Dead Clown Barbecue (10 page)

Read Dead Clown Barbecue Online

Authors: Jeff Strand

BOOK: Dead Clown Barbecue
5.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

So now I'm thinking, what do I do? Should I call the cops? Should I run? Should I try to save the poor bastard?

What? I don't know why he didn't put up his hand to block the cleaver. Yeah, I guess it should have been instinctive, but he didn't do it. I didn't get a chance to ask him! It wasn't the kind of situation where I'm going to stroll over there and say "Excuse me, kind sir, but if I might borrow a moment of your time, I'd like to know why you didn't elect to use your hand to deflect the meat cleaver." I don't care if it doesn't make any sense — I'm just telling you what I saw, okay? He was dead in the next few seconds anyway.

Damn it, now you're making me get ahead of the story.

So the chef swings his arm back, and then
whack
! Slashes the cleaver right across the guy's throat! Joey and I are both like, no way did that just happen! And then I start to think that maybe the whole thing is a publicity stunt, y'know? Like maybe Harvey's is trying to cater to edgier clientele, so they're faking homicides. But then I realize that there's just no way. The guy is spraying blood everywhere, his wife or girlfriend is shrieking, and most of the other people in the restaurant are running for the exit.

Joey looks me right in the eye and he says, totally calmly, "Dude, this is really messed up."

What do you mean, how could I hear him over the other noise? Are you
trying
to be a jerk? I've got this great story, and you want to just sit there and poke holes in it. Well, screw you. I've got better things to do than talk to you if you're going to act this way.

Oh, that's
real
mature. What a class act you are. I don't care if you ever hear the end of the story or not, so that doesn't bother me a bit.

Okay, look, could you at least let me tell you the next part without interrupting me? You're not gonna believe what happened.

People have made it to the door, and they're trying to push it open, and this lady screams, "It's locked! It's locked! Oh my God, they've locked us in!"

Can you believe that? A chef storming out of the kitchen and attacking a restaurant patron I can maybe understand, but they locked us in! How demented is that?

The turkey sandwich guy is all flopped back in his seat, gurgling and clutching at his throat. The chef grabs the guy's wife/girlfriend by the hair, bashes her down on the table, and slams the meat cleaver into the back of her neck. I don't think she even ordered a turkey sandwich! Now the chef is a big guy, but he couldn't get all the way through her head in one blow, so he does it again and again and again.

Finally I turn away, because there are only so many times you can watch somebody try to chop somebody's head off, y'know? And people are trying to grab chairs and tables to break through the windows, but the chairs and tables are all bolted to the floor at Harvey's, so people are just shouting "Oh no! The chairs and tables are all bolted to the floor!" I think at this point Joey and I are the only ones left in our seats, if you don't count the guy and girl that the chef already killed.

People start kicking and slamming their fists against the glass, but it's not glass! It's plastic. Or maybe it's not actually plastic . . . it's that clear stuff you use that doesn't break. I'm not a restaurateur so I'm not sure. But these people have now gone completely out of their minds. It's
nuts,
dude!

I look back at the chef, and he finally got the woman's head off. And my stomach gets all twisted up because I think he's going to do something completely disgusting and flat-out wrong with the head, but he just knocks it off the table. It bounces a little.

At this point, I'm disturbed but I'm not too concerned about my own personal safety. I mean, yeah, the chef has a meat cleaver, but it's not like he can chop off all of our heads, right? If the crowd would've rushed him instead of getting bent out of shape over the locked door, we probably could have saved the headless woman.

Then the other chef walks out.

He's got a frickin'
rifle
!

Now even I'm starting to question the motivations that are going on here at this point. I start to think that it may not really be about that turkey sandwich.

Bang! A guy who was pounding on the window gets the back of his head blown open. No multiple whacks with a meat cleaver for this guy — he's dead.

Bang! Another guy dead!

Bang! This old lady gets it in the back!

Now, if this were a made-up story, I'd talk about how brave I was and stuff, but I'm not making any of this up. So Joey and I, we got our butts right under that table, and we did it quick! And I can hear the rifle going off: Bang! Bang! Bang!

No, I'm not sure what kind of rifle it was. I don't know guns very well. It was brown, and it had a leather strap, I think.

Joey and I hear footsteps, and we can tell that the other chef is running across the diner. Bang! Bang! We're not hearing as much screaming anymore, if you know what I mean. Bang! Bang!

Joey goes "We have to do something!"

I go "What?"

Joey goes "Anything!"

I go "But what?"

Joey goes "I don't know! Something!"

I go "I agree, but what?"

There are maybe another six or seven shots, and then that's it. No more noise. They've slaughtered everybody else in the place. Joey and I are huddled under the table, trying to be very, very quiet, although since Harvey's is a pretty small place and there aren't tablecloths hanging down to cover us or anything it's a safe bet that we're gonna be found.

And this really sucked: Joey's cell phone went off.

It's sort of a double whammy, y'know? Not only did the phone give away our position, tenuous as it might have been, but it made us realize that we'd been too stupid to use our cell phones to call the cops when we had a chance. We're all like,
d'oh
!

So I hear footsteps running, and suddenly there's the chef, pointing the rifle under the table. And he —

Oh. I think the restroom's in the back, right next to the dartboard. Sure, no problem.

Hmmmmmhmmmhmmm. La-de-da.

Yeah, I'll have another one. Thanks.

Hmmmmmhmmmhmmm.

Jesus, how long does it take? You're not building a frickin' ark in there.

Hey, welcome back! Where did I leave off?

No, no, I was way past the meat cleaver decapitation. Then what's the last part you remember? I know I told you about the rifle. The second chef came out and he started shooting everybody. Me and Joey hid under the table. Then Joey's cell phone went off and the chef was right there with the rifle. I don't know what kind. I told you, it was brown with a strap.

I have no idea who was calling Joey. He didn't answer because he was a bit too preoccupied with the rifle-toting chef. So the chef says "Get the hell out from under there." And neither Joey nor I particularly
want
to do it, but we also don't want to join the other people who've got bullets in them, know what I mean? We're both kind of hesitant, because I figure that whoever comes out first is gonna get shot first, and I'm guessing that Joey figures the same thing, and we aren't quite prodding each other, but we're definitely trying to use nonverbal communication to suggest that the other person should go first.

And the chef is like "
Now
!" and so Joey scoots out from under the table. But the chef doesn't shoot him, which immediately makes me wish I'd come out first. He just pushes him out of the way and then looks at me. I climb out from under there and stand up.

The whole place looks like there was a massacre. 'Cause there was one. I mean, there's blood all over the floor, blood dripping off tables, blood splattered all over the windows, corpses all askew . . . it's sick.

The bald chef with the meat cleaver walks over and stands next to his buddy. And they're just staring at us sort of funny, like maybe they're thinking "Shoot or cleave? Shoot or cleave?"

Joey goes, "Why are you doing this?" Which is a pretty legitimate question, you've got to admit, but it also sounds kind of hokey. But I don't tell him that because I want to know the answer.

The rifle chef says, "We're sick of people complaining about our food." And then he goes off on this rant that I swear lasted a good ten minutes. I mean, if you make crappy food and charge people for it, they're gonna call you on it sometimes, right? But, God, he just went on and on and on, babbling about the lack of respect his customers give him, and how he worked his way through culinary school while he was taking care of his dying sister, and how nobody knew what kind of pressure he was under, and blah, blah, blah. By the end of his speech I was ready for a meat cleaver to the face.

Then he points his rifle back and forth between me and Joey, like he's trying to decide which one of us to shoot. And I'm trying to do this thing where I subtly move my eyeballs in Joey's direction, so that it might be some kind of subconscious signal that he should be the one to get shot. I mean, I don't wish Joey any harm or anything, but if one of us has to get shot, why not make it him, right?

The chef shoots Joey.

Not in the face or stomach — right in the kneecap. I cringe like he shot me instead, because I can't even imagine how much that's gotta hurt, though Joey's wailing is a pretty good clue. And the cleaver chef pushes Joey into the booth, laughing like he's gone completely insane. And Joey is bawling and shouting "Why me?" and now
both
chefs are laughing and the situation is so messed up that I can hardly even describe it.

The one chef twirls his cleaver and
whack
! There goes Joey's pinky. And the other chef presses the barrel of the rifle against the detached pinky and shoots it right off the table! Then they both laugh some more.

Is this too gross for you? It gets worse.

Pretty soon there's a pile of nine fingers on the table. The chef pushes them together into a nice tight pile, and then the other chef shoots again, sending fingers flying everywhere. And my first instinct is to bend down and try to scoop them up, just in case Joey lives through this and surgeons can reattach them, but I don't want to call attention to myself.

Then the chef starts slicing up his arms. No, Joey's arms, not his own. Duh. The cleaver isn't going through the bigger bones too well — it's probably dull from all the work he's put it through. I can't help but wonder if he'd offer me some kind of immunity if I went and got the blade sharpener for him, but of course I'm not really gonna ask that.

Then I guess they got tired of Joey making so much noise, because the other chef shoves the barrel of his rifle into Joey's mouth and pulls the trigger. And as all this stuff comes out of his head, I swear to God my first thought is that I should gather it up in case the surgeons can sew it back inside. Your mind does funny things under stress.

So Joey's dead. And since I'm the only non-psychopath left alive in the place, I figure I'm next. And, yep, my fears are confirmed when that rifle is suddenly pointed in my direction.

No, they didn't kill me. Are you trying to be a smartass? I'm telling you a story where one of my best friends got chopped up right before my eyes, and you're making fun of it. Oh, you thought I might be a ghost, real funny, real hilarious.

I'm almost done with the story. Can you find it within yourself to let me finish? I promise I won't take up much more of your ever-so-extremely-valuable time.

So I see my chance. The chefs are still laughing like maniacs, and I realize that the one with the rifle is only about eighty percent focused on me. That's when I kick him as hard as I can, right square in the upper thigh. And we struggle for a few minutes, and meanwhile the other chef slams his cleaver right into my arm. You can see the scar there, see? It's kind of faint. I'm not sure why it's jagged — that's just the way the meat cleaver hit it.

I get the rifle away from him, and
kaboom
! Right in the forehead! That chef is
history
, dude! But there's no time for me to celebrate my victory, because the other chef is coming at me with that damn cleaver again.

I shout "This one's for Joey, you son of a bitch! And for everybody else, too!" and pull the trigger.

Click.
Rifle's empty.

So I bash the shit out of him with it. A lot messier, but it gets the job done.

And then the incompetent waitress from before comes out of the back room, looking all scared and stuff. She runs over and throws her arms around me and says "Thank you! Thank you so much! I was sure they were going to kill me next! Oh, I just don't know how I can repay you for what you've done!"

I tell her.

She looks at me, and starts to unbutton her blouse. I toss the rifle onto the floor, pull the waitress close to me, and —

Where the hell are you going?

This is the best frickin' part!

Ah, screw it. That's what happened.

 

 

PREGNANCY TEST

 

"Congratulations on your purchase of a Smith-White Studios pregnancy test! To get the most out of your interactive experience, please answer all questions honestly. If you hope that you're pregnant, press the blue button. If you hope that you're not pregnant, press the pink button."

[Beep.]

"Okay, you do NOT want to be pregnant. Well, we'll see how that works out for you in just a few short minutes!"

[Suspenseful music.]

"The next step is to hold me under your urine stream for five seconds. If that seems awkward, don't worry, it's much worse for me than it is for you! Ready? Go! Aaaugh, I'm drowning! I'm drowning! Ha ha, that's just a little joke to lighten the mood. You can take me out now."

[Catchy jingle.]

"The disgusting part is over, so now all you have to do is wait! If you think this baby could be an unplanned blessing, press the blue button. If you think this baby will ruin your life, press the pink button."

[Beep.]

"Ooooh, so you must be pretty stressed out right now! Well, I'll do what I can. If you visit our website, you can see the full line of Smith-White Studios birth control products to keep this from happening again. Of course, if you don't get the answer you want, you can always pre-order them for nine months from now!"

Other books

The Case of the Vampire Cat by John R. Erickson
Element 79 by Fred Hoyle
La fortaleza by F. Paul Wilson
Through a Narrow Door by Faith Martin
The Mortifications by Derek Palacio
The Unwanted Heiress by Amy Corwin
True Grit by Charles Portis
Prince of Twilight by Maggie Shayne