerk off her male counterpart.
The Latina woman is wearing incredibly tight clothing and her breasts
are the size of the cantaloupes she’s looking at. Her nipples are visible
through the white shirt she wears. While she will make satisfactory
masturbatory material this evening, she is obviously not suitable as a
lifelong mate.
69% of women who wear blouses exposing their nipples in public are
more interested in short-term physical relationships than sustainable
romance.
I grab my corn on the cob and move on.
“Bartholomew Bartley, is that you?” I hear someone say as I’m turning
onto the canned goods aisle.
Spinning, I see that it’s Mr. Higgins, my old middle school principal. I
tell him it is indeed me.
“Goodness, it’s been years, Bartholomew,” he says, smiling incredibly
wide. His hair has greyed since I last saw him.
I agree it’s been years.
“I heard about your mother passing a few years back. That’s so very
tragic.”
I agree it’s very tragic.
“So, what are you up to? How has life since middle school treated
you?”
I tell him life is fine and that I work at Jim’s, but that that’s only
temporary because I’m planning on becoming a teacher.
“A teacher? My goodness, that would be wonderful! We need lots of
good teachers in Mangle County, you know.”
I agree we do. After an awkward moment, we bid each other goodbye
and say it was nice seeing each other and such as that. He fails to mention
what he caught me doing in the janitor’s closet when I was in the 8th grade
and I’m glad for this.
After gathering my groceries, I go to the register where a young lady—
probably only sixteen or seventeen—begins scanning my items. Her
nametag identifies her as Swelly, an odd name, and she has a bunch of
jewelry in her face and wears black lipstick. There was a time in my life
when I would have found this stuff rather attractive, but that was about
fifteen long gone years ago. Swelly asks if I want my milk in a bag and I
tell her no thanks.
32% of women with multiple facial piercings are involved in regular
drug use. 16% of people—any gender—who wear black lipstick on a daily
basis have frequent thoughts of suicide.
The sky is already a dark blue as I walk out into the parking lot, with a
dozen or so stars twinkling and only a sliver of the sun still peaking over the
horizon. I head toward the street, intending to cross it and take a right
toward my house, when I see a woman’s wallet fall from her purse as she
gets out of her car. She appears not to notice and closes her door and walks
toward the grocery store with her walletless purse slung over her shoulder.
Shuffling over to her car, I set the milk on the pavement and scoop up
her wallet and hold it over my head, hollering “ma’am” to get her attention.
She turns around, looking startled, looking frightened, looking like
someone who thinks they’re about to get robbed.
“Yes?” she says, her light-brown eyes wide.
I tell her she dropped her wallet.
“Oh, goodness,” she says and walks timidly to where I stand. “That’s
very kind of you. A lot of people in this world would have taken it. Thank
you.”
I tell her to think nothing of it. She has wavy brown hair to her
shoulders, styled nice but not eccentric. She’s heavyset but not fat. Her
breasts are full but she’s conservatively dressed, so as not to draw attention
to her curves. She wears little if any makeup, yet her face is pleasing in a
simple way. She takes the wallet from my outstretched hand.
“Thank you, again,” she says, smiling. “You’re truly kind.”
I nod, wanting to say something more but completely unable to find
the words.
“Goodbye,” she says, nodding back and turning and walking to the
grocery store, the whole time with me standing there like an idiot deaf-
mute.
When she’s disappeared inside the store, I go back to walking home,
almost forgetting to pick up the milk. The walk home is a blur. I’ve done
this a dozen or more times, where I unexpectedly come across a promising
candidate for a life partner and end up blowing it by either not saying
anything or, worse, saying something incredibly dumb.
One time, I was attending the county fair, checking out the concessions
and different vendors. There was this lady who had a table selling
handmade jewelry. She definitely looked like a potential mate, so I
approached her table and fondled the earrings and necklaces she had on
display. She asked how my day was going. My garbled response was to
inform her that it was Fat Tuesday. I wasn’t lying. It was Fat Tuesday. But,
seeing as she was a rather hefty woman, she understandably took offense.
She quickly noted that I wasn’t so slim myself and called me an asshole and
advised I shop elsewhere.
98.3% of women do not like being called fat.
When I reach the house, I notice the same cat from the previous
evening camped out in my front yard. I put the gallon of milk in the crook
of my arm carrying the other groceries and stoop down and snatch up the
cat before it can run away. Instead of throwing it, I bring it inside with me.
It’s kind of a multi-colored cat. Not altogether ugly. I let it roam around
while I put away the milk and mayonnaise.
I go take a leak and pick a few nose hairs, which I store away in zip-
lock bags, and come back out and kick the cat in the face and then make
myself a tuna sandwich. The cat is very interested in the tuna sandwich
despite the kick in the face. I let her or him—not sure which—take a bite.
She or he seems to enjoy it.
I put a bowl of milk out for the cat then watch a documentary on
heroin addiction among transvestites in Wisconsin then cut up the dead kid
in my basement and vacuum seal the pieces and store them in the freezer
down there. After all that, I go to take a shower, taking the cat and the corn
on the cob with me.
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Wendy
22% of modern relationships begin online.
The internet seems like it would be the perfect place to meet your
special someone, especially if you want a specific type of special someone.
Maybe you live in a moderately small town, like myself, and can’t seem to
find that special someone in your community. The internet should be the
perfect way for you to connect with those outside your community. The
problem with internet dating is that so many people lie about themselves.
A staggering 89% of women have used filters when posting pictures of
themselves online. Equally staggering, 58% of the populous admits to
fibbing, lying, or exaggerating when filling out their profiles on dating apps
and websites.
I met a woman on such a website. Her name was Wendy. Wendy
DarkPoet was the handle she used on this dating site. (I didn’t know it then,
but 97% of people who fancy themselves dark poets are talentless fools
who type out gibberish and post it online and call it art.) She had dark hair
and dark eyes and wore dark clothing. All this was fine with me. She also
claimed to be a recluse who didn’t like being around people. Excellent; true
love is only really experienced when you’re alone together. She said she’d
never been in love and dreamed of the day when she’d be united with her
soul mate. Because the world, she explained, created a perfect match for
everyone.
All this was music to my ears. I agreed with nearly everything she
said. We began talking regularly through the website messenger. Pretty
soon, we exchanged phone numbers and were texting nonstop. I suggested
phone calls, but Wendy always declined, saying that she felt embarrassed
talking on the phone and she was afraid she wouldn’t know what to say. I
consented. It’s understandable for someone who is a recluse, someone who
isn’t overly sociable, to not want to talk on the phone. This is what I told
myself, my brain foggy with desire for her.
This went on for months.
I was spending a significant portion of my time reading her poetry and
trying to make sense of it. She had this one poem about a vampire and a
witch making love, and it used the F-word nineteen times. The poem was
barely a page long. Whatever emotional response her poetry was supposed
to trigger, it was having little effect on me, unless you count confusion and
revulsion. I figured it was just over my head.
Eventually, I convinced her to meet up. She lived about four hours
away. We met at a seafood restaurant in Shreveport, Louisiana that was
about an hour from her home and three from mine. This was before my
license was suspended, so I’m meaning three hours of driving time, not
walking time. The distance bothered me a bit, yes. But, surprisingly, 60% of
long-distance relationships work out. Plus, there was no reason I couldn’t
move her in with me if we really hit it off.
So, we met.
I suspected right off that she’d lied about her age. She looked a good
deal older than twenty-six and a good deal older than her online pictures
suggested. She had crow’s feet, for goodness’ sake. Nevertheless, we made
our pleasantries and sat down for dinner. Conversation was light. We
ordered tea and food and I commented that the place smelled good and she
agreed. I asked if she’d written any poetry today and she said the words
weren’t coming today. When our food arrived, she held up her hand and
told me not to start eating yet.
“Bart, I have something to tell you,” she said.
I said okay. Surely, she was about to explain that she’d lied about her
age, that she’d made her profile say she was twenty-six without realizing
what the consequences would be if she really met her true love. She would
say the more we talked and the more she realized she was falling in love,
the harder it became to come clean. Naturally, this would anger me. But it
would be forgivable, I suppose. But I would have to know her real age.
“Bart,” she said, looking at her hands, looking at her dinner, looking at
her napkin, “I have kids. I have five kids.”
I sat dumbfounded, holding a fork with a chunk of slimy red snapper
clinging to it, my mouth slightly ajar.
“I’m sorry, Bart. I know I should have told you. But they’re really
good kids. I think you’ll love them.”
I dropped my fork, took the napkin from my lap and threw it on the
table, and got up and left without saying a word, without taking a single bite
of dinner. Wendy DarkPoet, or whatever her real name was, called my name
and chased me outside. She banged on my window as I pulled out of my
parking place. She chased me on foot as I edged out of the lot and shot out
onto the freeway.
Unfortunately, Wendy died that night, along with all five of her
children and three other residents, when her apartment building burned
down. Another artist gone before her time.
OceanofPDF.com
A Visitor
40.3% of Uber drivers are female. I did not get one.
It was raining this morning, so I decided to call an Uber to get me to
work. I considered driving my mother’s old Buick but figured I shouldn’t
risk it. Sometimes there is a police car parked at the gas station next to
Jim’s. I’m not sure if the officer is taking a break or watching for violators
or randomly looking up license plate numbers to see if the driver of said
vehicle has a suspended DL. So, I make the safe decision.
The Uber driver is an African fellow and he doesn’t say a word to me
or even nod or otherwise acknowledge my existence when I get in the car.
When the door shuts, he drives. We pass Miss Danbury’s house and I see
her wobbling to the mailbox with an umbrella. She does not slip and fall
and break her hip on the wet concrete.
The Uber guy drops me off at Jim’s and I tell him thanks for the ride
but he doesn’t say anything. When I go inside, I’m surprised to find Hector
has already arrived. He’s dancing around and listening to something on his
ear pods as he gets the drive-thru station ready for customers. Jim sees me
and asks where I’ve been. I look at my watch and see that I still have a
minute before my shift starts.
Today is Saturday, which means Jim’s Hot Chili is 25% off with the
purchase of a drink. I get started warming the giant stainless vat we use to
cook the chili. Then I go into the cooler and get the plastic tub of chili
we’ve been reheating for at least a week now. It sizzles as I dump it into Big
Bertha, the name we gave the chili-cooking vat. From my pocket I take a
zip-lock baggy with a couple of two-day old turds in it and feed it to Big
Bertha. The turds sizzle. I stir everything together and place the lid on Big
Bertha, then ask Jim if I should make any fresh chili in case we run out. I
have raw cat meat in my other pocket just in case. But Jim says the chili
should last through the day.
Hector tells me he had two girls at the same time last night, which I’m
not sure I believe. I don’t question him though. 83% of men want to have a
threesome. I’m not one of them. 86% of men lie about their sexual
accomplishments. It’s probably more. 18% of men claim to have had a
threesome. It’s probably less.
“Yo, Shorty, that chili smelling good today,” Hector says.
I agree, it does. He eats a bowl before our first customer arrives and
says it’s fantastic. At 11:30, I go to the restroom and take a poop into the
same zip-lock baggy then add this to the chili. Saturdays are busy chili
days. Jim has a bowl for lunch. So do Lacy and Rico, the college guy that
only works weekends. They all say it’s swell. I try a bite for myself and
agree it’s tasty.
At 5:30pm, thirty minutes until I’m off, Hector comes back to my
station and says some girl up front is asking about me. I tell him that’s
ridiculous and that I’m too busy to play games because I have twelve patties
cooking, two of which have cat meat in them. I don’t tell him that part.
“Seriously, dog, there’s this chick out here asking for you. Has to be
you she’s talking about.”
I sigh and ask him what she said.
“Yo, she said the bald guy with glasses. Yo, she said you found her
wallet or some shit.”
My mouth drops open. Sweat crops up on my forehead. The sizzle of
beef and cat patties seems to grow increasingly loud, until that’s all I hear.
And I’m hot. It’s like it’s me on the griddle, being cooked up and flipped
and slathered with cheese and sauce. I haven’t a clue what to say. My mouth
likely wouldn’t work if I did.
“Yo, it is you she’s talking about! Shorty, get your bald ass out there
and talk to her!”
I stammer something neither he nor I understand, standing there slack-
jawed with the spatula in my hand.
“Yo, I’ll take over the grill for a minute or two. Go check her out,
Shorty. Get you some of that poo-nanny!”
Reluctantly, I hand the spatula to Hector and remove my apron and
leave my station in the kitchen, pushing through the swinging door that
leads to the front registers. The least desirable profession on the planet
when a woman is looking for a mate is a fast food worker. That’s what I’m
thinking as I approach the counter. It feels odd up here, looking out at the
dining room of Jim’s Burger Joint. I never go to this side of the restaurant.
Sure enough, there she stands. Beaming.
I smile, weakly, my hands clasped in front of my trousers, my fingers
fidgeting. It occurs to me that I have a zip-lock bag in my pocket with poop
smears inside of it. I hope she can’t smell it.
“Hi,” she says. Her hands are clasped in front of her too, clutching her
purse. “I figured you worked here.” She points at her own shirt as if
pointing at mine, at the Jim’s logo.
I nod but can’t manage to say anything.
“I…I wanted to thank you for last night. For giving me my wallet.”
I nod again and manage to tell her it was nothing.
“It was very kind of you,” she says.
She told me this twice last night and I’m beginning to feel
uncomfortable and two customers—two teenagers in slouchy britches—
have walked through the door. If they try to place an order with me, I’ll
look like a complete fool. As they approach the counter, looking at the
menu, I point at Jim, who has been standing over in the corner with his
arms crossed watching this whole ordeal with amusement, and tell the teens
that he’ll take their order. Jim chuckles and approaches the register and asks
them what they want. I smile again at the woman but feel like I’m smiling
too broadly. So, I decrease the broadness of my smile.
“My name is Sara,” the woman says.
I nod. She probably thinks I have some mental handicap. I inform her
I’m Bart. Then I tell her my whole name is Bartholomew Bartley, just to get
that embarrassment out of the way.
“Bartholomew Bartley. What an interesting name. You must have
interesting parents.”
I agree they were interesting. I don’t tell her that Mother died of
poisoning and Father died by jumping in front of a bus.
“Bart,” she says, looking down at her feet briefly, “would you like to
have coffee sometime?”
I stutter something and sound like a fool, like a dark poet. Sara seems
to understand whatever garbled mush comes out of my mouth.
“Would tomorrow be okay? Or do you work Sundays? Or go to
church?”
I manage to tell her I don’t have work and don’t go to church. I was
forcibly removed from a church once, after an incident involving a rolled-
up newspaper, three candles, a priest, and a confessional. But, obviously, I
don’t tell Sara this.
“Tomorrow then? Starbucks or Carlson’s?”
I tell her I prefer Carlson’s to Starbucks but we can go to whichever
she wants. She prefers Carlson’s too. We agree 10am is a suitable time to
meet and Sara bids me farewell after once more thanking me for giving her
her wallet. Jim says Hell must have frozen over if women are suddenly
asking me out on dates. Hector calls me a sly dog and tells me I better be
balls deep in Sara by noon tomorrow and tells me I better bring protection if
I don’t want a little Shorty Jr. crawling around in nine months.
Only 7% of women prefer to ask out the man, as opposed to being
asked out.
I float through the rest of my shift. To celebrate, I treat myself to a
chili burger, even though I rarely eat at work. I walk home in a daze.
Though Sara didn’t say it was a date, that’s clearly what it is. You don’t ask
a stranger to coffee this day and age unless you’re considering becoming
romantically involved.
Relationships that begin with dates at coffee shops are 71% more
likely to be successful than those that begin with dates at pubs. It’s a good
sign, whether Sara is aware of this statistic or not.
There are no cats in the yard when I arrive home, barely recalling my
walk from Jim’s to the house. I go through my closet, trying to decide what
clothes to wear tomorrow, while listening to a podcast called The Art of
Relationships. 70% of heterosexual women prefer men who wear clothing
that is snug but not tight. Definitely not baggy, unless the woman in
question has greater than nine tattoos, two or more piercings in her face,
and smokes grass. I should dress casual but not overly casual.
I decide on a pair of dark Levi’s and a black button-up shirt that is the
proper length to be left untucked. I iron these items while listening to the
remainder of the podcast and then hang them up on the back of my
bedroom door. Then I polish a pair of black leather shoes that I haven’t
worn in some time. They’re square-toed and fashionable but not too
snobbish. After this, I place a black belt and black socks atop my dresser.
All of this could have easily been completed tomorrow morning, but I
prefer to not be stressed about time.
After a long shower, I pee into a coffee mug and put it in the
microwave for eighty-two seconds and put a sleepy time teabag into it. I
drink this while watching a documentary about the prevalence of
necrophilia in the concentration camps of World War II.
Before going to bed, I send an email to my senator telling him he’ll be
assassinated in thirteen days. I have trouble getting to sleep, so I stick my
finger in my butt and count to fifty.
OceanofPDF.com
Date Day
66% of dates in which one of the people in question arrives late result
in no follow-up date.
My alarm goes off at 7am rather than the typical 8. After performing
my necessaries, I eat a bowl of oatmeal with sliced carrots and mustard,
washing it down with apple juice. I wash my mouth twice and shave extra
close, being sure not to miss a spot, and apply an extra layer of deodorant. I
then dust a small amount of baby powder over my torso and between my
legs.
80% of women will not date a man who stinks. Though, women
equally assert they like the scent of a man’s sweat, as I stated before.
Studies show, however, that the pleasurable sweat odor is noted when a man
has been exercising or performing manual labor, not when perspiring from
nervousness about a date.
I sit on the couch in my underwear and watch several videos of various
surgeries. One of them depicts a large abscess being removed from a man’s
testicles. When it’s 9am, I get dressed and spray on a hint of cologne and
once more rinse my mouth with mouthwash.
Given the stats on women’s likelihood to date a man without a vehicle,
I decide it’s worth the risk to take the Buick. Carlson’s Coffee is too far to
walk and taking an Uber to a date would be ridiculous, and either of those
scenarios would be frowned upon by Sara, no doubt. I’ll drive the speed
limit and stop fully at all stop signs and obey all traffic lights.
I slide into the car and insert the key and for one panicked second I’m
convinced the car won’t start and my coffee date will be ruined and I’ll
spend the next three months mourning that I’d lost the one, all because I
didn’t check the Buick’s drivability beforehand. But it fires right up.
I worked at a coffee shop for about a year. It was the job I had before
my current one. Calling myself a barista sounded a lot better than calling
myself a fry cook or burger flipper. 65% of women drink coffee daily. 77%
like the smell of coffee. Good numbers. Women—and people in general—
hold baristas in higher regard than fast food workers, even though they’re
both low-paying positions in the food service industry. That job went away
when the Texas Department of State Health Services shut down the coffee
shop because large volumes of June bugs were being ground up with the
coffee beans. It was good coffee.
As I pull up to Carlson’s, I see Sara’s Honda Accord turning into the
parking lot. The fact that she drives a four-door sedan is a good sign, unless
there are car seats in back. Women who drive coupes are twice as likely to
smoke and drink, and three times as likely to be unfaithful to their mate,
compared to women who drive sedans. Women driving minivans are the
most loyal, but that’s typically a clear indicator of motherhood. I’m not
interested in finding a partner who is already a mother.
I park next to Sara and she sees me and waves, smiling, as I put the car
in park. We disembark our vehicles at the same time. Sara is wearing a
yellow sundress and has a yellow scrunchie holding her hair back. She’s
wearing makeup, but not much. She wears black flat sandals and her
toenails are painted yellow with black polka dots. Her black purse is slung
over her shoulder. I tell her good morning.
“Good morning to you, Bart,” she says.
We don’t touch each other but we walk close together. I feel somewhat
awkward, like my hands should be doing something, and I start to put them
in my pockets but decide against it, feeling this might give the impression
that I don’t wish to hold Sara’s hand. I ask her how often she goes to
Carlson’s.
“Not very often,” she says, turning her head to look at me as we
approach the door. “I usually brew my own. What about you?”
I tell her it’s been a while since I’ve been here and I open the door and
allow her to go in first. The coffee shop smells like a coffee shop. Like
fresh coffee beans and cinnamon and all manner of sweet things. I tell Sara
it smells good.
“Sure does. Have you eaten breakfast? I may get a muffin or
something.”
I say I ate a little something earlier but that I’m always open to a
second breakfast, then I pat both hands on my belly. Sara laughs, smiling
broadly. Women find men more attractive when they’re capable of poking
fun at themselves, especially regarding weight.
We walk up to the counter. Surprisingly, there is no line. I recognize
the barista as a young woman whose miniature schnauzer I killed last year.
She was reading a book at the city park, letting the pup run about. I
cornered it behind some bushes and removed all four of its legs with a pair
of garden loppers. It was alive when I left but the newspaper reported the
next day that it had died. I still have the legs. Sara orders a vanilla latte and
a blueberry muffin. I order a red eye and a brownie. I pay for both orders
even though Sara says she is happy to pay.
63% of women prefer the man pay for the meal when on a date, though
this stat is trending down.
We take our food and find a table by the window and wait for our
coffees. I comment that the weather is nice. Sara says she’s glad it stopped
raining but that her garden really needed it. I ask what she grows in her
garden and she names off several vegetables and some herbs. I tell Sara I
had a garden for a few years but that my backyard is in a low area that
retains water, so it’s not the best for growing. She asks what I grew and I
tell her cucumbers. She asks if that’s all I grew and I say yes and she laughs
and says I must really like cucumbers.
The barista whose dog I killed calls out our order and I go get the
coffees. The vanilla latte smells overly sweet. I return to the table and hand
Sara the latte and she thanks me and says she likes my glasses. I tell her
thank you and tell her her dress is very pretty. We sip at our coffees and
nibble at our pastries. We talk about the art that decorates Carlson’s,
agreeing that it’s nice.
“How long have you worked at the burger place?” Sara asks, sounding
truly interested.
I tell her almost four years but that I want to become a teacher. I
explain that I have most of the college required already and that I just need
to enter a teaching program. Sara nods and says that all sounds wonderful. I
ask what she does for a living.
“I guess you could say I’m a teacher,” Sara says, crinkling her nose in
a way that I find alluring. “I make instructional videos.”
My heart flutters when she says she’s a teacher. She’s getting better by
the second. I ask what subjects she covers.
“Oh, all kinds. I’ll have to show you. So, do you have any family
around here?”
This question is a massive indicator of her intentions. 94% of women
who ask about the family of the man they’re dating do so because they’re
interested in a long-term relationship and are curious if current family
dynamics could in any way hinder things moving forward. The other 6%
ask about family just to fill conversation. I don’t believe this is the case.
I tell Sara that I have no children and both my parents are deceased. I
tell her about my brother dying when he was an infant, when I was twelve.
The official cause of death was SIDS. I don’t tell her the real cause. I tell
her about my grandfather dying in the nursing home from hypoglycemia. I
don’t tell her about the large vial of insulin I have in my medicine cabinet. I
tell her I have an aunt and uncle that live somewhere in South Dakota who I
haven’t seen or talked to in years. I ask about her family.
“No kids for me either. Maybe someday. My parents live in Dallas, just
far enough away so I can visit on occasion without worrying that they’ll
drop by without warning.”
I laugh at this and we talk some more, sipping our coffees slowly so as
not to bring the date to a close too soon. I tell her I collected baseball cards
as a kid. She collected rocks and sea shells. I enjoy watching
documentaries. She enjoys scary movies and romantic comedies. I have no
pets and nor does she, though she likes all manner of animals and would
like a pet at some point. I tell her I feel the same way.
I excuse myself to the restroom where I take a leak then stuff a wad of
toilet paper down the front of my pants. I look at the fake bulge in the
mirror as I wash my hands. When I exit the restroom Sara is looking at her
cellphone. Our pastries are long gone and when Sara takes a drink from her
mug, I can tell by the tilt angle that it’s almost gone.
“Can I have your phone number?” she asks when I get back to the
table.
I tell her of course and give her my number. Moments later, my phone
buzzes. I look and see that I have a message saying Hi, Bart! I text back Hi,
Sara! and save the number as hers.
“This has been really nice,” Sara says, sticking her phone in her purse
and smiling at me.
I agree that it certainly has been nice. There is no more coffee in my
mug or hers. I’m contemplating how to go about asking Sara for a follow-
up date when she speaks.
“When is your next day off?”
I tell her tomorrow, further explaining that Sundays and Mondays are
my typical days off, but that I’ll pick up Sundays on occasion if I’m
wanting a little extra spending money.
“Do you have any plans tomorrow?”
I indicate I don’t.
“Would you like to come over to my house then? I can make us lunch
and maybe we can watch a movie or something.”
89% of women who ask for a second date with a man desire a long-
term relationship. 72% of women who ask a man to come to their home are
open to the possibility of sex.
OceanofPDF.com
Post Date Drama
I’m over the moon with joy after leaving Carlson’s Coffee when I see
the police car in my rearview mirror, its lights twirling. I’m being pulled
over.
Frantically, I look at the speedometer. I was not speeding. I stopped
fully at the stop sign half a mile back. I have not been driving erratically.
Turning on my turn signal, I slowly pull the Buick into the parking lot of an
adult toy store that doesn’t open for another hour. When I park, the police
car pulls up behind me, blocking me in. Watching through the rearview
mirror, I see a female officer disembark from the police car, blonde and
slender, wearing sunglasses.
Women in law enforcement are 70% more likely to have a
domineering, type A personality as opposed to women in other professions.
Though female officers are less likely to use force compared to men, they
are twice as likely to write a ticket for simple traffic violations. 22% of
female officers are lesbians.
Sighing, I roll down my window as she approaches. Is driving with a
suspended license an arrestable offense? I’m not sure. Maybe it’s up to the
officer. I’m not sure the statistics on female officer arrest rates, but this
officer being blonde and slim is not a good sign. Whether I’m arrested or
not, the Buick will certainly be impounded, leaving me in quite a
predicament tomorrow, when I’m supposed to be going to Sara’s for lunch.
I could make an excuse to Sara, I suppose, telling her that I had to put the
car in the shop or something, and I could take an Uber to her place. But this
would result in a serious blow to her perception of my manliness. A man
should be able to work on his own car.
“Hello there,” the officer says when she reaches my window. “License
and proof of insurance, please, sir.” Her voice is even, just going through
the motions.
Opening my glove box, I grab my insurance card, deciding, for now,
not to bother with the revolver or the steak knife or the rope or the Dremel
tool I have hidden beneath the car manual. Pulling my license from my
wallet, I hand her both items and fart loudly.
82% of women who hear a stranger fart try to avoid interaction with
this person.
The officer looks at me oddly, then scrutinizes my license and
insurance, both of which are in date. Looking back at me, she says, “Where
were you headed, Mr. Bartley?”
I explain that I was going home and had just come from Carlson’s.
“I see,” the officer says, nodding. “I pulled you over because your
brake light is out. Passenger side.”
Relief washes over me. Just a light out. No big deal. I thank the officer
for letting me know. I tell her that I’ll get it fixed right away. I say I’ll go
directly to AutoZone and fix it now.
“That’s a good idea,” she says. “Let me just go run your license and
you can get on with your day.”
My heart stops. I ask if it’s really necessary for her to run my license.
“Have to do it for everyone we pull over. It will only take a minute.”
She turns and begins walking back to her vehicle.
I call out to her, unbuckling myself and opening the door. Trying not to
sound panicked, I ask if she wouldn’t mind showing me which light it is
that’s out.
“It’s the passenger side brake light,” she says, barely halting her stride
back to her vehicle, where she’ll quickly discover that my license is
suspended.
I get out of the car, saying that I never can remember which light on
the Buick is the brake light and which is the blinker. I ask again if she could
show me.
Sighing, the officer walks around to the rear of the car and points at the
brake light on the right side as I walk up and stand alongside her. I nod and
say I thought that was it and suggest that maybe the light is just
disconnected and that I should be able to check it out by opening the trunk
and that if she didn’t mind, she could shine her flashlight into that corner so
we can have a look. She sighs again but removes her flashlight from her
belt and pushes her sunglasses up on her head.
Smiling, I tell her thank you and open the trunk. The officer clicks her
light on and bends inside the trunk, angling the beam to the corner. I ask her
what she sees as I pick up the crowbar. She’s beginning to say something
when I bring the iron crashing down on her head. It makes a crunching wet
sound on her skull. She’s unconscious after one blow, going limp and nearly
sliding out of the trunk. I keep her from falling to the pavement though and
lift her and shove her all the way inside. After removing the radio and
Glock from her belt, I close the trunk and look around. The parking lot is
empty but the street has several cars motoring back and forth. If anyone
noticed the happenings, I can’t tell.
I throw the radio and gun into the front passenger seat of my car then
proceed to the police cruiser that’s blocking my escape. It’s still running and
the doors are unlocked, so I get in and pull it into a parking space. I notice a
nightstick wedged in between the seat and the center console and I grab this
and put the car in park and turn it off, taking the keys and nightstick with
me when I go back to the Buick. I wipe sweat from my brow with the
sleeve of my shirt as I start the car and head for home.
I’m about halfway there when I hear the officer start rustling around in
the trunk. She bangs on something then screams something I don’t
understand then bangs on something again. I ask her politely to keep it
down. I continue driving normally.
Suddenly, gunshots fill the car, incredibly loud and painful to the ears.
Four quick shots from the trunk. One of them tears through the headrest on
my seat and I feel it whir past my right ear. Another hits the center of the
windshield, leaving a hole with a spider web of cracks around it.
Apparently, the officer had another gun on her somewhere.
Screaming a curse that I don’t typically use, I grab the Glock from the
seat next to me and, still driving, fire into the backseat until all the rounds
are spent. Fifteen or sixteen total shots, I think. My ears are ringing, so I
can’t be sure, but I think the movement from the trunk has ceased.
That night, to celebrate a successful date with Sara, I smear my own
feces across my naked body then violate the officer’s corpse with her
nightstick while I watch a documentary on extreme body modification.
OceanofPDF.com
Sara’s House
I elect to park the Buick in the street in front of Sara’s house rather
than in her driveway. Though I installed a new brake light prior to leaving
the house, I was unable to get the windshield fixed before today’s date. Sara
might find the bullet hole in the windshield, the three in the dash, and the
multiple bullet holes in the backseat peculiar and parking on the street
offers the least likelihood of her noticing these anomalies.
Her house is a moderately sized brick home with light pink trim. The
grass in the front yard is lush and manicured and the bushes are neatly
trimmed and daffodils along the driveway bloom beautifully. Assuming
Sara cares for her yard herself, these things indicate she finds comfort in
staying home and takes pride in her things, both of which are ideal traits for
a mate.
I’m wearing non-pleated khaki pants and a light blue button-up short
sleeved shirt, an outfit I determined looked nice but would be comfortable
for sitting—possibly cuddling—on the couch as we watch a movie. There is
a strong wind today and it whips my clothing as I get out of the car. The
weather man said there is a 70% chance of thunderstorms this afternoon.
56% of women say they are more inclined to get close to their partner
during stormy weather.
I walk up the driveway carrying a single red rose—a gift that indicates
I like her without coming off as desperate or presumptuous—and move
along the sidewalk to the front door, where I ring the bell. Sara answers the
door after fourteen seconds. She is wearing another sundress, this one a
floral print with lots of reds and yellows. The yellow scrunchie is in her hair
again and she wears red lipstick.
59% of women find red lipstick to be empowering. An even greater
percentage believe men find red lipstick desirable. This is not the case for
me, but her choice of this color suggests she wants my desire.
“Hello, Bart,” she says, smiling broadly.
I tell her hello and offer her the rose.
“Thank you so much. That’s so sweet.” She takes the rose and smells it
and sighs with satisfaction. She waves her hand indoors and says, “Come
on in.”
I follow her inside and close the door gently behind me. There are
candles lit somewhere in the house and they smell of frankincense,
lavender, and eucalyptus, a combination that conveys neither lust nor
romance. It’s a homely scent. Comforting. The house is dim but not dark
and is well-maintained, clean and tidy without being museum-like.
Sara retrieves a vase from a cabinet in the kitchen and puts an inch or
two of water in it and then adds the rose, which she smells once more
before turning to me. The kitchen, too, is clean. Whatever she intends to
make for lunch, she has yet to begin. I suspect she may want to chat for bit
—perhaps even engage in our first kiss—before setting about preparing
lunch. This is okay by me.
“Would you like some tea?” she says, pulling a kettle from a cabinet
next to the stove. “I always drink a little herbal tea in the afternoon.”
I say tea would be wonderful. 35% of women drink herbal tea. People
who drink herbal tea are generally believed to be more health conscious and
more likely to live a long life.
“I hope you’re not too hungry yet. I figured we could drink tea and talk
for a little bit first.”
I indicate this would be just fine by me. As the water warms, Sara asks
what I did last night. I tell her I did some laundry and watched some
television and ate some stew. All this is true. I don’t tell her about cleaning
the trunk or what I did to the officer or what was in the stew. I tell Sara she
has a very nice house and she says thank you and says we’ll go look at the
garden later if I want and I say that would be fine. She says she has some
cucumbers in the garden but they’re not ready to be picked yet.
When the kettle whistle blows, Sara grabs two mugs and adds a teabag
to each and pours in the water. She hands me one and leads the way into the
living room where we settle onto the couch, sitting apart but not too far
apart. Conversation continues over this and that. I sip at my tea and she sips
at hers. I ask what her favorite kind of music is. She says golden oldies, like
Van Morrison and The Everly Brothers and John Denver. I state she has
good taste in music and she puts some on, keeping it low so we can still
talk.
Studies show that people who prefer mellow music are more
empathetic and observant of the needs of others.
I yawn but Sara appears not to notice. She tells me about a time when
she visited Alaska with her parents, but I’m having trouble following her
story. The music, even though it’s low, seems to weave in and out of her
words. I watch Sara’s lips moving, trying to read the words as well as hear
them. I yawn again. I’m incredibly embarrassed and apologize for yawning
but Sara waves her hand and continues talking. Now, she’s telling me about
a trip to Hawaii, saying how blue the water was and something else and
more stuff I don’t follow. My brain is foggy. I try to remember if I got any
sleep last night after everything I did with the officer. I can’t remember. My
eyelids are growing heavy. Sara’s words are garbled; mushy sounding.
43% of men report having a drink unknowingly spiked at some point
in their life. A shocking statistic.
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Perfect Match
I’m naked when I wake up.
There is a bright light above me, shining down on me, like the lights in
those surgical shows I watch. My brain is still muddled and my arms and
legs aren’t moving. I realize I’m restrained. I’m lying on something—a cold
slab of metal, it feels like—and my arms are restrained at one end and my
legs at the other.
“There he is,” I hear Sara say from my right. “I was wondering when
you would come around, Bart.”
I look in that direction, my vision blurry. I blink several times, hoping
to understand what I’m looking at. Sara is outfitted in black latex. The latex
suit even stretches over her head, leaving openings over her mouth, nose,
and eyes. Her lips look red as ever. She has some sort of military style hat
on her head. She fancies herself a dominatrix, I’m guessing.
16% of women enjoy bondage. I’m unsure if that statistic means
enduring the bondage, applying the bondage, or both.
This is an unexpected development.
Though my words are slurred, I manage to ask Sara what’s going on.
“Oh, Bart,” she says, flinging her hand up. It’s then that I realize she’s
holding something. Some leather thing with tassels. A flogger? “You’ve
been chosen to participate in one of my lessons!”
I should be very concerned about where this is headed—and I am—but
for some reason I can’t help picturing my naked self laid out like this. I’m
thinking about what my penis must look like with me being cold and scared
and embarrassed. I’m certain it has sucked itself up into my abdomen
somewhere. This is very humiliating. I let Sara know that I appreciate her
wanting to involve me in her lesson but that I’m very cold and kind of just
want to go home.
She laughs and turns around and looks at something. I realize there is a
camera behind her. A camera on a tripod. A green light is on, I guess
indicating that it’s recording. My vision is clearing a little. At least she left
my glasses on. I sigh and look back up at the light, noticing another camera
up there. Looking back at Sara, I suggest maybe we could do this another
day.
“I think not,” she says, laughing again. “Bart, have a look to your left.”
I have a look to my left. The wall is covered with things. Leather
things and stainless things and other stuff. Whips and paddles and saws and
knives and surgical instruments. All manner of things one would expect in a
sufficiently stocked torture chamber.
1.2% of women consider themselves sadistic.
I congratulate Sara on her assortment of things and ask if she plans on
hurting me.
She laughs again, then turns to the camera. “Ladies and gentlemen,
boys and girls, people of every sort, this is a lesson on what happens when
you’re a naughty boy. Do you want to see what I do to bad little boys? Do
you want to learn how you should treat bad little boys? Of course you do!”
She twirls her leather thing for the camera then spins around and hits
my chest with it. It doesn’t hurt bad. She tosses it aside and leaves my field
of vision. That was just for show, I’m assuming. I ask Sara what I did to be
a bad little boy. I tell her I thought we had a good date. I say I don’t think I
deserve this.
She emerges again, leaning over my face and whispering, “You didn’t
do shit, Bart. You’re a good little boy. I just say that shit for the camera.”
With that, she shoves something into my mouth, something plastic and
tube-like. She turns back to the camera. “This one comes by special request
from Johnny in Iowa: The Funnel of Puke!”
My mind is just beginning to register what she’s said when I see Sara’s
latex-covered fingers diving into her own mouth, gagging her. She gags and
leans over me, removing her hand and vomiting directly into the funnel
she’s stuffed into my mouth. It’s hot and sour and chunky, filling my mouth
and gagging me. I try to spit it out but Sara has a firm hold on the funnel,
making it impossible for me to expel anything. I have only one choice: I
swallow the puke. It immediately regurgitates back into my mouth, but with
nowhere for it to go, I force it back down. Three times I throw up into my
mouth and have to swallow. Eventually, it stays. Sara removes the funnel
and tells me that wasn’t so bad. Panting, I say it was pretty bad. She says
we’re just beginning.
It doesn’t get better from there. Sara smashes my balls with a hammer.
She saws off my toes. She sticks needles in my eyeballs. Of course, she
whips me and paddles me and flogs me and all that stuff too. All of this,
apparently, is at the request of different people from different places. Her
patrons, I suppose. Or students, she may call them. She pulls out my teeth
with pliers and runs screws up my nose and cuts my penis off and shoves it
up my butt and uses a giant dildo to shove it up further. Lots of people
requested butt stuff. All sorts of things get shoved up there. At one point,
Sara pulls poop out of my butt and smears it on me. I find it somewhat
ironic that I was enjoying doing that to myself the night before.
I don’t last long when the knives come out and she starts exploring my
insides. I’m assuming the video lasts a good while after I’m dead. No
reason for her to stop just because my heart does.
0.000000006% of women in the United States make a living doing
snuff films. And that one lady just happens to be my perfect match. My
100% match.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Patrick C. Harrison III (PC3) is an author of horror, splatterpunk, and all
forms of speculative fiction. He is also an award-winning editor and a
blogger. You can follow his free newsletter at pc3horror.substack.com,
where he writes frequent movie reviews and updates on his fiction. If
you’re interested in either his writing or editing services, feel free to email
PC3 at pc3@pc3horror.com.
More Books from PC3
Grandpappy
Vampire Nuns Behind Bars
A Savage Breed
Cerberus Rising (w/ Chris Miller & M. Ennenbach)
Inferno Bound and the Hell Hounds
5 Tales That Will Land You in Hell
5 Tales of Tantalizing Terror
Visceral: Collected Flesh (w/ Christine Morgan)
Visceral 2: Filleted Flesh (w/ Daniel J. Volpe)
If you enjoyed 100% Match, you’re guaranteed to be a fan of PC3’s
exceedingly depraved novella Grandpappy. Find it on Amazon!
Praise for Grandpappy:
"PC3 unleashes the equivalent of an Extreme Horror nuclear bomb on
fans of the genre. The result is a cyclone filled to the dirty brim with
brutal imagery and gorrific dialogue, all wrapped in a filthy,
overflowed adult diaper worn by the legendary Grandpappy!"
-K. Trap Jones, author of The Drunken Exorcist and owner of The Evil
Cookie Publishing
"Well. That was f*cked."
-M Ennenbach, a thoroughly disgusted poet and author of Hunger on the
Chisolm Trail
"With a level of grotesquery matched only by its pitch-black hilarity,
Grandpappy manages to tell a story so interesting you ALMOST forget
about all the...moist bits."
-Chris Miller, author of Dust and Shattered Skies
"I can’t in good conscience give Grandpappy a blind recommendation
to the Gen Pop, but for the weirdos, splatterpunks, and fans of
extreme, I think it’s requisite reading. It’s the twisted bastard child
of The Nightly Disease, House of Leaves, and American Psycho — but
much sicker than any of those titles."
-Craig Wade, Host of B-Movies and E-Books
"One of the most extreme, twisted, splattery pieces of fiction to ever
come out. This book will have you thanking whatever God you
worship, that you don’t have a Grandpappy like this to care for. If you
have a weak resolve or stomach, consider this your warning."
-Dawn Shea, owner of D&T Publishing
"A stomach-churning good time. PC3 knows how to cut the gross-outs
with a healthy dose of humor. This is the kind of book that'll have you
giggling into your barf bag (but keep one handy, yeah?)" -Brian Asman,
author of
Man, F*ck This House
"Patrick C. Harrison III's prose are smooth, engaging, and lull you into
a false sense of wholesomeness. Grandpappy puts the reader through
the emotional ringer, and then squeezes out a little bit extra for good
measure. If you're looking for your next read that leaves no stone
unturned, and no taboo unexplored, Grandpappy is sure to tick all the
boxes. From the most unreliable narrator I've ever read, to medical
terms that I had to look up and then wished I could scrub from my
mind, Harrison takes you places you never thought you'd go. 5 rancid
beans out of 5. P.S. As for me, chilidogs are now OFF the menu."
-RJ Roles, owner/operator of Books of Horror and Crimson Pinnacle Press
"In Grandpappy, PC3 practically pries open your eyelids and force
feeds drops of acid into your eyeballs as he whips this wicked written
fever dream across the page. It's imaginative, intense, and totally
insane. You'll vomit in your mouth a bit, but you'll f*ckin' love it."
-Carver Pike, author of Grad Night and co-host of the Written in Red
Podcast
"I'm a registered nurse. I've dealt with the colostomies. The dreaded
bedsores. The gnarly fungus-encrusted toenails. And yes...the smells.
Inexplicably, PC3 still managed to stimulate my gag reflex throughout
the entirety of this story. Bastard."
-Bridgett Nelson, author of Bouquet of Viscera
“Crazy! Out of this world weird at times. It goes from a normal start to
suspicion of the weird, to what just happened!?
This book is not for everyone, it is truly extreme. If you dare, you may
be rewarded. Or you may be sick. Either way it will be an
unforgettable experience.”
-Amazon Review
“I loved this book!! It was like a splatterpunk fever dream. It was my
first by the author but won’t be my last. If you like absurd and gross
horror this book is for you.”
-Amazon Review
“What the hell was that? Wild ass book, that read more like a Bizzaro
Extreme Horror. Messed with my head a LOT. That being said, it was a
fun read, and made ME feel like I was going crazy.”
-Goodreads Review
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