I have wild dreams of becoming a famous writer. Occasionally, I muster up enough determination to crawl out of my laziness to jot short vignettes that I imagine could become smashing short stories. Hah delusions.
Anyway, I noticed I haven't written anything worthwhile in ages and although Lafayette manned the fort ably, I need to pitch in too.
So enjoy this vignette that will, in due time, become the next best Los Angeles novel:
My normal honk-to-mile frequency is around 2. 2.53, to be technical.  But today I was easily approaching the freakishly astronomical realm of  10 honks per mile. I felt a sweet, deep jolt of savage satisfaction as  my sweaty fist hit the vinyl expanse on the middle of the steering  wheel. The oblong Toyota logo shuddered, almost in resonance with the  loud honk that reverberated across the freeway, bouncing off fenders,  plexiglass and tricked up wheels. It was loud and emphatic, proudly  showcasing my frustration, vehemence and desperation.
The  four-oh-five didn't seem to care one bit. Maintaining an enviable  zen-like calm, it inched forward, like the download bar in a dial-up  connection. Like a trickle of soothing rainwater making its way on a  harsh, rough rock. A four-car pileup had the singular misfortune of  meeting planned construction about forty minutes ago and the ensuing  hookup had led to the chaos we were in. 
My fist hit  again. The logo shuddered, releasing yet another long wail. Dammit, not  as satisfying as last time. The honk was beginning to lose its utility.  The law of diminishing returns rearing its ugly head, I thought. I could  almost imagine that grandiose tenet of basic economics cackling at my  plight. Smug bastard.
I peered through the  birdshit-spattered windshield, the imaginary fumes of my anger obscuring  my vision. There was some movement through the driver window in the car  in front of me. A human hand rose through the portal, rising through  the hot air with steady confidence. It settled at an even height and  through the clenched fist arose The Finger. It leered at my anger, an  act of cold defiance. My lips contorted in a half-smile (the wry kind).  Life of the four-oh-five, as usual.
Barnett would be proud!
ReplyDeleteHAHA yeah he taught us well. Still remember those graphs
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