Dear diary,
Last night we installed a dethatcher blade on the roof of our Crown Victoria and drove around the city booming big bass beats: banging around the block, shaking the streets. I called out to a police officer who was patrolling that area: “Come on and climb into our vehicle. Would you like to roll in our whip with us? We are ripping and roaring around in our ride tonight.” So the man tipped his cop cap to us, and approached the passenger size rear door, and got in. He saw that his wife was already in the car: she was sitting with me; she had her arm around me. “You know Julianne, I presume,” said I to the officer, respectfully. The woofer speaker was right behind us blasting rumbling pummeling bass, so my dialogue had to be subtitled. The policeman looked a little uncomfortable.
Our chauffer drove us into the lot at the Palladium. The place was packed, so we had to go all the way to the back row, to find a parking spot. We got out of the car and walked the long way to the venue. I had a mask on my face. People cheered when I took the stage. I performed a Moroccan song, playing a double-headed drum with a mallet along with my lute. Old ladies everywhere began entering states of transcendence, sleepwalking around like zombies; that’s why the newspapers reported that the dead came alive: it was an optical illusion.
You are probably wondering who I am. Have you ever considered what the result would be, if the original Christians had received a supply of muskets from the resurrected Savior, so that they could protect themselves from their scheduled martyrdom? Well, I am the living answer to that question; for the above scenario was not hypothetical: my cohort and I are the original People of the Way. (That’s what we called ourselves back then; though over the years we have adopted the more popular moniker, despite finding it derogatory.) We apostles truly did receive a huge shipment of long-barreled guns from our risen Savior. And I was granted immortality like a vampire, when my Redeemer breathed on me, so I became his representative on earth, while he went back up to heaven. Thus, over the years, I’ve enjoyed cruising around the city streets, blasting the big beats and occasionally stopping to perform live Moroccan tunes, with my posse of disciples in our Ford Crown Victoria, atop which I recently installed a dethatcher blade in hopes that this shall become an iconic image.
Wherever I walk, birds flock around me and tweet. Doves descend from the sky (more on this later). Many voices are heard. Thunderous voices. Voices like the crashing of waterfalls. They declare good tidings, and they bless me. They say that I am doing a good job. I serve my Savior, who remains above the clouds. If you speak his name disrespectfully, I will slap you.
Alright, so here I am, walking around with my disciples in New York City. We’re wearing our gold chains. Birds are flocking us. We parked our Crown Vic in the underground garage. It’s a nice day: slightly overcast; there’s a smell of honeysuckle. “Wow, neat, mom, look!” says a little boy from the other side of the street, while we pass by his family. I recognize the woman: her husband’s a cop. I wave to her. She smiles. “Nice gun,” she shouts. I’m not carrying my musket now, but I have this tank of laughing gas strapped to my back, and there’s a cord that runs from it to the pistol-shaped dispenser that this dame was referring to. I squeeze the trigger: it spritzes the surrounding crowd, and everyone giggles.
We enter a shop whose sign says “Spike Ballot Bowling Pass.” The proprietor greets us warmly. I spritz him a little, and he laughs. Then I ask: “What do you sell here? We’re looking for wood and metal, to build an ark.”
The man calms down and answers: “Solid brass. Everything you see will fit the bill. I can make wood, too, if that’s your fancy.”
The notion raises my eyebrows. “Make some wood, then,” I say; then I turn to my disciples and mutter: “This I must see.”
The shopkeeper takes his mark, readies himself, does a false start; then tries again. “Listen to those dogs barking in the distance,” he says, by way of excuse; “the sound tenses me up, and I can’t concentrate: I just go into squirrel-brain, and my thoughts get scrambled. It’s as if I were gripping a tree, hoping my fur camouflages me from all predators.”
We then hear a deep woofing noise coming from outside. When we turn to look out the front window, we see now, filling the rectangular pool before the Lincoln Memorial, a life-size replica of Noah’s Ark made from shittim wood and brass.
“Sorry,” says the shopkeeper as we gaze in astonishment, “I know that it should be gopher wood; but I was thinking of the Ark of the Covenant. It’s tricky to maintain a properly encyclopedic focus when all the atoms are parading past one’s volition from out of the chaos-void. I hope you don’t mind.”
“Mind!” I turn around and exclaim with a beaming smile. “What you just did is exactly what I wanted – even the replacement: I was, in fact, going to specify a shittim substitution, only I forgot to say it. (I’m an accredited wood fetishist.) No, you did very well. Thank you so much. I was assuming that you would just get us the source material, and we would have to build it; but here you’ve finished the project for us. This saves us at least a week of hard labor. How much do I owe you?”
“No money,” said the shopkeeper; “I have no use for it. But didn’t you just put on a concert at the Palladium? I would take that. Would you be willing to part with it?”
This request caught me off guard. I answered: “Are you requesting a recording of the show? I’m not sure they filmed it, but if one exists, I’ll try to find it for you, sure.”
“No, no,” said the man, “I mean the statue of Athena that was stolen from the citadel. The fact that you had performed at the place that was named after it only jogged my memory. I desire the cult image. For I’ve heard that it works like a lucky charm, and I’d like to display it under my brazen palm tree here.”
“Ah, I understand now,” I said. “Yes, I could give you that Palladium, but I would need to go back and fetch it from my apartment; and I’m excited to play in our ark. Would it be OK if I simply pay you later?”
The man looked sad. I then snapped my fingers and said: “Hey, on second thought, the thing is just a wooden effigy – I don’t understand why you can’t manifest it yourself, the way you did with the boat outside. Is there some divine prohibition?”
The shopkeeper dried his eyes and looked around with his mouth agape as if he’d just been born again. “I never thought of that,” he said. “Do you really think that I could do it?”
“It’s worth a try,” I said.
So the man meditated on the volcano of potential, and within a moment, a glittering bird came and perched upon his palm.
“Your faith has healed you,” I laughed, patting the man on the back. Then I spritzed him again with the dispenser from the gas canister, and he joined me in laughter.
“Thank you so much,” he said, after his giggling fit subsided; and he placed his hands together before his face.
2
Ever since I was young, I wanted to be the leader of a gang, and now I finally had my chance. I took my disciples with me over to the body of water before the Lincoln Memorial, where our ark was parked, and I used miraculous power to open the huge side panel which doubled as an entry ramp. We went inside, and I motioned for my disciples to sit at the long dining table. I went over to the mini refrigerator by the bar, and I took out some wine that had been placed therein to chill (I noticed that it was currently the perfect temperature); and I brought over some cheese, as well, and served everyone these refreshments.
A man from the outside world then entered the ark. This captured my attention immediately, because I assumed that only animals would come to see us, and never singly but only in pairs. But then I recognized the man as Paul Molitor, who played baseball for the Minnesota Twins from 1996 to 1998.
“Hi, Paul. Welcome,” I said; “would you like to join us? We’re having a snack.”
“No, no, thanks,” said Mr. Molitor. “The reason I came is because I heard that you are a physician.”
“Yes, I’m a certified medicine scholar,” I said. “So what?”
“Well,” Mr. Molitor replied, “I thought that maybe you could help me. I am not sick, but I would like my arms and legs to be stronger. Could you do that? For I have a high batting average at present, but I would like it to be even more impressive. Also, I have hit many home runs, and I have stolen many bases, but all these statistics could be improved miraculously, with your aid.”
“Let me get this straight,” I said. “You are neither ill nor dying, but you desire that I increase the strength of your already healthy arms and healthy legs?”
“That is correct,” Paul Molitor answered. And he placed his hands together before his face, while slightly bowing.
I finished my glass of wine, then I said: “Paul, your faith has already given you all the immense powers that you requested. There is not much more that I can do, other than instigate a placebo effect. But if you still want my advice, here it is: Dip yourself in the clean waters that surround this ark; splash for a few minutes; then dry yourself off. My friend Metatron will come down out of the Fulness and bless you; he might even be able to make you an elohim. But, like I said, all this is just window dressing compared to what your own faith has already accomplished. Go now, therefore; return to the field, and hit more balls, and steal more bases: you will notice an improvement in your playing, I guarantee it.”
Paul Molitor then left the ark and ended up having one of the best seasons of his career.
3
Now the fame of my spiritual tricks was spreading rapidly around the world. Many ladies were falling in love with me. Crazy ladies, nice ladies, smart ladies: all types of ladies. That’s what happens when you do good deeds: the ladies adore you.
So we hoisted the ark out of the pool where it had been floating, and we got the shopkeeper to install some wheels on it, so that we could enjoy traveling around the contiguous United States. And I legally changed my name to “Spectacular Infinite Galaxy Sin Redeemer.” And I went around slashing and bashing and crashing and lashing and smashing evil spirits from Hell. These evil spirits would confront me everywhere: they kept standing in my way, infesting madmen who lived in cemeteries, and they would bother the ladies who were trying to love me. I wanted to dispense with these evil spirits: so I exorcised them, and sent them back to their Father of Lies, who lives under the ocean. Ninety-eight percent of my signs and wonders are constructed from antimatter, which evil spirits abhor: that’s how I got rid of them so easily.
My disciples and I then took the ark on the Red Sea and went to visit that lady who flies around with the magic umbrella. She was doing an ad for a skateboarding company when we arrived. I cured her of more than fifty evil spirits, so she invited me up to her bedroom. We enjoyed a long conversation about dancing; our meeting remained entirely chaste. When I rose to leave, she thanked me again; then, to avoid sending me away emptyhanded, she gifted to my disciples a thousand ladies whom she legally owned as chattel. I insisted on compensating her for this multitude, but she just as adamantly refused any cash, claiming that to consider it a charitable donation was better, since then she could avoid the whore tax. “But they’re disciples,” I said, “not harlots.” “It matters not, in the eyes of the law,” she explained while making an obscene gesture.
So we left her place and went to visit Marcel Proust. We listened to rap music, and then he joined me to go start random fires. But I got angry with him, so my disciples and I left in our ark. (I have long since forgotten what our dispute was about, but it was really annoying at the time.)
We stopped at a fashion show. Then we bought some hotcakes for the crew. We put on an extemporaneous concert in the park, for the children. Then I called a Thunder Cat down out of the sky. But the beast refused to partake of any wine from the chalice that we were all sharing: it would only drink from the tap. So I put a curse upon the great feline, which caused it to blunder around as if it were walking on waves.
My disciple Bloody Mary built a beverage stand with the carpentry skills that I had taught her. Using a knife, she scratched out the word “Lemonade” and carved instead the phrase “Java Drinx $20/cup.” And she also sold rap cassettes. So I bought some rap cassettes and a few beverages for myself, and I sat in the chair on the customers’ side of the establishment, and we chitchatted about the day.
“Now that a little time has passed, I’m upset with myself for treating Proust so meanly,” I admitted to Bloody Mary; “I hope that he will forgive me, so that we can remain friends.”
“I’m sure he will,” she said. “He’s an understanding soul.” She was rummaging around in the under-the-counter inventory while we spoke. Then she said: “Dammit, I think I lost a handful of rap cassettes.”
“No, I just bought a few from you,” I answered, then I held up my shoulder bag, which was brimful of rap cassettes, so that she could see it.
“Ah,” Bloody Mary exclaimed, “now I remember.” Then she turned on her portable computer and started clicking on website hyperlinks.
After a while, I grew bored, so I said: “Hey, Mary, will you go skating with me?”
“Roller skating, in the middle of winter?” she said.
“No, ice skating.” I said, standing up and putting my cane out for her to grab onto. “There’s a rink nearby. Will you go?”
She hesitated. “If you think that’s wise,” she said. Then she looped her arm through the hook in my cane, and we shut down her beverage stand and hired two centurions to guard it for the night.
We performed many fancy skating moves. Some of my disciples even joined us for jumps and stunts. Then Luke, who was a doctor, came out onto the thin part of the ice, and he fell in and drowned. So we had a funeral for him. Then we all took a hike up into the mountains, and Luke’s ghost followed us on a bicycle.
Suddenly a dove dropped out of the heavens and landed on my head. “What’s it saying? What’s it saying?” I asked my disciples. “It’s saying everyone’s gonna die!” they said. And they were all waving their hands and panicking.
“Alright,” I said, “I guess it’s time to say goodbye.” Then I stood thinking for a moment, while the bird kept flapping and squawking in its strange avian language. Then I said reflectively, to no one in particular: “I really miss being God the Father.”
CODA
Here underneath my tar lake, I remain dormant, waiting for the world to become pure war.
What happened is that our ark got bashed in half by my friend Scylla, who emerged from her cave when we were passing southern Italy. The resultant whirlpool sucked in all my disciples and apostles, but I was able to swim back over to the rink where we had been skating earlier: and I used a bottle of rum to keep myself warm while I punched through the ice. Then I walked barefoot fifteen paces and took a scenic route through the hole where the physician Luke had fallen, but I met a shark and got consumed. And all my blood fell out. But the shark was instructed by God to put me back onto the shore. There was nothing else to do for a while, as no people dared come around, because I stank from being inside the shark, plus much of my blood was gone, which left me looking all big, bad, black and blue. So I decided to use this interval to write down some of my ideas about relationships and patience, and the resultant manuscript turned out to be divinely inspired, so I got the book published. (It is easy to get books published.) My hard work paid off: I earned a great amount of capital, which I invested intelligently. I started my own business. I then went on a marketing blitz, spreading my message everywhere. The slogan for my company was: “If you can make it, we can freebase it.” So the idea was that my target customers would craft various things on their own, such as shirts or shoes or TVs or power tools or jungle ferns or pillows, and they could bring these items into my shop, and I would put the things into a big pot and boil them with sodium bicarbonate, thus converting them into a much more potent version of their former selves. Regular glass became Plexiglas; cats became Catwomen. That is how I, normal Bryan from Minnesota, transformed into King Bryan the Spectacular Infinite Galaxy Sin Redeemer. Now, here, beneath this lake of tar, I wait for that appointed day when I shall arise and scream one last time and then fall back asleep.








