Apparently some construction crew Einstein had a brainstorm watching E.T. the other night, since I woke up Saturday morning to find my neighbor’s construction site completely enclosed in some kind of gigantic biohazard flea tent. Thank God I’d ditched out on the idea of camping there overnight, since I’d likely have been trapped inside and I bet everything stinks like malathion in there now.
Cruelly denied access to my neighbor’s basement-in-making, I decided to do the next best thing and find out what’s in my own basement, since I hadn’t been down there in about eight years and my memory wipes clean like a credit report after seven. I couldn’t even find the key to go down there until I checked in Foghat’s party ball, the strange, amorphous blob of unidentified household detritus he pushes around like a bag lady raised by owls.
After I de-balled the basement key and broke the seal on the basement door that had been keeping everything inside in a permanent state of 1997, I took my last, deep breath of fresh air before voyaging down into whatever mummy farts and radon leaks had been lurking in the air under my house since back when Hanson was on the radio.
At first I was a little apprehensive heading down those stairs, not knowing quite what could be down there in the dark, waiting to jack up my Jill. I had a bad experience once in Canada, getting locked in some stranger’s cabin in the middle of the night and having to shimmy up out of the basement coal chute after a misunderstanding about bathroom etiquette. I wasn’t looking forward to reliving that again, plus I’m pretty sure I don’t have a coal chute.
But then I realized that any kind of creepy naked chainsaw killer down there would likely be way off his game after the eight-year vacation, and probably would have grown some hilarious deep-sea fish adaptations after spending nearly a decade in the dark, too. And I’d pay to see that shit. Then I remembered about the halogen floodlights I had installed in the basement, after Foghat lost his lucky tooth down there and I got sick of blowing through candles for my miner’s helmet looking for the damned thing.
After finding the switch and flooding the basement with enough light to incinerate any hiding mutated chainsaw freaks, I took the plunge into a land of mystery and wonder.
Or at least a lot of shit I forgot I had. Hula hoops, an airplane wing, and a gun that shoots billiards balls. And some sick bastard had painted a life-sized portrait of Nancy Reagan using real meat. Then there was the huge refrigerator with a normal fridge inside, and a mini-fridge inside that one like a giant refrigerator Matrioshka doll, I guess at some point I had shit that needed to be kept really cold.
A voting machine? Jesus, did I get elected? And I have no idea where those tricked-out dirt bikes came from.
But the most interesting thing I found down there was the giant crate of off-brand NyQuil I spied behind a wax statue of Evander Holyfield over in the corner. What’s the story behind this stuff? Anybody who’s got more than FM radio between their ears knows that cough medicine is only good for two things: methamphetamines and hilarious gag ice cubes. But a case? Man, that’s a lot of ice cubes.
I’m not sure why I would have bought an entire case. Actually, I’m not sure how I bought an entire case, I don’t think they sell it that way outside of New Mexico. Either they get a lot of colds down there or tweakers run the government. Maybe I was on a road trip and just didn’t want to pass up the opportunity.
Then again, it was a knock-off brand called NiteWipe, so maybe they had to sell it by the case to get people to buy the stuff. Well, it worked at least once.
So now you know the story behind how that weird blue-green igloo ended up on my lawn, and how I distracted the construction shmoes long enough to make a kamikaze run on the biodome to make sure they didn’t really have an E.T. trapped in there. Incidentally, I also added a concrete mixer to my carnival of basement thrills downstairs, which should make for some interesting speculation in another eight or nine years.
Bricks out.
Burn, Blaming, Burn