Read Sister Slam and the Poetic Motormouth Road Trip Online
Authors: Linda Oatman-High
and leaned over the pig.
“Come on. Get up,” she whispered.
And the pig listened!
Just like that, the chubby thing
struggled to its hooves
and waddled off,
just like this was any
ordinary carefree day.
Twig looked at me.
I looked at Twig.
We cracked up,
doubled over
with hysterical laughter.
“Hungry for pork and beans?”
said Twig.
“Ham and greens?
Maybe some bacon?”
We climbed back into
our poetmobile, and I squealed
out, leaving rubber skid marks
on the road.
If only we'd known then
what we know now:
Mister Farmer Brown
was writing down
every letter and number
of my license plate.
First rule
of the University
of Gray Road,
Blue Sky, and
Yellow Lines is this:
Never Run from
Hitting a Pig.
The cops stopped us
somewhere southeast
of Geasterville, Pennsylvania.
In blue uniforms,
with mirror sunglasses,
and Dunkin' Donut butts,
all two members
of the police department
of Geasterville
pulled me over.
They even used sirens
and red flashing lights,
and I wouldn't be surprised
if they'd had their fingers
on the triggers.
“I'm not exactly
America's Most Wanted,
you know,” I informed
Officer Cream Puff.
He just kept writing stuff,
biting his bottom lip,
probably because he had
to really think hard
to write a ticket for this.
I got a ticketâa big ticketâ
for something like reckless
endangerment of swine,
and leaving the scene
of a pig that's been hit.
“Oh, shit,” I said,
dropping my head
onto the steering wheel.
“Let's make a deal.
I don't hit any more pigs,
and you don't give me
this ticket.”
The officer
added something
to the ticket.
Twig hissed,
“Keep your big mouth
shut, Laura. Cockiness
will get you nowhere.”
But the injustice
of him busting us
for something like this
had Sister Slam pissed.
“This,” I said, “was an act of God.
It was like lightning,
or a tornado,
or an earthquake.
I didn't make that pig
go on the road.
God made him waddle
out there,
right in front of me.
There was no time to stop,
Officer.
In fact, I did stop, but
the pig was already hit.”
I was in deep shit.
I should have just
kept my mouth closed.
If only I'd known.
Second rule
of the University
of Gray Road, Blue Sky,
and Yellow Lines:
Never Try to Talk Your Way
Out of a Ticket When You've
Already Admitted That You Hit the Pig.
And then the cop
got his dig.
It was almost as mean
as the cool group could be,
back in the old days
at Banesville High.
“Body for Life
is a good diet.
You should try it.”
That's what he said.
I wished I were dead.
Just shoot me now,
before I hit a cow.
My jaw must have dropped
because the cop
rubbed his double chin
and tried to suck up.
“I wasn't intending to insult you.
It's just that the diet has helped me,
and I want to help others.”
Oh, brother.
What a loser.
Probably a boozer, too,
when he wasn't
in that uniform.
The cop patted his gut.
“Best shape I've ever been in.
I feel great.
Now be on your way.
Don't hit any pigs.”
Ha, ha.
Sarcasm isn't attractive
in an officer of the law.
I took off, wheels screeching,
peeling out.
With a pout,
Twig sighed.
“I could've died,” she said.
“
You?
What about me?
I need a diet.”
“What a riot,” Twig said,
spastic and sarcastic.
“This
is
a trip.”
I bit my lip.
“Twig,” I said,
“do you ever
care whether
I'm fat or thin?”
Twig grinned.
“Laura . . . I mean,
Sister Slam.
I like you just
as you are. I
even like your car.”
Twig's gift
is being able to lift
my spirits
when I'm sad.
“It's bangin'
to be hangin'
with you,” I said.
Then we sang along
with the radio,
which was playing
a Barenaked Ladies song.
We got most of the words
wrong. Those guys are poets.
“How far to Tin Can?”
Twig yelled to a man
at a shabby gas station
we passed.
“Hey,” I said.
“We're way low
on gas.” It's amazing,
all the gas
you have to buy
when you're in charge
of the trip.
I did a U-turn, quick,
showing off,
burning black rubber.
“Yee-haw,” Twig yelled.
Now she was getting
into the spirit of the
thing. She flapped her arms
like wings.
“Don't hit a chicken!” she squawked.
When we got out
to fill the gas tank,
this skank of a yellow-headed,
dad-aged, cabbage-shaped
dude got really rude,
saying something crude
about my boobs.
I flicked him the middle finger,
figuring that would make him
go away.
He couldn't take a hint.
“I can't believe this,” I said
to Twig.
“People in the real world
are as messed up as
kids in school.
It's bull:
all that stuff they
say in school
about maturity
and real life
will be different
and all that.
It's bogus.”
The obscene geek guy
opened a lemon pie
and shoved it in his venom-trap,
chewing with his mouth open
like some kind of
Conan the Barbarian
moron.
“Fat pig,” he blubbered,
his flubbery gut
bouncing as he lumbered
away.
“Dork,” I responded.
That's when the retard
retaliated by bombarding
my car with his smushed-up
lemon pie.
And then I
knew Rule Number Three
of the university:
People Are Rude in the Real World, Too.
Without a clue
as to what to do,
I just turned and threw
a hunk of chewed-up gum
at the dude's fat buns.
Lucky he didn't have a gun,
because I would've been one
dead poet.
But don't you know it,
when we left the station,
Mister Hideous Lemon Pie Idiot
followed right on our tail,
never failing to turn
onto every road we followed.
The Lemon Pie Guy
followed us all the way
to Tin Can,
and man, was I mad.
“Who do you think you are?”
I called to the pathetic
maggot-gagging
dweeb
crawling out of
his yellow VW.
“I know who
you
are,
missy,” said
Mister Hissy Fit,
all pissy.
“You're the poet
who doesn't know it,
but you have no chance
of winning
this slam.”
“Oh, boy,” I shot
back, cracking up.
Twig and I,
cackling like chickens,
followed his bubble-gum butt
and flubbery gut
into the brick building.
Registration was taking place,
and most poets were patient,
waiting in line and smiling kindly,
but Lemon Pie Guy
didn't know how to smile.
He just muttered and mumbled,
grumbling, rumbling, fumbling
in his pocket
for a pencil, and then
stumbling on something
nobody else could see.
“How annoying can one person be?”
Twig commented, and a chick
in tinted-pink glasses laughed.
“I'm going to smack his
big ugly head,” I said.
It wasn't what I meant,
but I said it anyway.
“That's not nice, Laura,” said Twig.
“I mean, Sister Slam.
That's not nice, Sister Slam,
to tease the man.”
“It's not a man,” I said.
“It's a thing.
If I could sing,
I'd have a song
about how it's just wrong
to exist in this world
if you're surly
like him.”
Twig grinned.
“You're the Queen of Surly,”
she said.
“I know,” I agreed.
“I am edgy.”
“So write a poem,” said Twig.
“Forget about Gloom Pillows
and Huge Boobs.
Write about Lemon Pie Guy.”
Twig is my life raft in
every hurricane,
my Tylenol for every ache
and pain.
She saves
me from going stark-raving-crazy
insane.
“Okay,” I said.
“What rhymes
with Lemon Pie Guy?”
Twig shrugged.
By that time,
Lemon Pie Guy
had disappeared
into his weirdness
somewhere,
and we didn't care where,
as long as he was out
of our stare
and our air.
Festering with indigestion
in the Sleep Best Inn
on that night in question,
I was desperate
for the white light
of revelation
that would lead
to the creation
of the best
lemon pie poem ever,
but I was suffering
from inspiration constipation.
The slam began
at 8 A.M.
the next morning,
and I was pouring
everything I had
into writing a poem.
Twig wanted to rent
videos, but I said,
“No. Poems are groovier
than movies.
Now be quiet,
so I can think.”
In the pink
stink of the
cigarette-stenched
room,
Twig was digging
the sixty-six
channels on the
television screen,
and I was as green as spinach
with frenzied envy
that her poem was finished.
“This isn't a pajama party,
Miss Smarty,” I said.
“I need to think!
I'm on the brink
of wearing mink
and riding in a limousine
if I win this slam.
I want to be on the
cover of
People
magazine!
I need to be the queen
of beat,
the sweetest heat
where words are concerned.
I want to burn
ears and turn
the audience to tears.
It'll be better than
a big sale at Sears.
I want the cheers!”
Twig was miffed,
and sniffled and sniffed,
and I caught a whiff
of her being pissed
at Sister Slam.
“Twig,” I said,
“we're here to compete.
I don't want to be beat.
I don't even know what the prize is,
but it's got to be sweet.
Look at all the license plates
from so many states: people
coming from all over the U.S.
for this slam.”
“Okay,” said Twig,
and she lifted her chin.
“Write your poem.
I'll leave you alone.”
She turned off the television
and made the decision
to mope. I hoped that
she'd be quiet now, but Twig sighed
and sniffed and flipped around.
The bed creaked
and Twig moaned,
sending me into
an irritation zone.
Twig huffed,
and I'd had enough.
I couldn't cope,
and my insides twisted
like old rope.
“Why,” I cried,
“can't I have peace and quiet?
Let's just try it.”
Twig sniffed
and hugged the pillow
to her nose,
and I wrote:
Lemon Pie Guy,
with your pee-yellow hair dye,
gut pudged as uncut pork pie:
the judges won't fudge,
so don't begrudge my win,
buzzing like a cussing
fruit fly,
Mister fly-by-night,
bow-tied, bone-dry
poet.
This is my war cry,
my psychic black eye,
indivisible, with liberty
and justice for me.
You see,
Mister Lemon Pie Guy,
my money supply
isn't high enough
to buy this contest,
so I'll win it honestly,
with supersonic
phonics, Mister Moronic.