Clem Gummer; The BehemouthA Story by Michael StevensMore Clem and Del adventures!![]() After miles of driving, Clem found himself
getting more and more tired, jerking awake when the car hit the bun buzzers
that marked the edge of the lane. He
rolled down the window and wished it could go another 14 feet down, as their
plunge into the Sea of S**t hadn't left them smelling too good, slapped his
face, and told himself, wake the f**k up
there sum b***h! Beside him Del slept peacefully.
"Wake the f**k up there sum b***h!" he shouted and started slapping
his face. Del immediately snapped awake
from his deep sleep and looked around in a panic.
"Www-what is it? Where am I?"
"Good morning there sum b***h
sunshine a*****e! I need you to help
keep me awake so I don't drive us into oblivion."
"What do you want me to do?" Del
asked, shaking his head to clear the sleep away.
"Just talk to me; about
anything. Just give me something to
focus on."
"Oh, how about this? Your a, how would you put it? Oh yeah, a real sum b***h for waking me up
and scaring me!"
Clem immediately saw red, "Oh, I'm
terribly sorry for scaring you; Maybe you'd rather, I don't know, die because I
doze off and veer into a big-a*s building or something?"
Del wiped his hand across his face and
replied, "Sorry Clem; say, how
about them Cowboys?"
Clem shot him a disgusted look and
answered sarcastically, "That's what you consider
scinti--scinti---err--good conversation?
What makes you think I give a s**t about Dallas, or the NFL? Go back to sleep sum b***h; I'll turn on the
radio; at least the static will be an improvement over your boring-a*s lame
attempts at conversation," and he switched on the radio.
At first, all he heard was indeed static,
as they were miles from any city and driving in a valley, with towering peaks
all around. Then,
"...station WKRP in Washtub City and
this is the news. The annual Scarecrow
Mating Festival is this weekend; be sure to dress up your crow in the hottest,
latest fashions to insure a bountiful harvest.
In other news...,"
"You call that news? Well, I suppose in Backwater City it
is!" he sarcastically said.
"...two men reeking like they'd just
crawled out of someone's large intestine forced a family from their vehicle out
on Highway 672 and headed for parts unknown.
They were last seen heading towards Washtub City in a blue and primer
colored 1985 Chevy four door sedan."
"I think they're talking about
us!" Del interjected.
Clem just stared open-mouthed at the pile
of moron in clothes sitting next to him, "Gee, you think there Del?"
His obvious sarcasm went sailing over
Del's head, however, "Yeah; what are we going to do now Clem?"
"Well, the first thing we've got to
do is find a river and wash this disgusting s**t off, then ditch this car,
unless you know a way to lose two of the doors!"
*****
The flowing whitewater of a creek running
just off the highway had provided nature's cleanser and soon they were back in
the car, albeit soaking wet, they felt better than they had up to that
point. Now it was time to find a new
vehicle.
"Where is another car when you need
it?" whined Clem. They had driven
for miles and hadn't come across a single car, and Clem was feeling more and
more uneasy. It was beginning to seem
like they had a huge billboard attached to the roof that said,
"Two Desperate Criminals Who Stole
This Car and Forced a Nice Family Out of It and Headed For Parts Unknown, But
Here They Are, Call 911!"
They had
to find something else, quick. The
more time that went by the more likely their capture.
At last!
They pulled up behind a logging truck pulled off the highway. "Here's something!" announced Clem. Dell gave him a look, and asked,
"That? Are you serious?"
Clem flashed him a look like he was a
little kid who misbehaves in school and answered, "Yes, I am surely serious, and don't
call me--oh never mind; look, I know it's not ideal but do you see any other
cars we can steal; maybe a sporty little generic two-door?"
"Don't be ridiculous; I just mean if
we're trying not to draw any
attention to ourselves this isn't the way."
"Well, sum b***h, I don't think at
this point we have any options."
You've
got the first part right; you don't think! Del thought to himself. "I know you're right but I still don't
like it!" answered Dell.
"You don't have to be best friends
with the damn thing!"
What? No, I didn't mean the truck, I
meant--"
"I know what you meant; do you think
I'm stupid?"
"Do you really want me to answer
that?"
"F**k you, you b*****d!" came
the answer.
Meanwhile a man with a baseball cap, a
dirty vest, and string of brown juice running down his chin and making roughly
a portrait of Ed McMahon on his used-to-be-white tee shirt stepped down from
the cab, his heavy boots stomping into the puddles made from the drizzle; which
had started about an hour ago, came marching towards the car. He was talking, but they couldn't hear his
words. Clem rolled down the window and
the rain came sluicing in.
"..you guys want?"
They could hear the idling truck,
"Why are you stopped, is the truck broken down? Cause if it is, we can give you a lift."
Clem asked, figuring if it was they could simply squeal out of there.
"No, I'm just taking a break;
wouldn't do to fall asleep, now would it?"
Clem opened the door and stepped out,
"No, I suppose--" and cold-cocked the unsuspecting Ed McMahon
impersonator/truck driver, who slumped to the ground.
Quickly, he looked at the at the truck
with, "Tall Boy Timber Co" painted on the door and shouted for Del to
climb in. Del jumped in, still mumbling
about 'a big mistake!' and Clem climbed in behind the wheel.
"Can you even drive one of these
things?" Del asked.
Clem looked around the interior and it
resembled an alien spaceship to him but he wasn't going to admit that to Del,
"Of bloody course I can; do you
think I'd be dumb enough to swipe something I couldn't drive?" while at
the same time thinking, we're fucked!
Del just stared at him and shook his
head. Clem grabbed the gearshift with an
array of buttons of which he had no idea of their function, pushed in the
clutch, saw a '1', cleverly deducing that it meant first gear and jammed the
gearshift into it, and slowly let out the clutch. The truck lugged forward, rattling both their
fillings, and Clem worried that it would stall, but it gradually picked up
speed.
He chugged out into the right-hand lane,
and pressed down the accelerator even more, until the engine was screaming, and
glanced down at the gearshift quickly and found the '2nd' marker, depressed the
clutch, and shifted into it, only he let out the clutch too soon and his arm
felt like there was a swarm of bees stinging him all at once as the gearshift
ground and kept on grinding. He
depressed the clutch again and managed to get it shifted. He was regretting that he'd never learned to
drive a stick, but it was a little late now.
Somehow he'd coaxed the rebelling beast up
to 55, although the engine was howling in protest. He knew he needed to shift again, probably
more than once but this was good enough; he didn't want to mess it up. He knew this behemoth wasn't the long-term
answer but at least they were moving.
Del sat staring out the passenger window, shaking his head and
muttering. He at first was mad, but soon
shook it off; hey, at least they were moving, right?
© 2015 Michael StevensReviews
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2 Reviews Added on April 6, 2015 Last Updated on April 6, 2015 AuthorMichael StevensAboutI write for fun; I write comedy pieces and some dramatic stuff. I have no formal writing education, and I have a fear of being told I suck, and maybe I should give up on writing, and get a job makin.. more.. |


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