Archive
I’ve Had Just About Enough of These Hippies and their Sex Magazines
By Fingers Rolly
Man on the Street

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I swear to the Lord Christ, I’ve had just about enough of these fucking hippies and their god damn sex magazines.
You walk into the drugstore. There’s Fat Sam with his apron. You look at the magazine rack. Nothing but god damn hippie sex magazines.
“Why you carry this degenerate shit?” I asked once. Fat Sam looked at me kind of funny. I didn’t press it.
Then I went over to the post office. A whole wall full of god damn hippie sex magazines. It’s unbelievable. I don’t know what the fuck’s going on. I get home to my trailer in that lousy whore of a desert and there’s the Evening News. Guess what’s inside? A god damn hippie sex magazine.
I scream at the desert often.
The Lankville Daily News would like to apologize for the preceding article. Mr. Rolly was assigned an article on the wetlands of Lankville County.
Ric Royer’s Recipe for Mayonnaise of Chicken in Shells
By Ric Royer

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Ric Royer is well-known for his gastronomic creations.
Before starting, have some china-plated scallop shells or some bathroom cups available; place about one teaspoonful of thick, chunky mayonnaise sauce in the center of each container (your choice). If the mayonnaise is not chunky, luxuriant or even bushy, add some small yard roots.
Now, take the remains of a chicken and cut it in squares. The squares should be neat and as near to the size of a discontinued Lankvillian halfpenny piece as possible (if a discontinued Lankvillian halfpenny piece is not available, look it up online– they have a lot of stuff on there). Now add the crisp lettuces, the slices of hard-boiled egg, the fillets of blond anchovies and some olives. While the first three of those items should be of the finest quality available, the olives can just be from a can. Nobody gives a fucking shit about the olives.
Arrange everything alternately on the sauce, forming a nice pile. Now, carpet the pile heavily with the mayonnaise sauce, smoothing the top with a sharp knife much in the way that you would run such a knife over the buttocks of a lover as a gentle form of threat. Now, cook up some of the chicken remains (put some folded parchment paper over the dish), rub the livers and then cool, allowing for 25-30 minutes resting time.
To finish, place four little bunches of French capers on the edge. This is decoration, so arrange artistically. Myself, I generally arrange the capers in the manner of the foundations of the great Eastern Lankville pyramids. Finally, serve one to each person commenting loudly to each, “THIS IS MAYONNAISE OF CHICKEN” and calling their attention to the lateness of the hour. Allow for napkins.
Ramping Up the Dance Party with BIG CHIPS
By BIG CHIPS
Special Correspondent

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“The Cut” borrowed his Mom’s station wagon last night and we headed out to the dance party. It was in an abandoned warehouse downtown.
On the way there, “The Cut” goes, “We gotta’ stop and pick up my boy Grant. He’s a spray-paint artist.”
“Yo, that’s awesome,” I said. But I was kind of confused.
“Skinny Grant. The Granter. Grant Money.” “The Cut” fired up a blunt and screamed something out the window.
We picked up Grant. He had a girl with him. Gorgeous dark-haired beauty in a sun dress with a sweet face. I fell in love immediately. But she didn’t really look Big Chips’ way. Just had eyes for this Grant character. “We’re gonna’ make out,” he said, as they climbed into the back seat. “Nice,” “The Cut” said. I stared straight forward and tried not to listen.
We stayed at the dance all night. Big light show, couple of dj’s spinning some electronica.
“Yo, ethereal,” said “The Cut”. He horned in on a couple of girls, started dancing ’em up. I noticed he had on these giant flared pants– “seventy inches, yo,” he said at one point, holding up his leg. I couldn’t even see his foot.
I watched Grant and the girl. They’d dance, then they’d make out between songs. Someone snapped a photo. I couldn’t take it anymore.
The sun was coming up when I finally walked outside. Climbed up onto an old train bridge and watched the lights of the city flicker off. There were a few cars on the underpass. Then, I took the subway and a taxi home. Pops paid the fare.
“How was your night, Big Chips?” he asked. He had on a short tie and was loading papers into his battered briefcase.
“I tried ramping it up, Pops. But I got distracted.”
“By what, Big Chips?
I didn’t want to talk about it. We had some Buntz Mallows Cereal and then Pops went off to work.
I think I slept until three.
Royer’s Madcap Experiences: I, Tire Salesman
By Ric Royer

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Once, I got a job as a tire salesman. I decided on an aggressive approach.
A man walked in.
“Hey, asshole. You want to buy these tires?” I yelled.
He looked shocked, amazed.
“I…I’m just looking.”
“There ain’t no looking at these motherfuckers, chump,” I yelled, patting a nearby set of white walls. “You either buy or you are no use to me. Tire Garden can get along fine without your bullshit money.”
He asked to speak to the manager.
I approached the door of Gary’s office. Gary was in there playing solitaire on a laptop.
“There’s a rapist out here, wants to talk to you,” I yelled loudly.
Gary said nothing. Just looked at me with those weary red eyes.
They let me go that afternoon.
Brock’s Obsessions: A Men’s Health Column
By Brock Belvedere, Jr.
Senior Staff Writer

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I have loved only one woman. But she has left me.
Yet, she still dwells in the same cold, darkened house. In the very next room, in fact. Upon occasion, I awake, my eyelids wet with tears from some unremembered dream, and I believe her to be there. There is a sound and then the creak of a door and she is gone.
I lay awake for hours, tormented by hostile thoughts. I scan photographs of her past lovers. A foreign artist, a sort of filmmaker, another artist– all of them more beautiful than I. And I imagine her nights then, in the mysterious woods and the endless, harvested fields. I was not there with her and I am not there now.
I sit in a chair in a little room filled with old books and look out at the falling leaves of autumn. The giant beans from a cigar tree litter the overhang; a siren can be heard far off in the distance. What does the siren indicate? My interpretation may be obscure to some but I have come to believe it.
I wake again, long before dawn. Another lonely, fitful night. She is not there.
I go to the mirror. There is a cream purchased secretly, manufactured in Lankville by the Buntz Mallows company, a concoction made of shea butter, Vitamin E and mallows. It is meant to reinvigorate the skin. I slather it liberally across my face– it fails to transform me. “You are still ugly Brock,” I say, into the mirror. “You can not compare to the past lovers. That is why she does not want you.” I think of more– a tall blonde dancer, a little archivist with a Christ-like body, a tiny boy of the East.
I repair to the pitch-black attic with a flashlight and a sobbing towel. There is a box there– formerly housing a Vitiello Decorative Ham, now filled with old photographs. There are a series of my lover and I, taken very early, when her desire was perhaps extant– our expressions are serious but satisfied as we pose for a long-forgotten shutterbug. I look over these longingly.
Then, I come to a smaller album, decorated in lace, perhaps hand-made. And inside, a straight-on shot taken at a dance perhaps, or some sort of party– the sort of affair to which I would have never been invited. And my lover is engaged in a deep, soulful kiss with the artist. I pass the already moist sobbing towel across my eyes. I feel myself sinking.
I go to the office before dawn– no one is there. I am assigned an article on Lingus Nets matches. I have no interest in it and place it aside. And I scan the photographs again.
I imagine the warmth of her body. It has grown cold, autumn is arriving. But I do not have it.
Where is she?
I don’t know.
Further depressing men’s health articles by Brock Belvedere will appear in future issues.
Royer’s Madcap Experiences: What Be This Madness?
By Ric Royer

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You purchase a tent for camping. Perhaps you add accessories– a lantern, a portable cook-stove, a reinforced, inflatable side-hut. That is not the issue here.
You drive to an area where there are trees, dirt, brush and perhaps a nearby stream. The stream is filled with the piss of industry, so it is merely for show. You rip the tent from its box.
It’s beyond complicated. There are too many poles, too many little fabric loops that must be delicately threaded and it is getting darker by the minute. The people you have brought– they may be family, they may be hookers– are standing by impatiently. It’s ALL on you, my friend.
The instructions are suddenly taken up by a fervent wind. They are gone forever.
You try to use your intuition but there is now no hope. The construction will lead to a deepening confusion, increasing levels of consternation and then, ultimately, madness.
And that’s where we are now.
Royer’s Madcap Experiences: My Experiences with Dwight, Part III
By Ric Royer

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You had to drive about seventy miles until you found a town with a reasonable selection of titty bars, Dwight opined. There’s always Lawrence but I find that to be bush league, he said, without irony. Never was Dwight so eloquent as when he talked of titty bars.
We stole a comfortable car, a ’78 Dodge if I remember and Dwight drove, making the town in about 40 minutes. It was a series of one-story brick structures, all painted black with opaque windows in their doors and garish color posters at street front. There was a hawker too, who idled on the concrete steps until he found a prospective customer.
Dwight parked on a dark side street. He had reasons for this, he said. I found the comment mysterious at the time. Later, I would come to the conclusion that that was the moment when Dwight began planning his own suicide.
We walked to the half-deserted main street. You could hear saxophone music from somewhere. We had a choice of four clubs– there was Skippers Go-Go, The Urban Tiger, Kitty Korner and Gelsinger’s French Toast. Dwight leered at them, hands in his pockets, his hunter’s jacket covered with the stains of many a spreadable cheese luncheon. “One’s as good as any,” he said. Skippers Go-Go was first along the line.
The club was painted baby blue with a pole and a four-piece band off to one side. Dwight selected a table near the back and I followed.
Almost instantly a man with an enormous face and a ragged mane of hair grabbed Dwight by the shoulder. “My friend over there doesn’t like you. And I don’t like you neither.” I knew then there would be trouble and I bolted for the bathroom. I hid behind a locked stall door for what seemed like hours.
When I went back to the main room, the place had been partially burned to the ground. Only the simplest of architectural rudiments had been left. The floor had been cleared and a series of slop buckets had been placed to collect the blood. It was horrible.
I stumbled out onto an empty street. The rest of the clubs seemed still operating but there was nary a soul about. I tried desperately to find the old Dodge– I was convinced of the street but the car was gone. An old lady on a dilapidated shack porch, quite near where I felt the car to have been, smiled at me. Then she said, “Take a bus home. There ain’t no other way.”
I made the Greyhound station in just under an hour, despite having no sense of direction. It was painted the same baby blue as the club. I bought a ticket for Lawrence and the bus was near empty at that hour– there was a guy in the back wearing a t-shirt that read, I don’t need an encyclopedia, my wife knows everything. There was a browning Sunday paper all over the floor.
I never saw Dwight again.
Sci-Fi Lacuna with Dean T. Pibbs
Today’s selection comes from Manly Bannisters (1975- ) of Eastern Lankville. Manly has published five absolutely irrelevant novels thus far but is perhaps best known for his short story “The Turgid Blood Red Sun” which first appeared in the magazine “Inflamed by Stars and Blood” in February 2004.
THE TURGID BLOOD RED SKY By Manly Bannisters

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It was not so much that I resented my assignment in Khan, the human settlement adjacent to the Yount Stronghold. It was that I had at least hoped for preferential treatment because of my handiness with the Tools of Space. After all, I did know an awful lot about the tools and also about the Lair of Yount. My own father had been one of them, had given his life in the search.
“There is an ancient saying,” I suddenly observed aloud. “It’s to the effect that he who serves also waits.”
“Why don’t you shut the hell up, Glenn?” said one of the Fire Monkeys. And yet, he crept to the orifice and stared out into Deep Space Night. He was anxious– anxious as a monkey gets.
“Who would have thought this?” I said, in desperation. “They always told us in class that we know nothing about Deep Space. Or very little. But this? This…HELL?”
“It’s only Hell if you view the passing spaceships as beacons of hopelessness,” said another Fire Monkey. He was one of the wiser Fire Monkeys. I liked him.
“But they are! They are beacons of hopelessness!” I began to cry. I thought of my wife on Earth. It was true, we never had coitus. But still. The loneliness here with these Fire Monkeys was becoming unendurable.”
“Go outside the Lair. Take in some of the various elements that make up this Transneptunian Planet,” said another Fire Monkey.
“You go with me,” I said. “You go first.” One became paranoid in the Yount Stronghold.
He stood up and approached the orifice. He was reticent, I could tell. And for good reason. For, as soon as he placed his foot into the dusty surface outside the Lair, he was immediately destroyed by a laser. It was abominable.
To finish reading “The Turgid Blood Red Sky”, send $9.99 and return envelope to Manly Bannisters, General Delivery, Lankville.
Musings of a Decorative Ham Man
By Chris Vitiello

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Many years ago, I contracted with a nearby agency to execute a series of ponderous highway billboards advertising our Vitiello Decorative Hams. It was during my first visit to this agency that I became smitten with a staff member (this, indeed, was before I had implemented my austere methods of self-control). She was a lovely, gentle creature and I found myself instantly desiring her to the point of obsession.
A bond was created early.
“Do you enjoy the eating of pizza?” I asked her. She looked up suddenly from her paperwork.
“Oh. Yes. I very much enjoy the eating of pizza.” A change came over her large brown eyes.
And so, that very night, we feasted. Following, we took a slow stroll along the waterfront. It was Fall– the air had grown crisp and cool. It was invigorating.
The next night, we did the same. This time, however, our evening was rudely interrupted by the sudden appearance of a tall blonde man with a boyish face and watery, almost transparent eyes (clearly he was on narcotics) and short-cropped blonde hair.
The two entered into a conversation. I stood to the side, seemingly invisible as the tete-a-tete went on for an interminable, almost intolerable period. Clearly, there was something between them. Later, after he was gone, I asked, “Who was that?”
“He is someone I used to go to large dances with,” she responded. There was a long, pregnant pause. “With lots of other people,” she added. “It was a large group of us that went.”
I detest large groups that go dancing, I thought. But I said nothing.
We had relations that night, I admit. She seemed distracted and distant and kept asking if I was finished. It was wholly uncomfortable. Again, I said nothing.
The next night the man-boy appeared again during our walk. And for weeks after that, well into winter, it seemed that this man-boy would materialize out of the shadows, oftentimes having the apparent gall to be found leaning against my very own Decorative Ham factory. I desired to whip him and even began carrying a whip. But I did not act.
And our relations continued in the same manner. And by early Spring, they had curtailed dramatically. And yet, every night, there was the man-boy, out of the shadows– ready to engage in further patter with my woman– staring longingly at her figure as I stood by helplessly, wordlessly.
Finally, I asked of her: “you had relations with that man, no? It is clear.”
“No, no, not at all,” she said. She could not look me in the eye. She kissed me but it seemed empty.
I entered a dark period then. I grew distracted and obsessed by this man-boy. My work suffered– I no longer hand-checked each Decorative Ham and many complaints were issued. Sometimes, I found myself wandering about the wharf and along the sun-blanched piers, consumed by her lie. I thought of her with this man-boy, I began to picture the act in my mind. He had partaken of her flesh and she of his. It was unbearable.
Finally, unable to stand it any longer, I broke a date with the woman and began to drive. I ended up at the seashore. There was a little store there that sold nets. The proprietor was an ancient figure, slightly bent at the waist but with the same crop of blonde hair and watery eyes as my tormentor.
“I desire to buy out your business,” I said suddenly.
“What?”
“As I said, old man. I desire to buy out your business.” I produced a check book. After some haggling, we worked out a deal.
The next night, I had the store bulldozed into the ocean. And that ended the entire affair.
Royer’s Madcap Experiences: My Experiences with Dwight (Part II)
By Ric Royer

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For hours, Dwight would sit in his lawn chair beneath the bug-zapper utterly motionless, not even shifting his heavy frame once, staring languidly towards the eerie savannah. Then, he would turn towards me abruptly and say something like:
“Let’s go down and beat up that fellow that built that little piano.”
I’d agree and the next thing I know, we’d be heading down there in Dwight’s old pickup. The front was now benchless and it was necessary to squat awkwardly or attempt to position oneself on the squalid collection of fetid blankets that lined the floor but that became moist from ceiling leaks. The pickup was lampless now too and Dwight would often have to veer off the road to avoid an aggregation of tumbleweeds or a dead body.
We finally arrived at the derelict bungalow. It sat off on its own behind a series of low, dead hedges. The front picture window was boarded up with cardboard boxes– you could still read the advertising on their sides. Condor Alights Beer, Buntz Mallows, Magnanimous Boys’ Horn of Comfy Hotel Bedding, standard really. Dwight parked the pickup across the dirt road.
The eccentric was there, we knew it. It was said he had constructed a tiny piano that could read your mind, pick up any melody there, play it back to you. The story was all over the county. But no one had ever seen it. Dwight decided to remedy that.
He kicked in the door with one simple forward exertion. The front room was lit somberly and the eccentric sat crouched at a desk, writing. Papers and books littered the surface. He didn’t look up.
The piano was there on a little shelf. Dwight stared at it. Suddenly, it lurched into action and began playing the “Barberie Pound Soaps” jingle. Dwight let out an abbreviated laugh of self-satisfaction. “Guess it works, huh.”
“Of course it works,” said the eccentric, still not turned in his chair. “Now, I must ask you to leave.”
Dwight had violence in his veins that night, I could tell. But he also felt a measure of respect for the little piano that could play the Barberie Pound Soaps song and its inventor. He wordlessly beckoned me out and even replaced the door using only some old wood screws in his pocket and a dime as a screwdriver.
Then we drove out to a trailer park and beat up some Island People.
Royer’s Madcap Experiences: My Experiences with Dwight
By Ric Royer

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“The gryphon builds a little nest and puts the messages there,” he said. Then, he spat in the dirt.
I eventually got around to proposing to X14F (with Dwight’s permission of course) but she turned me down. I was given one of those printouts by way of explanation but I couldn’t understand it. It was a lot of letters and numbers mixed together. I showed it to Dwight one time when we were sitting under the bug-zapper in the back yard.
“Um hmm,” he said.
The Rise and Fall of Oleg: A Cautionary Tale
Reporter Cookies Puhl won an unwieldy trophy for his 2013 coverage of “Oleg”, once one of the richest men in Lankville, who was found living in a pay-by-week motel. Cookies was murdered shortly thereafter.
THE RISE AND FALL OF OLEG
By Cookies Puhl- INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER
He was so wealthy that he paid cash for an expansion hockey club. He owned 16 houses, including several at Lankville Beach. He kept a garage packed with fully-restored vintage cars.
And then he lost it all. His hockey club folded. The homes and cars were auctioned off. The man himself disappeared from public view. What became of Oleg?
Cookies Puhl did some poking around and then some shoving of people and finally found the former executive holed up in a pay-by-the-week motel, operating a fledgling internet cat-related crafts business. His story:
Oleg limps to a fast-food restaurant every morning where he eats two large pancake meals from styrofoam containers. “Even though I eat in, I always ask for the containers,” he says, slathering the cakes with seven packets of syrup. “The reason for this is that I can use the styrofoam in the cat-related crafts business. You have to think ahead, you know.”
Back to his room by eight, Oleg checks his email for orders. There are none. Now–the waiting game.
“I have my boxes ready to go,” says the former executive, pointing to a dim corner of the carpeted room. “There’s some bubble wrapping there, some labels. Then the crafts themselves are in a storage bin down by the weeds. You know, down there.” Oleg points vaguely to some distant craft arena.
I ask him if he is not upset about losing his sports franchise, his houses, his cars. “We had a good run,” he says, vaguely. “I had a good time sitting up in those skyboxes, having boxes of popcorn brought to me by tanned women. But, that’s all over now.”
He checks his email again. Still no orders.
“We have ceramic cat paper weights,” he says, for no reason. “So, if you find yourself in a situation where you have a lot of papers flying around but you also like cats…” He stops. He looks vaguely past the cheap curtains towards an enormous gravel lot that was once a drive-in movie theatre. There seems to be nothing behind his initial enthusiasm for cat-related crafts. There seems to be nothing behind those large brown eyes except sadness. He is a man bereft.
Another check of the email. Nothing. In fact, other, older messages seem to have suddenly disappeared. He reloads the page and the site crashes altogether. He suddenly throws up some half-masticated pancake into a wastebasket.
“I use this thing called spummail.net. It only costs $0.99 a year. But it’s unreliable. I’ll have to wait two hours now before it reloads.” He wipes the edge of the wastebasket with a damp towelette.
“I think I’ll probably take some hard decongestants and a nap for awhile,” he declares. He flops down on the unmade bed, watching the computer and its laborious machinations. A loud humming suddenly fills the cramped space.
The man that once owned a franchise in the Pondicherry Association suddenly falls asleep. It is only 9AM.
Cookies Puhl will continue the sad story of Oleg in later issues.
Part II Who is Oleg?
Who is “Oleg”? A complicated question with even more complicated answers.
“Oleg” was born in the Depths Island town of Ludz though he is quick to point out that his parents were 100% Lankvillian. “During the War, my father was permitted to travel between Lankville and Ludz,” Oleg reveals, after finally waking from his decongestant stupor. “The reasons for this are unclear to me to this day. My father sent the family to Lankville in 1992 and two years later he was viciously murdered before he could join us. The details are murky but it appears that he attempted to purchase a pair of extremely wide shoes, an argument ensued and that he was knifed to death by the clerk. We got a letter in the mail saying that.”
“Saying what exactly?” I ask.
“That he was knifed to death by a shoe clerk. Ever since then, I have had deep resentment for the Islands and when I was wealthy and could afford many globes [at one time Oleg had seventeen], I was always quick to place a blue piece of construction paper over the country so that it appeared to be ocean. I called it the Lankville Ocean.”
Oleg’s email has finally reappeared after many hours of loud humming and strange warning boxes. There are no orders.
“My father taught me about business. He taught me to save large sums of money by hurting smaller people. He also taught me to deprive myself of things until I had a lot of money and then to spend it on ridiculous things, like hockey teams. These were his life lessons.”
Oleg repairs to a small hot plate that he produces from beneath a knot of soiled blankets. There is a styrofoam ice chest as well and from there he brings forth a box of “Steak-Om’s”.
“Steak-Om?” he asks. I want one desperately but I can tell that Oleg is only offering out of obligation. I say no and he seems terribly relieved. He begins warming the frozen steak panel over the hot plate.
The day is half-over.
The sad story of “Oleg” will continue in further issues.
Part III, Oleg Reflects
By Cookies Puhl- Investigative Reporter
Oleg has fallen asleep again and burned his Steak- Om lunch. He reflects upon the loss as he turns over the now empty container, almost as if he hopes that, magically, more frozen compressed meats will appear. “The last two months have been all about loss,” he says. Then he adds, “I fear I may have catalepsy.”
It is now late afternoon and the sky has turned a slate-hued grey, reflecting the mood inside the spartan motel room. There are still no orders for cat-related crafts and the computer has become an electrical beacon of hopelessness. “The sky over Ludz was similar to this,” Oleg ruminates. “If I had the power, I would crush Ludz and its people,” he says, dramatically. He suddenly collapses into the yellow and brown curtains, snapping the rod straight out of the wall. An errant screw shatters the blinking computer screen. The lights in the room all go out for some reason.
I transfer Oleg’s quaking body to the bed. Strangely, no further light seems to be transmitted through the curtainless window; indeed, it appears to be growing darker by the second. I stare down at the former executive’s aging face and see now that he has vomited. I turn his limp body over and the vomit seeps into the carpet.
I momentarily leave the room and purchase a bucket of chicken and a 48-piece biscuit. When I return, Oleg is standing over the useless computer. He has removed his vomit-stained shirt.
“All of my shirts are now stained with vomit,” he says. “I was waiting for a sale so that I could do laundry,” he explains. “But, I see that you have purchased chicken and biscuits.”
He produces a quart of cheap vodka and I realize now that he intends to take part in the repast, whereas I had intended to eat the meal all on my own. I reluctantly allow him two breasts and two biscuits. He breaks down in tears and then becomes suddenly loquacious. A certain vigor has returned to his cheeks.
“In the Depths, we say that no amount of misfortune can negate a bucket of chicken.” He tears into the flesh. I eat my portion of the bucket voraciously, so that there be no excuse to share any further. Still, Oleg poaches several more biscuits. “In the Depths, we say that the biscuit helps to temper the vodka.” Somehow, I suspect he is lying, that he is making up these proverbs to gain more of my dinner.
The sun has now gone down over the hills.








































LETTER SACK