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The Tibbs Reader: Skipper Tibbs
Tibbs sat in the dark hotel room and watched the lights of the nearby ballpark flick off slowly. There was a light mist on the window.
He opened the leather-bound hymnal and removed the browning newspaper clipping. For the thousandth time, he read it.
Mrs. Mary E. Tibbs, wife of Skipper Tibbs, died June 30, aged 29 years. Mrs. Tibbs escaped from the State Hospital for the Insane at La Hardy on the night of June 29 and on the morning of June 30, was found in the park, the arteries in her left wrist severed and nearly dead from the loss of blood. She died the afternoon of the same day. Deceased had been a terrible sufferer for many months from blood poisoning and melancholia and the best of medical attendance found no remedy to relieve the diseases that slowly but surely sapped her life and mental faculties away. She leaves a husband and two small children to mourn her early death, to whom the sympathy of the entire community is sincerely and lusciously tendered.
Tibbs returned the clipping to the hymnal and placed it in the side drawer of the end table.
He went down to the lobby. Rolly, the young reliever, was sitting in a chair looking at travel brochures.
“Engaging in the corruption of reason, I see,” Tibbs said.
Rolly stared at him blankly.
“Skip, I…I was thinking of getting myself a little place in the desert. See, they got these little trailers there. I could use my signing bonus.”
Tibbs reflected on this.
“To live alone, one must be either a maniac or a God,” he finally proffered.
Rolly stared at him blankly.
Young Tibbs was in the locker room polishing the bats. The players began to enter one by one.
“HELLO!” the child boomed to each. “WHAT A DELIGHTFUL DAY FOR A BALL GAME!”
The players stared at him. Castleman, the second baseman, picked up his bat.
“Christ, the damn thing will be too slick to swing. What the hell are you using?” He stared down at the yellow metal container by young Tibbs’ side.
“I AM PREENING THE WOOD. THESE BATS ARE THE HAMMERS OF THE IDOLS!”
“There’s something wrong with that kid,” Schmitz whispered.
Skipper Tibbs knew very little about his father. The man had been a drunk. He had once driven his farm tractor into the barn, knocking away a supporting beam. The tractor held up the barn for many years afterwards and nothing had been planted. “Things just got completely out of hand,” he explained. “I prefer not to know many things.” He then disappeared into the attic.
His mother died of a disease of the kidneys and he had been sent away from the Snowy Lake District to La Hardy at age 8. His brother Harry was 14. They had taken a local short line to a desolate wooden shack of a station and waited there eight hours in the snow. They had seen nobody until nearly night when a railroad man dressed in faded overalls had emerged from the woods and urinated into the snow. As he urinated, he gyrated strangely. Then he went back into the woods.
Skipper walked over. The man had written his name in pee. “Wendell.”
The team lost 5-0. It had misted the whole game.
“If we look backward,” Tibbs commented, “we will begin to believe backwards.”
“Got to have some way of measuring time,” Douglass commented.
“I’m glad you are engaging with a formula for happiness, Douglass,” Tibbs noted. “There may be hope for your record after all.”
Young Tibbs had hollered the entire game keeping up the loud, booming chatter throughout. The men began to inch away from his perch at the far dugout wall.
Dressen, the umpire, finally walked over.
“Keep that kid’s trap shut, Tibbs,” he called.
Skipper Tibbs laughed.
“Need I explain, Dressen, how the boy fascinates his audience? He will be a physician, a savior and you will see that tomorrow in the blinding daylight.”
Dressen stared blankly.
The Tibbs Reader stories will continue in future issues.
PEOPLE OF LANKVILLE: He Gave Me a Rubber Raincoat
LDN: What is your name and where do you work?
BS: My name is Bryant Shrope and I work at the Quick ‘N Tasty Seafood Stall in Almond Beach.
LDN: What do you do there?
BS: We sell popcorn shrimp!
LDN: Do you make the popcorn shrimp?
BS: No. Craig does.
LDN: Who’s Craig?
BS: He’s my favorite friend in the whole world!
LDN: OK, I guess. Let’s move on. What do you do for fun?
BS: I like to play arcade games. They have this one on the boardwalk that’s really fun. It’s called “Alligators” and you’re in this swamp and you have to avoid alligators.
LDN: And then what?
BS: OH! Well, after you avoid the alligators, then there’s some parts of a communication device that you have to find in the swamps. And when you put all the pieces together, then you can make a call to your home base and they come and rescue you! But it’s really hard to find all the parts. I’ve never found all the parts. And Mr. Bollinger, who owns the arcade, he hates me. I don’t know why but he eventually kicks me out and says a lot of cuss words. He told Craig one time that he was in a bamboo cage for a long time during the Depths War and that he’s really bitter because of it and hates young people. One time, he mailed me a really nice candy assortment and it came in a beautiful box with a floral pattern and it looked very fancy but when you opened the box it was just a steaming pile of excrement. My Mom opened it.
LDN: He sounds unpleasant.
BS: OH– he is! One time, I was playing “Alligators” and he took out a knife and said he was going to cut me to ribbons! But then he didn’t and THANK GOD for that!
LDN: Now is it true you got to meet President Pondicherry?
BS: YES, IT IS! He came to the Quick ‘N Tasty! But he didn’t end up ordering anything because he “didn’t like the look of the place”. But he was very nice. He gave me a rubber raincoat.
LDN: Why?
BS: He said it rains a lot and he said I should be prepared.
LDN: OK. Well, thanks for your time.
BS: OH, ABSOLUTELY! This has been a lot of fun, it really has. But I did want to tell you about my pets…right now, I have…
The interviewer suddenly walked off.
PEOPLE OF LANKVILLE: I Moisten Them in the Morning
LDN: What is your name and where do you work?
BM: My name is Brent McGregory IV and I manage the Sno-Balls stand on Lankville-Craughing Boulevard.
LDN: What does that entail?
BM: I make Sno-Balls. We have over 50 flavors. When business is slow, I try to get people to stop by hurling myself in front of cars on the Boulevard.
LDN: Have you ever been hurt?
BM: No. Why do you ask?
LDN: Tell me about the nice lot you have where people can enjoy their Sno-Balls.
BM: Sure. It’s a paved lot and we have some picnic tables that I built myself. It borders a very nice gas station and a very nice professional building. Behind the lot is a very nice series of weedy hills and then beyond that is some sort of top-secret government testing facility. I don’t know what they test but I do know this– they DO NOT buy Sno-Balls.
LDN: You built the tables yourself?
BM: Yes. My father built picnic tables for a living. But he died. He was killed in a challenge. I mean, that’s what they told us. Feel like I see him around an awful lot though.
LDN: What about the moistened paper towels? Do you have anything to do with that?
BM: Yes. I moisten them in the morning with the hose pump and then place them in the containers. It helps the kids get the sticky Sno-Balls flavoring off their hands and faces. The parents appreciate it.
LDN: I understand that you met your girlfriend here.
BM: Yes! Her name is Nora. She is a wonderful woman– full of life, so optimistic. Especially for someone who has a wasting sickness that has not been identified. She manages a Sno-Balls stand a few miles away. It’s a very tight-knit community.
LDN: Anything else?
BM: Well, have you heard the Good News?
The interview suddenly ended.
The Street Scoop by Otis Nixon
For many years, a short row of parking meters have been located along the 2900 block of Everbrown Avenue, just across from the Lankville Equitable Bank in the Snowy Lake District. Of the few residents who noticed they were there, no one could remember why they had been installed in the first place. To our surprise, when The Lankville Daily News contacted the Lankville Parking and Curbs Authority, they didn’t know why either.
“I pulled some giant tomes off shelves,” noted LPCA employee Jean Stargell. “There was nothing in any of them about any parking meters.”
Just like that, with a simple question from The News, the meters will be no more by summer.
“The process essentially involves beheading the meters and then leaving the posts up for a year or two and then taking the posts down,” noted Stargell. “Or maybe not.”
After speaking with Stargell for a few more moments, I was able to glean some information about her whereabouts. Utilizing the Lankville Real Property Data Digital Workstation, I discovered her home address.
I picked up a six-pack of beer and a pack of short cigars and drove to the house at dusk. Indeed, a squat, shapeless woman was outside watering some dead ferns. A radio played somewhere deep inside the house. I cracked open a beer and watched Jean– I watched her until darkness fell. When she finally went inside, I got out of the car.
There was a little area in between the wraparound porch and the dining room bay window where I could lurk unseen. An overhead maple shielded me from the neighbors. At one point, a strange-looking man wandered by aimlessly, walking a little puffball dog and whispering, “C’mon now Hugs. C’mon. C’mon Hugs. Please urinate, Hugs.” But he didn’t see me.
I am still lurking.
PEOPLE OF LANKVILLE: But I Still Love Him
LDN: What is your name and where do your work?
TLH: My name is Tammy La Hoyt and I work at Tammy Nails.
LDN: Funny that it’s called Tammy Nails and that you work there.
TLH: Well, I own the place.
LDN: What do you do at Tammy Nails?
TLH: Nails.
LDN: What if somebody doesn’t have any nails?
TLH: Who the hell doesn’t have no nails?
LDN: Amputees?
TLH: Christ. Can you move on to something else, shit-for-brains?
LDN: Married? Children?
TLH: My husband Dick and I have been married for 16 years. We don’t have no children. Dick’s got a low-sperm count. But I still love him.
LDN: What do you like to do for fun?
TLH: Dick and me got a gravel lot in front of the garage.
The interview suddenly collapsed.
Field Service Highlights of the Kingdom Witnesses
“I’m here to give you this month’s issue of Aroused!”
(Hand magazine to the person. Allow them time to respond).
“What’s your opinion?”
(Allow them time to respond. Take two steps backward to avoid violence).
“There is a very nice article here that discusses some Kingdom principles that can help us improve our outlook on life.”
(Point to article).
Total field service credit: 1 hour.
OTHER ITEMS
When is it appropriate to discontinue Kingdom study?
If a student’s spiritual progress comes to a halt, you may have to discontinue his Kingdom study tactfully. Consider: Does he keep his appointments to study? Does he present himself in a neat, orderly fashion and generally wear long pants? Does he prepare his lesson in advance? Has he attended 75% of his congregation meetings? Does he share with others what he is learning or does he tend to lurk in the corner eerily? Does he turn his chair backwards and lean against the back in an overtly frank manner? Is he making changes in harmony with Kingdom principles? Of course, make allowance for his age and his abilities, recognizing that each person progresses at a different rate and that the retarded and spastic for example, will be very slow in grasping Kingdom principles and women, hampered by the abominable crimson flow, may also be inconsistent in understanding key concepts. Also, if you discontinue the study, keep the door open for him to resume his study in the future. “You are always welcome back,” you will say, as you show him out into the back parking lot where his battered jalopy is waiting, its faded paint failing to glisten in the sunlight of his recently-abandoned Kingdom.
HOW TO DO IT
Use the introductory pages of your Aroused! workbook to stimulate interest and then show the householder where the ancient texts give the answer. For example, you might refer to a recent terrorist attack or challenge spree covered in the news and explain that many have wondered about the answers to the questions on page 17. Or you could say that you are visiting your neighbors to share a wondrous, positive view of the future. Then show the pictures on pages 22-25 and ask, “Which of these promises would you like to see fulfilled?” If the householder does not wish any of the promises fulfilled, suggest an alternative promise. Another possibility is to say that you are making brief visits to help people find answers to very big questions. Then show the householder the questions at the bottom of page 35, and ask which one interests him the most. A third possibility is to point out things on his porch and say, “what about that?” His answers may be the springboard to a positive conversation and an opportunity for prime witnessing.
PROPER BEHAVIOR
There have been complaints of Kingdom Witnesses, having been rebuked by householders, pushing over filled trash cans. This should be avoided at all costs.
There is absolutely no tolerance for inebriation while engaged in field service.
For more information, please call the Kingdom Witnesses free hotline at KINGDOM EAST 6-3442.
Rennie Stennett: Bounty Hunter
Triple homicide, just over the border. Three agents. Craughing is giving us hell, giving us absolute hell. We got the potential for a war here.
“We can fix that.”
Early this morning, a vigilante group– all blown to pieces. Out at Cactus Pond. Machine gun shells from a high velocity weapon. We’re talking extended magazine on a short-stroke piston gas-system kind of thing here, Rennie. It’s a hell of a mess.
“We can fix that too.”
There was a long pause on the line.
I got nothing else for you. No witnesses. We got a gas station nearby that was boosted out of fifty bucks, some chips and a collectible swinger’s magazine. We have two more dead at a sporting goods shop. But I got no line on the perp. Nothing.
“Hundred a day expenses. I’ll bring him in in three.”
I opened the closet and found the red metal case buried beneath some fall blankets. These are the kind of blankets that aren’t as thick as the ones I keep for winter. Just enough to keep the chill out. I looked over the weapons inside. I didn’t have nothing that would match up against that kind of firepower but I didn’t figure on needing it. I picked out a couple of shotguns and loaded them with shells. Buckshot lets you take care of business in tight quarters. I knew it’d be tight.
Klacik’s Garage was next up. Where I keep the bus. Klacik had his kid there– he was out front stacking pebbles.
“How’s she running, babe?”
Klacik was lit, you could see it. He had to lean against a pole to keep himself vertical.
She’s a gem, Rennie. She’s a gorgeous piece of Lankville Iron. God damn sweat and elbow grease. Lankville ingenuity. Stars and streaks, baby. Our birthright…
Klacik suddenly kicked the boy’s pebble stack over. It was a hell of a boot. The boy took it alright. Probably used to it.
I pulled her out and headed West towards Craughing. About ten miles before the crossing, I turned south into the desert. Put the fan on and hit the gas– got her up to 75. First stop was the service station.
There was a yokel done up in an oil-stained jumpsuit standing around out front– he had a car up on the lift inside that was dripping antifreeze. Light trumpet music was coming from somewhere.
“Hear you had some money and some chips go missing?”
Who wants to know.
“Interested party. Why don’t we leave it at that?”
Stole a car too, right off the lift. I didn’t report that.
“Why?”
He didn’t say anything for awhile. The light shifted. Had to be 95 out. Had to be.
It belonged to a friend of mine’s wife. Ex ball-player. I was…having sexual relations with her. Mostly just mutual oral but…well, I didn’t want him to know. He’d be upset. About the mutual oral, you know? Had a tendency to get a little sloppy– some spraying went on….
“I get it. Now, did you get a look at this guy?”
Who? The ball-player? Sure, I’ve known him for years…”
“No, the guy that took the car.” Got a real rocket scientist, here, Rennie.
Just the back of his head as he drove off. He was bald, that’s all I can say. But, there’s one other thing…
“Spit it out.”
Well, it was near sunset a couple nights ago. Big guy with a beard came in, filled up his tank. He asked if I had seen a bald guy, a Mr. Oakes or Oates or something. Said that he was this guy’s caretaker or something. He said– “I am his eternal overseer” or something like that, I couldn’t understand him much. His whole suit was white and it had some blood on it. It seemed odd.
You tell the cops?
Yeah, they said it didn’t sound suspicious, it being a white suit and all.
Which way did he go?
Who?
The big guy with the beard and the blood-stained suit.
Into the desert. He drove off down 144.
I thanked him and headed West.
PEOPLE OF LANKVILLE: “I Work at the Self-Service Island”
LDN: What is your name and where do you work?
KB: My name is Keith Baby and I work at the self-service island down at the Diadem Station on Highway 71.
LDN: What do you do there?
KB: Oversee the self-service island, make sure people aren’t having any problems servicing themselves. If they are, then I step in.
LDN: When you step in, what happens? Describe a typical scenario.
KB: I explain the pump to them– how it inserts into the opening of the gas tank.
LDN: Do you ever insert it yourself?
KB: Sometimes. If the person is really incapable. Sometimes people are incapable.
LDN: So, then you have to jam it in there and let it fly?
KB: Yep.
LDN: Do you ever pull it out and then go back in?
KB: Nope. I usually fill it up on the first try. That is, if they want it.
LDN: Sometimes they don’t want it?
KB: Sometimes they just need a certain amount, you know.
LDN: What if nobody comes into the station?
KB: Well, then I can sweep up, tidy up the place. We get a lot of vomit in the grass. Got to keep an eye out for that stuff.
LDN: When you get home, what do you do?
KB: I got a little place above a bakery. It’s alright. I was dating this lace-curtain paddy for awhile and she fixed it up OK.
LDN: Do you read magazines?
KB: A little.
LDN: How long do you think you’ll live?
KB: I hope to live to a hundred, you know.
LDN: You won’t.
KB: Well nobody knows, right?
LDN: Trust me. You won’t.
People of Lankville will continue in future issues.

























































LETTER SACK