Tag Archives: TKoM

Death Comes to the Office – Chapter Two

As Gertrude worked her way through the numbers, she worked very hard not to notice that they didn’t add up even without her boss’s final figures. She knew that there was something askew but preferred not to think about it because she was trying to avoid the obvious, because the obvious meant that she’d have to stay even later.

As she tried hard to concentrate on not thinking about the fact that her firm’s finances were almost certainly in total ruin, her glance drifted off to the growing pool of blood behind her chair that appeared to be coming from the ceiling, but just as she glanced upward to the source of the blood, her computer screen flickered, startling her enough to jump in her seat, knocking her water glass onto the keyboard causing the whole system to shut down.

“Well, that just about does it,” she thought. As she tilted her keyboard over the trash can to dump out the water she’d spilled onto it—inadvertently but cleverly making a wonderful excuse for her to leave—she once again glanced at the (now much larger) pool of blood that was not only most certainly coming from the ceiling, but the now visible body parts that were clumsily stuffed into the ceiling tiles by someone apparently unfamiliar with body part storage.

“Shit, now I definitely have to stay late,” she thought to herself. “Whomever’s responsible for this is gonna have hell to pay!”

Death comes to the office – Chapter One

As the day neared its end, Gertrude wondered whether she might make it home in time to see tonight’s ‘Dancing with the Stars,’ her favorite television show, but everyone in the office seemed determined to make her late with their bleeding from the eyes and ears and such. She was, however, determined. A little known fact about copier toner is that it can be fashioned into a wonderful makeshift second skin with just the right amount of heat. Sadly, if you apply too much heat it’ll seal you up tighter than a steak in butcher’s wrap and you’ll suffocate in around sixty seconds, which is something people typically try to avoid at the office, and especially when you’re trying to get home to watch television.

The thoughts that kept going through Gertrude’s mind as she entered the final figures for next week’s audit weren’t that the company is most certainly going to be seized and quite possibly a good majority of the company’s senior management were guilty of a great many major felonies, up to, but not including possession of rhino horns and anabolic steroids, but that she couldn’t remember whether or not she had bought cat food the night before on the way home. Since she couldn’t remember, she’d have to stop at the convenience store around the corner from her building and get some to be sure she wasn’t out. This would make her later than expected to get home to her favorite program cause it’s not like she could call her cat to confirm he had food or not.

At this point she was starting to panic. Her boss was late in turning in his figures for the audit and he was the last one left who needed to turn them in. Little did she know, there was much more in store for her than accounting figures.

More from the mustard king

A little explanation: In college, I developed an alter-ego writer that I called The Mustard King. Really it was a way to just let go of anything I called sensible and write in a style that fit my mood, which was mostly ridiculous. I did a lot of writing in snippets but never anything that amounted to a real story of any kind, in other words I’m a great starter but bad at finishing. So, here are a few of the random starts and stops from the archives, enjoy!

The look on Ursula’s face turned to disgust as she took the turkey flatbread sandwich off the serving tray and as she began to hurl it towards the wall Marge then realized that she had indeed used the imported Norwegian mustard and NOT the Big Bird yellow store-bought kind.

Had he realized what he had done before he entered the convenience store, Todd might not have asked the clerk for change in Drachmas-the national currency of Greece-when he purchased that pack of Hostess mini-gems, he might still be alive.

Further angered by the fact that he was wearing light colored clothes, Marla asked Greg to step further towards the curb allowing the cab’s broken mirror to fatally cut him right in his femoral artery, a sight that the townspeople of Hingsburg hadn’t witnessed since Jim Thomas had that horrible run-in with the public park grill in 1986.

As far as haircuts go, Stan’s was bad…but not too bad. Kind of like when you have a Caesar salad that is just a few minutes old.

When she ordered the Croque Monsieur Fatima forgot about the one she was carrying in her purse. It was angered so terribly that it exploded in a violent rage so extreme the thin lining between space and time was completely destroyed creating the chaos that we now know as, reality television.

The mustard king and princess olive write a story

The alley was dark except for a single light, shown in the back behind a chain-link fence; however, the suicidal man who had previously doused himself in kerosene committed his last act by setting the alley ablaze with a fiery light. The howl that escaped his now charring lips was so great that it set off nearby car alarms in a cacophonous symphony.

As he made his way to the back entrance of the bar, Albert Fillstein–the bar’s owner–tripped on a large rack meant to hold hamburger buns and hurled himself through the back door, bursting into the alley. Much to Albert’s horror, he was greeted face-to-face with the now smoldering corpse, which was propped up against the building adjacent to the bar’s back door. There were flaming footsteps that led back to the alley entrance where, to Albert’s chagrin, stood Betty Fundt–his high school crush. She was holding a cigarette in one hand and an uncooked Cornish game hen in the other. Just as he noticed it, the hen popped out of Betty’s hands and hobbled over to Albert, reached up and produced a business card from it’s neck hole.

The bird held the card for “Bert’s mobile taxidermy and dry cleaning service” up to Albert and he bent down to pick it up, but upon doing so he realized that his unattended pot of boiling potatoes might just go dry if he left them there any longer and began mumbling to himself about inkwells and staircases, hoping it might be enough to distract the bird and Betty. As he turned away expecting to find the door to the bar, he was greeted, instead, by a huge Morton Downey-esque mouth. As he stood there in terror, waiting to be eaten or at least bitten in half, the mouth let out a thunderous burp that made his ears ring and knocked him back into the brick wall behind him. Just then, the seemingly quiet corpse let out a chuckle, softly, then louder, all while smoke poured from its mouth.

It was then that Betty decided to reveal to Albert the real reason she was there. “I’m your destiny,” she said, and threw her arms open wide then began to flail them about in a spastic fit uncharacteristic of someone so seemingly, well, human. The corpse, who by all means should be silent at this point, said “don’t forget about your potatoes, Mr. Fukamachi.” “Ignore him!” yelled Betty as she walked over and lit a cigarette of of the corpse’s smoking knee.

“For alls I know, I should be ignorin’ the both of yous,” said Albert in a perfect impression of the late bluesman John Lee Hooker. Startled, Albert turned his gaze downward. “Oh, I’m sorry, the three of yous,” as he addressed the cornish hen which was still dancing around by his feet and intent on handing him business cards.

“This is all just a bit for me to take in right now,” said Albert in his normal tone of voice. Betty opened her mouth but before she could speak the giant mouth yawned loudly and its tongue came rolling out of its mouth to reveal Albert’s grandmother, clinging to the tip with one hand and holding a hatchet in the other. “Eeeep!” the Cornish hen squealed as Albert’s grandmother gave chase down the alley towards the entrance and out onto the street.

“Nana, no!” cried Albert as he ran after his granny, who was screaming at the little bird–“you little fraud! He didn’t do nothin’ to them squirrels but eat ’em clean up! I’ll put an end to your little scheme! Ahhhhhh!” As they vanished from the alley and their screams faded into the night, Betty was startled when the corpse suddenly blurted out, “I’m famished, wanna go get a burger?” Betty stood there for a second then nodded, figuring that her night couldn’t possibly get any worse. “Yeah..but I’m buying,” she said. Fearful that he’d be left out, the gaping mouth asked to come along too. “Why not,” said the corpse “she’s buying.”

Sadly, the potatoes dried up.

Return of the mustard king

Take this into consideration while picking out your next ear of corn:

The tiny society that lives in your ears, is not related to that of the society that lives in an ear of corn, they are significantly different. They that live in your ears have a grand lifestyle, and they are able to afford themselves comfortable footwear. The corn dwellers can only have what they find on the streets, which are often flooded. You may wonder what they may do to better themselves but you shouldn’t, their footwear problems are their own. They didn’t exactly get the short end of the stick either. The ear dwellers have to make a living selling lime colored felt products to blind snow soldiers from the Antarctic. They are not very adept sales people either, some would say quite incompetent. It’s kind of like the nomadic brown mice who make a living by selling patternless wrapping paper to the residents of small Irish villages, but not really. The two societies are actually distant relatives, the mice aren’t related to anybody.