Hello and welcome to day four of Operation Jerkhunt, the pet project of a neighborhood group I recently organized to hunt down the freakish scum who stole my neighbor Hamms’ Winnebago and, once they’d had their vile fun, dumped it in the Potomac River to conceal the evidence of their truly heinous crimes against the retired. That’s the story the vigilante group is working from anyway, I personally know better but am in the unique position of being unable to correct their misconceptions without revealing the fact that Omar Bricks was the one who borrowed the Winni and, through no fault of my own, drove it into the Potomac with a half-naked record store clerk in the shower. “Drove” is actually entirely too strong a word, since in truth there was a giant stuffed carnival bear behind the wheel at the time, and the Winnebago actually rolled downhill backwards into the river thanks to the stuffed bear’s poor understanding of parking brake procedures.
I have a rock-solid alibi since I was in the Winnebago’s shower at the time, as can be backed up by a half-naked record store clerk named either Darlene or Danielle. That was a large part of the problem, actually, since when you’re already wet and in the shower, it’s not as obvious as it would otherwise be that your mobile home is steadily sinking into one of America’s greatest rivers. So by the time you put two and two together, it’s way too late to organize a team of pack mules to pull the Winnebago out of the river before someone’s collection of rare “road music” LPs is damaged by the river water, silt, and various beaver activities therein.
So far we’ve had little luck tracking down the vermin, though we have concluded conclusively that there’s no way in hell he could live in our neighborhood. In fact, it was likely a woman, possibly crippled, from remote Eastern Europe, making retaliation all but impractical. There is a moral victory, however, in knowing the truth, and I know that Hamms has appreciated my help and the fact that he can sleep well at night now, knowing that Omar Bricks is keeping an eye on his house and assorted goodies.
Our previous misunderstandings about my frequent trespassing in his bathroom, burning down his house while it was being built, having him arrested twice on charges of necrophilia, and taking a shit in his garden and blaming it on my dog now well behind us, Hamms and I have moved on to a beautiful new phase of our friendship. Namely the first phase after someone’s been your enemy before and now you think they’re okay on a provisional basis. Like I said, truly a beautiful thing.
He’s had me over to his house for beers twice now, once that he knew about, and I can clearly see the roots of a lifelong friendship taking hold. Or at least as long as he’s going to live, which from the looks of things should only be another seven months at best since Hamms is older than Bob Hope. But Omar Bricks is pretty good at seven month friendships. Any longer than that and you hit the dreaded “Seven Month Itch,” when your friend inevitably finds out that you used their precious Hummel figurine collection for a pyrotechnic-heavy one-sixteenth scale recreation of the Spanish Civil War or that you’re the one who’s been painting all those crude sexual figures on their bathroom walls at night.
But those first seven months, or five, man. That’s the beautiful part. Bricks out.
Check Your Breasts