How To Save The World: An Alien Comedy (33 page)

BOOK: How To Save The World: An Alien Comedy
3.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“It’s alright.  I’ll wait until you get your sandwich as well,” he re
marked, before adding, “So anyway, where are you from?”

“I’m from Nedland
[51]
,” the needy lass replied.

Eric had already suspected this from her accent
[52]
but it was nice to have it confirmed.  ‘Ar, class!’ he thought to himself.  ‘That’s perfect!’  Since arriving on Ko Pagna Eric, like most dudes, had formed a top three of Femling nationalities, and whilst Sveltish was obviously his number one, Nedlandish was definitely his number two.  He just tended to find that Nedlandish lasses were more honest and direct than other lasses and didn’t play games.  And whilst he would obviously prefer to score with his number one choice of nationality, unfortunately Sveltish lasses always made him nervous and flustered, by virtue of their total and utter complete lushness and their high status, so if he was playing the percentage game, which he was, then a Nedlandish lass represented a much greater chance of success than a Sveltish lass.

Within a couple of minutes the Nedlandish lass’s chork sandwich arrived and so Eric suggested, “Shall we get somewhere to sit?”  Inside Mr.J’s were
three tables and during his period of sussing things out Eric had decided that sitting at one of these tables would present a good chance to initiate a scoring opportunity.  He reckoned they were the equivalent of a late night taxi queue back on Earth.

“Yes, a seat sounds good,” the Nedlandish lass agreed.

So Eric quickly made his way around the food stalls through the gatherings of people and inside Mr.J’s to one of the tables.

But then as he took his seat he turned around to discover that the Nedlandish lass seemed to have vanished.  ‘Ar, man.  Where’s she gone?’ he thought to himself.  He wasn’t initially overly concerned, however, because despite her drunkenness he assumed she couldn’t have gone too far astray and he would therefore quickly catch sight of her once again.

But unfortunately for Eric he scanned the crowds of people to find that she was nowhere to be seen.  ‘Ar, fuck!  I’ve blown it,’ he thought. Messing up a perceived potential score was one of the few scenarios that pushed Eric past the realms of remarking ‘Flip!’ and into the realms of fully entrenched swearing.  ‘Ar, fuck!’ he repeated to himself.  ‘Why did I walk so quickly?’  Eric had a habit of dashing off and walking too quickly and becoming separated from his friends.  With his friends though, it wasn’t such a big deal, but with a fit Nedlandish lass it was totally annoying.  ‘Ar, hey!  I knew she was drunk.  I should have walked slowly and held her hand or something so we didn’t get split up.  Ar, what a total muppet I am!’

Eric was right.  He
was
a total muppet.  He took as long as he could to finish his chork sandwich in the vain hope that she would eventually find him, but his hopes remained unfulfilled.  So after he took his last bite of sandwich he headed home alone.

‘Ar, fuck!  I can’t believe I’ve messed up the chance of a
potential score,’ he thought to himself, as he lay down for the night.  ‘Ar, man!  I’m totally useless.  Ar, rubbish.  Why did
I
get stuck with this mission?  Of all the people that could save the Earth, the responsibility had to be given to a total feebloid like me.’  Messing up a good chance (at anything, not just scoring) always left Eric feeling negative, but the added responsibility of saving the Earth meant that on this occasion he was doubly negative.  ‘Ar, hey!  I can’t believe my total utter rubbishness, like.  I’m a proper useless chump.  How am I meant to save the Earth when I can’t even get past the first simple stage like sitting down without dashing off and losing her?’  Eric was generally an optimistic person but right at that moment he was feeling totally and utterly dejected.  Barely an ounce of optimism remained in his body.

But then as he gazed around his room he noticed one of his t-shirt
s hanging over the balcony to dry.  The one with the slogan, ‘Everything will be okay in the end.  If it’s not okay, it’s not the end.’

A reluctant smile forced itself onto Eric’s face.  “It’s not the end,” he told himself, speaking out loud.  “Everything is most definitely certainly not okay
– what with the human race probably gonna get obliterated thanks to me being a total feebloid and all that – so that means it’s not the end.  So that means there’s no need to feel gutted.”  He smiled once again to himself, this time not so reluctantly.  “Things will be okay in the end.  After all, the t-shirt wouldn’t lie.”

Then he looked at his t-shirt once again.  “I hope you’re right, t-shirt,” he mused.  “I hope you’re right.”

Chapter Five – The Catch-22 Solution

 

Eric had given it another couple of days at trying to score, before deciding that he was too nervous and would have more chance of scoring if he was more relaxed, and the best way in his opinion of being relaxed was to not be on the pull.  Obviously the drawback to this strategy was that when you’re not on the pull you don’t tend to pull, hence the expression ‘not on the pull,’ but at this stage of things it was all about getting into the right frame of mind.

Hex had
continued his form by scoring three times in the last week, and whilst this wasn’t an exceptional record it was nevertheless more than respectable, and therefore Eric reckoned it made sense to model his approach on Hex’s.  And the biggest thing that stood out about Hex was how relaxed he was.
[53]

So that was what inspired Eric to forget the mission and stop being on the pull.  Hex scored on a regular basis and Hex was always really relaxed and cool with lasses, so if Eric wanted to start scoring he decided he needed to be more like Hex, which meant being more relaxed, which in turn meant not being on the pull.  It was a catch-22 solution, of course, but Eric told himself he’d adapt the plan later, once he had put the first stage into place.

Of course back on Earth, Eric’s answer to his nervousness would have been to get really drunk.  Talking to lasses when he was drunk was never a problem.  Coming out with gormless drunken patter and acting like a drunken fool was sometimes a problem, in fact
frequently
a problem, but by the law of averages he would always occasionally come out with some moderately okay patter, which would be enough.

But here on Fem, with his unfortunate immunity to the effects of diquintenol, getting intoxicated wasn’t an option.  This was a fact that Eric had hidden from his new Femling mates, for obvious reasons.

“Aye, so Eric, you have to get DQed up tonight, like,” Zonny cajoled.  Zonny was another of Eric’s team-mates from the Beach Soccer Tournament.  “It’s my last night.  You can’t stay sober on my last night.”  Eric and his beach soccer mates were currently hanging out once again at The Hang Out Club, which had quickly become Eric’s favourite club on Ko Pagna Beach.

“Aye, you have to have a few beverages tonight, like,” Kesta
encouraged.

“I wish I could,” Eric
reflected, “but there’s no point.”

“What d’you mean?” Zonny inquired, looking confused.

Eric suddenly realised that his comment was close to blowing his cover.  “Ar, it’s just that, like … well, er…”  He frantically racked his brains to come up with a way to explain away his careless remark.  “Just, like … I can, er … proper take my drink much better than yous weaklings, so even if I had ten drinks I’d probably still be totally sober … what with uz being dead hard and all that compared to yous,” he boasted, thinking on his feet.  He said all this with a jokey expression on his face and he was pleased that he seemed to have dug himself out of the hole he had nearly gotten himself into.

“Have you heard him?” Zonny retorted.  “You haven’t had a single drink the whole time you’ve been here and yet you’re bragging about your drinking capabilities.”

“Aye, if you’re such a hardened drinker then prove it tonight,” Kesta challenged.  “Howay, man.  It’s Zonny’s last night, man.  You can’t stay sober again on Zonny’s last night.”

Eric wasn’t enjoying his non-drinking being under the spotlight and therefore decided to use diversionary tactics. 

“Right anyway, I’ve got one for yous,” he began, “you’re going back with a really fit lass to her room one night, but then she says, ‘There’s just one condition … you can only use your tongue or your hands.’  What would you pick?”

Zonny, Kesta and Hex looked at each other for a few stunned seconds, before breaking out into
surprised chuckles.  “Hey, you’re weird, you, Eric,” Kesta remarked, smiling and shaking his head.

“What d’you mean?” Eric replied, defensively.  “What’s wrong with that?  It’s a perfectly normal question to ask.”  He put on the demeanour of someone who was affronted at being called weird, but in reality he was quite pleased that his question had had the desired effect and his Femling mates had been successfully distracted from their attempts to get him to join in with the DQ drinking.

“Ar, yeah.  The old ‘tongue or hands’ dilemma,” Kesta grinned.  “That old chestnut.  Yeah, many the time I’ve been going back with a lass and she’s said, ‘Right, here’s the thing … you can only use your tongue or your hands.  What’s it to be?’”

Zonny and
Hex laughed at Kesta’s irony, and Eric also allowed himself a begrudged smirk.

“Well you never know…  It’s always best to be prepared,” Eric insisted, jokingly.  “I’d hate to find myself in that position one
night only to think, ‘Ar, no.  If only I’d considered this earlier, rather than have to make a snap on-the-spot decision.’”

“Eric, man.  How l
ikely is it that a lass is gonna get you back to her room and then say, ‘Right, you can only use your tongue or your hands?’” Kesta asked.

“Well, not very,” Eric admitted, “but the point of the ‘Would You Rather
?’ game isn’t to come up with realistic scenarios.  It’s to come up with interesting dilemmas.  It doesn’t have to be realistic otherwise in my case I would have asked, ‘Would you rather get bombed out by a Sveltish lass or a Nedlandish lass?’”  To be fair, Eric’s biggest problem since arriving on Fem wasn’t getting bombed out.  It was being a total bottler.

“Well what does it matter?” Kesta inquired.  “If you’re getting bombed out then either way, you’re getting no action.”

“I’d rather get bombed out by a Sveltish lass,” Hex commented, “cos I’ve obviously been with a few Sveltish lasses before
[54]
, but a potential Nedlandish lass would be a new nationality for the tick-sheet, so therefore a Sveltish knock back would be easier to take.”

“Ar, here he goes again,” Kesta replied.  “‘Oo, I’ve been with a few Sveltish lasses already.’  Would you like uz to help support your arms there, Hex?”  This last comment probably doesn’t make much sense so perhaps I should explain that on Fem they use the expression ‘big arms’ to mean conceited, rather than ‘big head’ like we use here on Earth.

“Well I’m just explaining my reason,” Hex shrugged.

“I’d rather get bombed out by a Sveltish lass as well,” Zonny remarked, “cos it’s like if you were g
onna get knocked out of the Triple F Cup
[55]
you’d rather get knocked out by Divington United
[56]
than Plankton Village
[57]
.  There’s no shame in…”

“Eh!  Y’pure cheek!” Eric suddenly interrupted.  “You can’t compare Nedlandish lasses to Plankton Village!  That’s proper shocking, that!  Nedlandish lasses are more like a Woolton Wanderers
[58]
.”

“Yeah, bad example,” Zonny acknowledged, “Although I’d say they’re more of a Blaydon Toon
[59]
than a Woolton Wanderers.  But anyway, I just meant I’d rather get a knock back from the very best, rather than a knock back from
almost
the best.”

“Blaydon Toon!  What a pure cheek!” Eric screeched.  “You can’t compare Nedlandish lasses to Blaydon Toon!”  Eric was quite indignant at what he perceived as a blatant insult to Nedlandish lasses, but at the same time he was also quite flattered by this comparison, as Blaydon Toon was the football team he had naturally been drawn to support on Fem
by virtue of the fact that they wore the same black and white stripes as Newcastle United.  Realistically though, if he was being objective then Blaydon Toon were a decent but under performing team, and so his anger at Zonny’s failure to recognise the high status of Nedlandish lasses was greater than his pleasure at the compliment this comparison was to his favoured football team.

“I thought you supported Blaydon Toon,” Hex queried.

“Aye, I do,” Eric confirmed, “but that doesn’t mean I see them through rose-tinted glasses.  They’re no Woolton Wanderers … which Nedlandish lasses blatantly are.”

“Well I’m entitled to my opinion, like,” Zonny shrugged, “and I
’d still say Blaydon Toon are a pretty decent team, like.”

“Well you must be blatantly mad if you don’t realise how lush Nedlandish lasses are, like,” Eric opined, rather cheekily.

“Anyway, the relative lushness of Nedlandish lasses wasn’t the point I was trying to make,” Zonny explained.  “I’ll put it another way … say if I tried it on with Jerga Nedson
[60]
and she knocked uz back then I’d be massively offended, cos Jerga Nedson’s blatantly in no position to be fussy.”

“I’d be massively relieved,” Kesta remarked, “not massively offended.”

Other books

EscapingLightning by Viola Grace
Moongather by Clayton, Jo;
The Lake House by Helen Phifer
Resistance by C. J. Daugherty
Always Kiss the Corpse by Sandy Frances Duncan