Part 26 (2/2)
Sigh.
Sometimes life is good.
Entomophagy is the consumption of insects as food by humans. Human insect eating is common in cultures in many parts of the world; over one thousand insects are known to be eaten in eighty percent of the world's nations. Insect eating is rare in the developed world.
A bowl full of millipedes, as long as they're not actually writhing, is a not untasty-looking sight, something like a cross between Kellogg's Coco Pops cereal and a spicy Indonesian bami goreng. In my enthusiasm, I called out, ”Garnish them with a sprig of parsley!” and was roundly admonished to shush up: n.o.body wanted to hear my voice on tape. I blushed for my lapse in professional standards. I mean I really blushed: what the h.e.l.l was I thinking, breaking the fourth wall? Christ. My mother's voice from early childhood sprang to mind: For f.u.c.k sake, Raymond, doing random s.h.i.+t like you do is why you're never going to be allowed to have fancy things in your life. Now nip down to the chip shop and swipe me some f.a.gs. If Mr. Bradbury catches you, just blow him. He's not picky. Just make sure I get my Rothmans at the end of it. Don't stand there like your a.r.s.e is full of bowling b.a.l.l.s, boy. Move it!
Ahhh ... precious childhood memories.
You'd think I could just sit there for a few hours and watch some wildly attractive semi-naked people eat millipedes, but no-and why? Because from behind the bleachers, in a wail no sound technician on earth could ever scrub from a sound track, I heard my mother heading my way.
”Raymond? Is that you in them seats? Move over, because I'm coming up.” She clumped her way up the rows to settle beside me, Fiona, Eli and Tony.
”h.e.l.lo, Fiona dear. h.e.l.lo, boys. You two are Yanks? Good on you. We put out for you something special back in World War II, we did. Shove over, Raymond.”
”So, how was your gourmet meal, as prepared by Tabs and Elspeth?” I inquired.
”Gourmet food means nothing to me at this point, Raymond. I've got me a dead colon. May as well ask me to digest a concrete lawn ornament.”
”Lovely.”
”Don't be such a prig, son. I spent half your childhood trying to coax a poo from you. My G.o.d. I may as well have been trying to pry a hooker's t.i.t from your father's claws. The way he'd lay into a woman? Jesus and Mary, it was like a peregrine falcon making off with a fluffy little duckling while its mum screams from the reeds. Mind you, that kind of manhandling has its merits-or you wouldn't be here today! Har, har har!” Mother coughed up a fetal pig and horked it off the bleachers into some crabgra.s.s. ”Oh, look at me and you, Raymond, a million years later on a glamorous South Seas island, like two peas in a pod. Nothing like family, I say, nothing.”
We all stared down at the contestants. At the purple-coloured picnic table, Tammy [Dental Hygienist, Texas] was about to guzzle a soup bowl full of hostile earwigs-who could object to watching that? Tammy furtively held a wriggling horned thingy up to her starving lips, and suddenly Mother went ballistic, shouting, ”Oh, my dear G.o.d, Jesus, no! Stop!”
Everybody stared at her as she carried on screaming. ”Good G.o.d, girl, what are you thinking, putting those nasty creatures down your throat?”
”Mother-”
”This is all part of America's undeclared war on science! I can tell!”
Time stopped as we all tried to figure out what she was on about.
”Mother, that makes absolutely no sense. The insects here are delicious and protein-rich, raised in hygienic farm-like environments.”
”Eco-friendly and green,” added Tony.
”When Tammy or whatever her name is eats them, she's actually receiving all the EU-sanctioned daily dietary recommendations,” I said.
Mother looked fed up with me. ”Raymond, she's a ho eating a f.u.c.king bowl of bugs. Don't you talk down to me, son. I'm just saying that the Americans don't like science anymore and are trying to get rid of it as quickly as they can. That young woman eating bugs over there would have been an astrophysicist if her country hadn't s.h.i.+pped their entire economy to China. Her life could have had dignity; instead, she's eating worms to pay for an endless string of abortions.”
(You'll note that Fiona stayed silent during all this. And that my mother knew the word ”astrophysicist”-who would have guessed?) ”Well, whatever, Mother. This is a TV show. It has endless minutes that need to be filled with endless amounts of footage. If you make any further outbursts, the PAs will drag you off to some forgotten lagoon where those people I mentioned a while back who gave you your brand-new t.i.ts will take them back with carpet knives as they squeal with glee.”
”You can't blackmail me over my implants anymore. Tabitha told me while I was eating that once your implants are in, they're in forever and can never be removed no matter what, like a band of travellers taking over your backyard while you're at church.”
”Mother, you've never been to church in your life except to pilfer sedatives from the purses of those Presbyterian women who run the thrift sales.”
Stuart stalked over to us. f.u.c.k.
”Potter, what the f.u.c.k is going on here?”
”Just chatting with my mum is all, having a lovely time watching some attractive young people eat insects.”
”Can you tell your mother to please keep her f.u.c.king voice down?”
”How dare you swear at my mother!” As though tasered by some unseen force of filial duty, I dove off the bleachers head first at Stuart and knocked him to the ground. ”n.o.body talks to my mother like that!”
45.
If you've ever seen a fight erupt in public, you'll know that n.o.body ever dashes in right away to stop things-even nuns and vicars want a dab of free blood. So there I am hammering away on Stuart, with him hammering away on me, with grit in our eyes and countless dozens of entertained eyeb.a.l.l.s staring at us, cast and crew yelling encouragement, when in my blurred peripheral vision I see Mother crabwalk down the bleachers, screaming, ”Kill him, Raymond! Kill that nasty f.u.c.ker who swore at me! Kick him in the teeth! Kick him in the b.o.l.l.o.c.ks! Kill that f.u.c.ker! Kill! Kill!” I have to admit, I felt just the tiniest whiff-just a kitten fart, really-of love for the old woman.
Fiona was also on her feet, chanting, ”Get him!” I had no idea whom she was supporting.
And then, when we had started to slow down a bit, a couple of the more burly PAs pulled the two of us apart to Mother's chorus of ”f.u.c.king p.u.s.s.ies. f.u.c.king he-p.u.s.s.ies is what you are!”
Stuart pulled free of his PA and started brus.h.i.+ng the coral dust from his khaki trousers. ”Potter, you are FIRED from this show.”
Tony and Eli grabbed me so that I didn't lunge at him again. ”Fine. Like I care. And by the way, while we're all here, Stuart, how can someone who's a big shot TV network guy like you be so incredibly f.u.c.king cheap that he actually seeks out free bootleg CDs of a children's movie? I mean, how can anyone be that f.u.c.king cheap, Stuart?”
Victory! I could see everyone thinking: Well, yes, this Gunt does have a point. Why couldn't a flunky have bought one for you? You couldn't just get it off Apple TV or Netflix? You really had to save a few bucks by having someone import a bootleg?
Nailed you, you f.u.c.ker.
”Actually, the CDs weren't for me, you selfish d.i.c.khead. They were for the children's hospice in Bonriki.” Hospice? Uh-oh.
”That's right, a hospice! For children dying of cancer. Yes, you heard that right, cancer.”
I could feel audience sympathy drifting Stuart's way.
”The trans-Pacific Internet connection went down, and the children really wanted to see Harry Potter, like it was a final wish, so I thought that I, Stuart, would make a difference. So excuse me if helping some dying children get their final wish is cheap. I guess we should all follow your fine example and retreat to a lagoon-side f.u.c.k hut while the rest of the world goes to h.e.l.l.”
I could then see an idea entering Stuart's mind, and I sensed I wouldn't like it one bit. ”Yes, well, Herry,” he said calmly. ”I'm not a total a.s.shole, and I apologize to your mother for swearing at her.” He looked at Mother, who was just then shaking dandruff flakes from her hair. ”Sorry about that.”
”Not to worry, whoever you are.”
Stuart turned back to me. ”Okay, here's the deal. Just to show you how magnanimous I am, I'll set you a challenge. If you can eat a full bowl of bugs, you can have your job back.”
”Really? You're not just f.u.c.king with me?”
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