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la paternité
La paternite est un homme le plus important travail

Chinese: 父亲
父亲是一名男子的最重要的工作

Japanese: 父権
父親は、男の最も重要な仕事です。





The Fertile Monk

Becoming a dad is a bit like becoming a monk. It requires devotion.

Survival
means protecting our freedom from ever more powerful government agents.





Hant

by Fred Reed




Tother day I walked up the holler to ask Uncle Hant about space aliens. Its because Hant knows everything most nearly.

It was spring and birds were hooting and hollering in the rail cut through the woods to Hants place and bugs were shrieking. The he-bugs, anyway. They rub their legs together like fiddle bows and screech so maybe the she-bugs will get smitten and the he-bugs will get laid. Then she goes away and leaves his kids in a pile under a leaf, all twelve million of them, and he never sees them. I dont see how evolutions made much difference.

We get lots of space aliens in West Virginia, like May flies around a porch light. Nobody knows why. Maybe they like trailer parks. Some folks reckon they believe the satellite dishes are little cute saucers and come to visit. Anyway, last week Miss Brody Lou Callister, that nice old-maid librarian, was down by the rusty tipple by the tracks. Sure enough, this strange light came from up in the air, the way it always does, and sucked her up like a Hoover-matic. She met Elvis and Hitler and got the weird sexual examination. Well, she pitched a tent by that tipple and lives there, hoping.

Hant was out back at his still, cutting wood to fire the cooker. Hes a real moonshiner, and sells to yuppies out of DC. Actually he gets authentic bulk-lot alcohol from Buffalo, Moonshine Flavor from an outfit in Taiwan that does coal-tar chemistry, and real antique stoneware jugs from a toilet factory in Newark. He adds a little rust-dissolver to give it a kick. He says they got lots of yuppies in Washington, so a few here and there dont matter.

Hant, you have to tell me about space aliens, and Extra Terrestrial Intelligence. Hes a long tall sucker, kind of stiff with age now, and looks like nine miles of bad road. He wears a floppy hat that you just know used to be something else before the flatbed ran over it.

He leaned on his ax so hed be picturesque and said, Son, if its terrestrial intelligence, it damn sure aint extra.

Sometimes Hants hard to talk to. I tried again.

Hant, the lady on the satellite said this flatlander scientist named Serge done gone and hooked together about a million computers to find space aliens. I reckon hes one of them Russians. Probably a comminest.

He sat on a stump and reached for a jug. Hes got a jaw like a backhoe that needs to shave and doesnt look natural unless hes leaning on something. Of course, he usually is.

Want a swig? he asked.

That death dew got rust-cutter in it?

Not hardly. I like the enamel on my teeth. This heres Beam. Whos this Serge rascal?

Serge for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence. That CNN lady said the Air Force has a whole barn full of space aliens in New Mexico. And they think space is just crawling with them.

Cant be, he said. He had that smug look he gets, like a man thats got a date with somebody elses wife and just drew five aces too.

Why?

Cant be anything in space, or it wouldnt be space. Aint nothing there. Thats how you can tell its space. Any fool knows that.

I hadnt thought about it that way. Hants pretty smart, considering he dont exist. Hes just a filament of the imagination.

Maybe they aint in space, but the CNN lady said a flying saucer crashed out in Roswell, thats a town in New Mexico. They gotem stacked up like cord wood and the Feddle Gummint wants to find more.

Hant got that funny embarrassed look like he wanted to change the subject.

The Feddle Gummint couldnt find next week with a month to hunt. He was quiet for a moment. Then he took a big three-gurgle hit on the jug and looked thoughtful. I could tell he was about to show off.

I remember that night. I guess it was my fault. You could see he was proud of himself.

What was?

The crash.

I figured he must have got a running start on that jug before I got there.

Ol Joe Float come up that night and bought two gallons of shine. Yep, it was my fault.

Joe Float was the local drunk when I was just a kid. His name wasnt really Float, but he drank so much people thought he ought to, so thats what they called him.

Next morning we found him in a field that was scorched in a circle. The jugs was next to him, empty, but he was stone cold sober. We were afraid the shock might kill him.

From all I heard about old Joe, being sober would at least have confused him considerable. He hadnt tried it since he was about nine years old.

I guess them old space aliens must of sampled that panther sweat. Joe said that saucer was flying upside down and sideways before it spit him out. Everybody just rattled around, Hitler and Judge Crater and the Lost Tribe. Course they didnt have Elvis yet.

Hant, you arent making this up, are you?

He didnt say anything for a minute, just looked at me all sorrowful like hed just noticed that Id poisoned him.

Its getting so dont nobody trust a literary apparition these days. Seems like it aint worth getting out of bed in the morning.

He was just trying to be pitiful. You couldnt get him out of bed before noon with a bird dog and a buzz saw.

Still, he could have been telling the truth. They made this movie once in Bluefield about space monsters that crashed in the mountains and starting turning folks into cocoons. People would go out at night and youd find them hanging in trees, all wrapped up. They looked like big tent-caterpillar nests.

It must have been a pretty good movie because it played in drive-ins all over the country and everybody said the teenagers would have liked it if theyd seen it. The reviewer in Wheeling gave it three thumbs up, and ever since then Hollywoods tried to get movies reviewed in West Virginia.

So maybe thats what happened. Seems like space aliens dont drive too good anyway, and with that brain paralyzer Hant makes, they wouldnt have a chance.

I told you Hant knows everything.



Copyright 2002 Fred Reed.
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