Three Scoops is a Blast!

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Authors: Alex Carrick

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THREE SCOOPS”

 

IS A BLAST

 

 

 

Alex Carrick

 

 

 

Copyright
©
Alex Carrick 2010

 

Praise for “Two Scoops” Is Just Right

 

 

5 Stars…
A choice pick for short fiction fans.
~ Midwest Book Reviews.

 

Really funny… If you want a good laugh (and who doesn't) you MUST pick this book up. MUST.
~ The Book Journal

 

A fun read…
If you want a good laugh buy this book, read this book, then buy one for a friend.
~ Barbara Kent, Success Books

Acclaim for “Thee Scoops” Is A Blast!

 


Three Scoops” Is A Blast!
(sequel to “Two Scoops”) contains
“The Size of the Skip”
, an honorable-mention recipient in the
2010 Lorian Hemingway Short Story Competition.

 

 


Three Scoops”

Is A Blast

 

36 original short stories

 

Alex Carrick

 

Kindle Edition

 

Copyright 2010 Alex Carrick

 

ISBN: 1-4528-6255-9

EAN 13: 9781452862552

This e-book is intended for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be sold or given away to other people. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Amazon.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author
.

 

To my wife, Donna. The two of us egg each other on in the writing game.

And to our children, Tom, Ted and Tammy-Li.

They make our lives delicious scrambled eggs.

Foreword

In early 2008, I was asked by my employer to start writing an economics blog. I approached this with considerable trepidation, worrying about whether I would have enough material and if I could do it justice. I quickly found I had no shortage of ideas and that I rather enjoyed the experience.

 

So much, in fact, I began to branch out with humorous lifestyle material I was composing on the weekends and at night, just for fun. I posted these pieces on my personal blog site, “
www.alexcarrick.com
”, then published an anthology in my first book,
“Two Scoops” Is Just Right
.

 

While “
Three Scoops” Is A Blast!
does contain some stories about the family and the modern work environment, it branches off into somewhat longer fictional pieces than appeared in
Two Scoops
. These latter tales wander through time and space or consist of made-up conversations that take amusing, ironic or unexpected turns.

 

It’s been an enjoyable ride trailing my characters to see where they would lead me. Here’s hoping you enjoy the journey as well.

 

Alex Carrick

 

Contents

(1) The Madame Lazonga Defense

(2) Life is Sweet Again on the Planet Lollipop

(3) Obamacare and Harry Potter

(4) Disney Goes After a Bigger Fish than Marvel

(5) My Wife and I Argue over our New i-Phone

(6) No Problem, Excuse Me and the Limits of Civility

(7) The Seagull Poet of Butter Bay

(8) Real Estate Purgatory

(9) I Got Robbed by a Liquor Store

(10) The CAB Nations and their Rogue Currency

(11) The Devil Pulls a Fast One

(12) Giving a Finger to the Moon

(13) Witness to a Backyard Execution

(14) So You Think You Know Flop Sweat

(15) The Weatherman, the Economist and the Gypsy Lady

(16) The Red-Suit Mistletoe Initiative

(17) Pedro Martinez’ Incredible String of Good Luck

(18) The Freeze Dried Monster on the Skyway

(19) Lenny and Keith Flounder in the Shallow End

(20) The Mechanized Sorting Day of the Dead

(21) Catching Up on the Not So Local News (a.k.a. Burying Barry in Barrie)

(22) The Wizard and the Rose

(23) Herb Green discusses his Finances in Four-letter Words

(24) A Curious Case of Bottled-up Passion

(25) Ms. Phitts and Mr. Gatheral Spar Two Rounds

(26) Dancing the Family Man Shuffle

(27) An Imaginary Friend of an Imaginary Friend of Mine

(28) The Personal Injury Attorneys to the Stars

(29) Chasing a Murderer into Polar Bear Country

(30) One Thousand Years of Baked Goods

(31) Fuzzy on the Details

(32) The Size of the Skip

(33) Queen’s Jester to King’s Betterment

(34) One Shot in the Hot Seat

(35) That Would Be Naïve of Me

(36) Forever Running Late

 

The Madame Lazonga Defense

 

August 17, 2009

 

It was medieval times in Merry Olde England and tales of knights and dragons, sorcery and witchcraft still held sway over the land. Superstition was rampant and those who could foretell the future were held in high esteem. Revered for being at the top of her profession was Madame Lazonga, a woman who had grown wealthy through necromancy on behalf of the common folk.

 

Madame Lazonga’s abilities came in visionary snatches from which she was able to deduce logical outcomes. In one such trance, she even foresaw her own untimely end. She would meet a violent death at the hands of a vicious murderer. This made her more cautious in her everyday dealings. She became overly protective of her private life and turned miserly to a fault. She wouldn’t share her riches with anyone, not even her only child, Angelina.

 

Angelina, in the full bloom of youth, was a stunner. She had russet-coloured hair down past her shoulders, hazel-flecked sparkling eyes and a curvaceous frame that brought many men to kneel at her altar. Unbeknownst to most, however, her sexiest feature was her brain. Also a secret to the world at large was the fact that Angelina had a lover among the nobility, Lord Flatley.

 

Lord Flatley was the bachelor scion of a once-noble family that fell out of favor with the king and was suffering the consequences. Dashing in appearance, athletic in aspect, but limited in intellect, he was flat broke, with wants beyond his means. Angelina was crazy in love with him.

 

Angelina harbored hopes for their relationship until one fateful day in the town square marketplace. For the first time ever, Lord Flatley approached Angelina and her mother in a public place. Madame Lazonga spotted him first. “That’s the man! There he is! He’s the one who’s going to murder me!” she cried out. An unseemly commotion ensued. The local citizens and a couple of soldiers descended on Lord Flatley and escorted him away. Angelina was aghast.

 

From then on, Madame Lazonga told anyone who would listen about Lord Flatley’s connection to her dream. This put a serious crimp in Angelina and Lord Flatley’s plans for their relationship. When next they met clandestinely, Angelina whispered her instructions in Lord Flatley’s ear.

 

The foregoing is background and prelude to a discussion before a regional magistrate one fine spring day, as the accused was brought forward to explain what happened to the victim.

 

MAGISTRATE: Would you please tell me how it is you come to be standing before me today, Lord Flatley, in the matter of the notorious demise of Madame Lazonga?

 

LORD FLATLEY: Gladly, your honor. This is a situation that has been developing for some time. Madame Lazonga apparently had a premonition she would be murdered and, the first time she saw me, she cried out to all around her that I was the man she saw in her vision.

 

MAGISTRATE: How many times did you actually encounter her?

 

LORD FLATLEY: Three times in all. Twice before yesterday. The first time, after she called out her accusation, I was taken into custody by local authorities and questioned about my intentions. When it was established that I had never before met the woman, I was released without trouble.

 

MAGISTRATE: And the next time?

 

LORD FLATLEY: On the second occasion, the woman again cried out that I would be her murderer. Again I was surrounded and taken away for interrogation. I could no longer say I knew not the woman. I had quite a bit more difficulty securing my release. Madame Lazonga is held in high regard in these parts. After my second incarceration, I did a great deal of thinking.

 

MAGISTRATE: And then you saw her again yesterday in the crowd at the marketplace?

 

LORD FLATLEY: That is correct. But this time I walked directly up to her and killed her. In fact, I made quite sure she was dead. I strangled her, then stabbed her through the heart and finally held her head under water for a considerable period of time, at the horse-drinking trough. It went exactly according to plan. Everyone else was too stunned to react until it was over.

 

MAGISTRATE: Why did you do that sir?

 

LORD FLATLEY: Because I had done my research. Madame Lazonga was known to be a rich older woman. Someone was bound to rob and kill her someday. It was unlikely to be obvious who that person was and so I would be saddled with the crime. Then I would be hung or burned at the stake. Therefore, I decided to kill her myself in front of everyone, in self-defense.

 

MAGISTRATE: What an extraordinary notion. Is there more to your story?

 

LORD FLATLEY: Yes indeed, your honor. Madame Lazonga has never been known to be wrong in one of her predictions. My course of action was pre-determined. I had no option but to do her in. The integrity of my resolve can be seen in the fact that I made no attempt to rob her of her jewellery. That, apparently, was her one vanity. In my mind, it was justifiable homicide.

 

MAGISTRATE: That’s your defense? You were powerless to act in any other way? It is your contention this whole case rests on how perfect the victim was in foreseeing the future?

 

LORD FLATLEY: Yes, your honor.

 

MAGISTRATE: My initial reaction is that you’re presenting me with a barrow-load of nonsense. Nevertheless, you must be one in a million to make such an assertion and then carry through on it. Very well, I’ll consider what you have said. Let’s hear from some other witnesses.

 

For the next several hours, peasant after peasant was called before the judge and confirmed how accurate Madame Lazonga was in predicting births, deaths, marriages and the many other life-altering events crucial to the ebb and flow of the village’s survival. Finally, the judge got around to speaking with the victim’s daughter. Like many men before him, he was smitten by her astonishing beauty, but prided himself on being able to maintain a workman-like demeanor.

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