“Shouldn’t it be the Positive Woman?” asked Avie. “If the
Negative Man stopped being a man, he might have stopped being made of
anti-matter as well…”
“No, he was still made of anti-matter,” I replied. “I mean she.
He’s a she now. She just switched genders. Or sexes. Or whatever you want to
call it. I mean, he switched…into a she.”
We were all sitting around Wilton Ashe’s bookish apartment on
Ferry Street at Cass Avenue—Avie, Wilton, Audrey, and I. It had a big bay
window open to the south, and was crammed with all kinds of houseplants and
bookshelves. It only had one bedroom but it had a nice-sized kitchen and living
room. The walls were white and everything was open and bright. The sky was
clear and blue and the steam heat cranking from the radiators almost gave the
illusion of spring or summer, even though it was still winter.
Friday, July 31, 2020
Friday, July 24, 2020
#74: Double Negative
I agreed to go back up to Troy a few nights later,
on a night when I wasn’t scheduled at the Union Stripe Café. But it had been so
long since I’d used my megapowers I really had to psyche myself up. The last
time I had tried pulling on Avie’s weight machines, I could barely do ten reps
at forty pounds, flabby civilian weakling I had become. But when I put on my
Ms. Megaton Man uniform, my courage came back and I managed to fly to Detroit’s
northern suburbs without any problem. I had no choice, since I don’t drive and
I didn’t want Avie hanging around dangerous scientific machinery any more than
was necessary. In fact, I was hoping she’d get so busy with school and her
theater group that she’d forget about joining the Troy+Thems altogether, so I
never even let on to her that I was going.
Friday, July 17, 2020
#73: The Whistleroar of the Wondrous Warhound
Neither I nor Avie had bothered to do any cleaning in our
apartment since we’d moved in before New Year’s, except for a quick tidying up
before my birthday gathering. She had promised to dust and run the sweeper in
the upstairs living room, and I agreed to handle the kitchen and bathroom,
which was right next to it. We both managed to find ways to procrastinate—me with
my homework and her with her working out in the basement. But by mid-February,
the bathroom was starting to get funky, and I couldn’t stand it anymore. So
there I was, scrubbing the tiles in our shower. I could hear Avie clacking away
at the weight machine down in the basement, and was more than a bit perturbed
at her. What if Clyde and Alice2 were to drop by? Of course, this
wasn’t likely—I hadn’t heard from them since they’d gone to New York.
Friday, July 10, 2020
#72: Guess Who’s Not Coming to Dinner
Chuck Roast’s eyes opened instantly. He bolted upright, grabbing
the cushions of the sofa. Holding one in front of himself defensively, he
cried, “Who? What?”
“What are you doing here?” I demanded. “What is the Human Meltdown doing back in America?”
“I was recovering from jet lag, if you must know,” he said. “What are you doing...? Oh, that’s right. You used to live here.”
Chuck rubbed the sleep from his eyes, set the cushion back in its place, turned, and put his feet on the floor. He relaxed somewhat, satisfied that I wasn’t immediately going to attack him.
“What are you doing here?” I demanded. “What is the Human Meltdown doing back in America?”
“I was recovering from jet lag, if you must know,” he said. “What are you doing...? Oh, that’s right. You used to live here.”
Chuck rubbed the sleep from his eyes, set the cushion back in its place, turned, and put his feet on the floor. He relaxed somewhat, satisfied that I wasn’t immediately going to attack him.
Friday, July 3, 2020
#71: The Troy+Thems
It was the first of February, the day before my birthday,
and I was walking home from my afternoon class at Old Main when I noticed a
white van in the parking lot of the First Holistic-Humanist Congregation of
Cass City. This wasn’t just the usual white van belonging to the residents, my
friends the Y+Thems, which was always there, but a second van parked alongside
it. On the side of this van were the words Inter-faith Church Healing for
Hopeless Liabilities, and there was a dumpster unceremoniously plopped down next
to it that ICHHL workers were quickly filling with debris.
“Oh, no,” I said to myself. “What now?”
“Oh, no,” I said to myself. “What now?”
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