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1-12:The Return of the Lost Gavel

Posted: February 19th, 2007 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Colonel Panix, Daisy, Elvis, Freddy McWarickson, Marcus, Prime, The Return of the Lost Gavel | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

He groaned feeling like his head was the victim of a friendly-fire incident and instinctively felt between his legs.

‘Ewww,’ he exclaimed with Daisy’s voice which had a tone in the lower-levels of revulsion and shook the liquid from her hand, ensuring it was as far away as anatomically possible.

She reached out with her other hand and retrieved paper from the roll and used it to dry the remaining moisture, then grabbed some more to rub the fragments of tissue paper from her hand.

There was a knocking at the door.

‘Not finished,’ she called out.

‘You’re on in thirty,’ said Marcus. ‘You need to shift please. You’ve still got to get dressed.’

Daisy felt a moment of confusion, while she examined her clothing. This gave way to tangental irritation.

‘What are you doing in the ladies,’ she asked pointedly.

‘What?’

‘You’re disturbing the stream of consciousness,’ said Daisy, hinting at something else entirely. ‘Go away. You could be arrested.’

‘What are you on about?’

Daisy sighed, retrieved more paper and used it for its usual purpose.

When she emerged, Marcus was leaning back against the bank of sinks, with a bemused expression on his face.

‘You’re done then,’ he asked with a closed smile.

‘I need to wash my hands,’ she replied and pushed past him quite deliberately to the specific sink which he was standing in front-of.

‘We’re on a bit of a schedule, here.’

‘I need a drink,’ said Daisy, making the only excuse she could.

‘Fine,’ said Marcus, rolling his eyes. ‘Just hurry up.’

* * *

Emerging from the toilets, Daisy was confronted with half a dozen flash-bulbs and at least as many microphones thrust under her face.

‘Hey, get lost you lot,’ said Marcus, pushing forwards. ‘You know the rules. No interviews before the gig.’

Several flash-bulbs were discharged in his face, for which he thanked the particular photographers with a very rock-and-roll punch in the mouth for their trouble.

‘Miss Penfolde,’ began one, and was rounded upon by Marcus.

As he confronted the journalistic hacks, and laid down the law to them, Daisy slipped quietly away to the bar.

‘Gin and tonic, please,’ she said to the barman.

He reached over his shoulder with a practiced motion, retrieved a can of pre-mix and, with a flourish, clicked it open with a special bar-tending tool that looked for all the world to be a miniature crowbar. The can was placed onto the bench before her.

Daisy blinked at it.

‘Is that it?’

‘Yep,’ replied the barman, with a bored tone.

‘So, no bottles of spirit,’ she asked. ‘No top-shelf, bottom-shelf..?’

‘No,’ said the barman. ‘Just mediocrity.’

‘It’s a bit…’ said Daisy at last with a dubious tone and frowning at the yellow, red and silver can which seemed to have been designed by people who communicated by yelling at one-another. ‘Naff.’

‘You have no idea,’ he replied with a shake of his head, then added in a monotone, ‘Oh, I nearly forgot. Would-you-like-peanuts-or-chips-with-that?’

Daisy stared. ‘Come again?’

‘We’ve been told we have to ‘suggest-sell’ when making a transaction,’ he replied with clear distaste.

‘What, like in fast-food places.’

He nodded.

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1-6:The politics of thought

Posted: December 16th, 2006 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Daisy, Miss Rook, Prime, The politics of thought | Tags: , | No Comments »

She woke with a killer headache and instinctively felt between her legs.

The arm was restrained. As was her other one.

She opened her eyes and winced from the sudden dazzlingly bright lights before her. Her ears were being assaulted by screeching sound from somewhere in the room.

‘All right,’ she yelled, closing her eyes as tightly as she could. ‘For crying out loud, turn it off!’

No-one responded; it was entirely possible they didn’t hear her.

On and on the sound went, screeching up and down. She couldn’t see anything past the lights, her senses were on overload. Nothing was getting through, not the surface she was lying against, nor what was restraining her.

Suddenly the lights and sound stopped. The room was plunged into darkness.

She shook her head, unable to see or hear, but glad of the sudden quiet.

‘Hello,’ she thought she said; she knew her lips moved, but heard nothing.

Again the lights went on. The noise followed.

‘Fuck,’ she yelled. ‘What do you want?!’

The noise and light continued for what seemed like an eternity, then stopped again.

She shook her head and glanced around, eyes still unable to focus. A new rectangular source of light became evident; a doorway had opened.

Two shapes, perhaps human, walked quickly into the room and pulled her head upwards.

She tried to focus, to lift her head away, but it was held firm.

She was slapped hard across her face. The force wrenched her head to one side and her cheek smacked into the wall.

Before she knew it, her bonds had been removed and she was being dragged along a corridor, blinking madly.

‘What’s this about,’ she asked in a whisper.

Neither of the guards answered.

She tried to get her legs beneath her, but they were too weak. Her senses began to report that she was horribly and sickeningly hungry.

A doorway was opened before her and she was thrown inside.

Her body went into shut-down and everything went dark once again.

* * *

Sudden cold woke her; she was soaking wet.

She opened her eyes and saw water. Struggling slightly she realised someone was holding her head beneath the surface.

She fought as best she could, but her strength was gone; her body weak from lack of protein and constant abuse.
She gulped, trying desparately not to breathe-in the water, but it was not enough.

Convulsing she fought one last time, and was yanked upwards out of the water, choking and spluttering; water had gone down into her windpipe and she was unable to clear it on her own.

She was dumped onto the floor and pain exploded in her abdomen; someone had kicked her stomach.

The water exploded from her throat and she gasped, gulping air.

She heard boots walking around her.

‘You were caught,’ said the voice in a monotone, then repeated: ‘You were caught.’

Daisy gulped air and shook from fear and confusion. What was all this?

‘We have you now,’ said the voice.

Was the voice female?

‘I’d let the others at you, but there are rules,’ said the woman derisively. She continued to circle, then repeated, ‘you were caught.’

‘Caught,’ whispered Daisy flatly. ‘Caught?’

‘Caught in the wrong place at the wrong time,’ said the woman, continuing to circle. ‘And now we’ve got you.’

‘What is this,’ Daisy whispered, now blinking far faster than was normal; the shock had caught-up with her and her body was shuddering uncontrollably.

‘You were caught and now we have to make an example of you,’ said the woman.

‘Why?’

‘Why?’ said the woman.

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1-14:Porn Again (part2)

Posted: January 19th, 2006 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Porn Again (part 2) | No Comments »

A red mustang accelerated hard up the ramp from the basement car park of the Australian head-office of The Church of

Elvis, with Marcus in the drivers seat, Elvis in the passenger, and Donnie and Prime sitting behind. With very little care, the car zoomed into the traffic, past trams and other cars.

As they drove into the distance, a large black four-wheel-drive pulled away from the kerb and began to follow.

High above the building a half-dozen helicopters were descending, Police markings on the sides, armed officers rappelling down to the rooftop.

Just below them, a neon sign clicked automatically to the alternate message:

The King has…
Left the building

High in the sky, the clouds gathered; the hitherto sunny day had been consumed by other weather. There was crack of lightening and a roll of thunder.

This was Melbourne after all; beautiful one minute, pissing-down the next.

Marcus found a relatively empty side-street, and drove down it, changing up gears.

‘Hey, I recognise this,’ said Donnie, recalling a particular incident with a beat-up car, a boot-load of fertiliser and a close-encounter of the digital kind.

Prime nodded.

Marcus slowed and indicated left at the end of the street. Opposite them was Parliament House, and more politicians than one could comfortably imagine.

‘Lucky to escape that,’ said Donnie, peering up out of the back window at the church building. The helicopters had landed now and presumably their occupants were rampaging unabated within the building.

‘Yes,’ murmured Prime, her mind on events of the past and a particular car-ride with a once close-friend. ‘Lucky indeed.’

‘They weren’t after us,’ said Marcus. ‘We’d never have got out if they were.’

‘Yeah,’ asked Donnie, peering sideways at Prime. He wondered if she was recalling the same incident as he. Could that be why she was so quiet. Bad memories?

He shook his head; he’d forgotten that he had been Daisy that time and that this memory couldn’t possibly have been shared with Prime.

‘Probably just making an appearance,’ said Prime at last and not without a little cynicism. ‘But they’d have needed some serious money to pay the cops to go in on The Church.’

Elvis hmm’d irritatedly.

Donnie gave her a questioning gaze: a frown with one eyebrow slightly higher than the other.

‘Well, the bigger the job, the bigger the payment,’ said Marcus, glancing back: he’d seen Donnie in the rear-view mirror.

‘Perfectly logical.’

‘So who’d have enough money to pay the coppers to take on the church?’

‘Government most probably,’ said Marcus. ‘The PM was certainly ranting about how he was going to have us taken down.’

‘Putting taxpayers money to good use,’ said Prime, sardonically.

Elvis glanced into the side-mirror. Something wasn’t quite right.

They passed a large bus, emblazoned with the business-name:

Casino Day Tripper

As they passed, Donnie could see pensioners tapping ineffectually on the fogged-up windows with the palms of their hands and walking stick frames.

‘Long Live Rock & Roll,’ Donnie read from a barely legible scrawl on the glass.

There was a hint of music from the bus as the Mustang finally accelerated away; a mix of 1950s out-of-copyright songs which were usually heard on commercial stations devoted to The best of particular decades.

Donnie looked over to Prime, a question in his eyes.

‘So, what am I missing,’ he asked at last. ‘What couldn’t you tell me?’

‘We’ve unearthed new information,’ said Prime, ‘as to the origins of The Sisterhood and The BSD.’

‘Monsieur Bleu and Madame Pink,’ said Elvis. He seemed unhappy to be repeating these names, and added in a murmur. ‘Old names from old times.’

‘Who,’ asked Donnie.

‘CCT,’ said Elvis.

Donnie cut over him.

‘What, another three-letter-bleeding-acronym,’ he paused. ‘What’s this one for Cretinous Cu–’

‘Cubist Conspiracy Theorists,’ Prime interjected. ‘It’s a…’

She considered a moment, thinking of the easiest way to explain.

‘You know Picasso,’ asked Elvis, a little tension slipping into his voice.

‘What, a lot of eyes pointing up nostrils, that sort of thing?’

‘It’s an avant-garde movement,’ said Marcus, glancing backwards then back to the road.

‘The principle is that the only way to represent something is to show it from multiple points simultaneously,’ continued Prime. ‘Picasso and Braque were the first to apply it.’

‘What, and the Cubists followed on from their fine examples,’ asked Donnie, eyes wide.

‘The Cubists live the examples,’ said Elvis. ‘They are cubist.’

Donnie considered this image for a moment and couldn’t make it work. He shuddered.

‘Thing is,’ said Marcus. ‘since we’re on the BSD and Sisterhood shit-list, we’re probably on the Cubist’s too.’

‘Brilliant,’ said Donnie sarcastically.

‘But we don’t know their intent,’ said Prime. ‘We don’t know why they created the two groups.’

‘And we don’t know where they are,’ said Elvis.

‘Did you make contact?’ asked Prime. ‘At the shoot?’

‘Hmm, What?’ asked Donnie, kicked from his thoughts and realising it was he that she was speaking to. ‘Who with?’

‘Your contact,’ said Marcus. ‘The reason you were there?’

‘There? Oh… there…ah,’ said Donnie, mentally backing away. ‘The only person I spoke to was a leather-masked gimp.’

‘Yes,’ said Prime. ‘that was him.’

Donnie shook his head slowly. Whoops!

‘No, sorry,’ Donnie, faltered, and added, his mind concocting a plausible excuse, ‘the helicopters arrived too early.’

‘So we’re flying blind again,’ Elvis breathed out heavily, resigned, glancing down in the mirror. The black four-wheel drive was still behind them. Elvis frowned at its image in the mirror and glanced away again. He drummed his fingers on the dashboard and squinted into the wing-mirror once more, trying to read the number-plate. There was a ‘Q’ on it.

‘The Cubists were also behind Universal Promotions,’ said Marcus.

Donnie blinked; now there was a name with an unpleasant, tinny melody ring-tone to it.

‘Not sure what they wanted to achieve with them,’ added Marcus, almost jovially, ‘but we’re working on it!’

‘But won’t the cops take the computer systems,’ asked Donnie. ‘Take all the information?’

‘It’s all stored on remote servers,’ said Prime. ‘Even if we lost the local branch, we could still carry on.’

‘We’re not going to lose it, though…’ asked Donnie, hoping he was right.

‘Well, it’s possible they could revoke the permits,’ said Prime. ‘But the church would go on.’

Donnie stared out of the window, his eyes drawn to a huge sign on the side of a building.

At the top of the billboard were two words, in huge type:

Problems With

Below this was the lower part of a man’s torso, a bare stomach which was bisected, before any pornographic imagery could be implied, by a pair of blue jeans, which led down to the upper legs.

In the fastenings of the jeans had been placed a wooden ruler, pointing out at a jaunty angle.

The final word on the poster was, as would now be obvious, referring to a certain piece of male anatomy which could – on occasion – be problematic due to a number of unforeseen circumstances.

Donnie’s memory kicked up.

That’s right!

‘What about that mob under the restaurant,’ he asked Prime with a slight smile.

‘What about them,’ asked Prime.

‘Would they know where the Cubists are?’

‘Been there, done that,’ said Elvis. ‘It was unoccupied when we went in and never used since.’

‘How did you find out about it?’

‘Luck,’ said Marcus.

‘Skill,’ said Prime.

‘Patience,’ said Elvis.

‘What,’ asked Donnie, not getting it.

‘Both groups were being fed information somehow,’ said Marcus. ‘It seemed logical there was someone watching.’

‘Couldn’t they be the cubists,’ asked Donnie.

‘You’d think so, wouldn’t you,’ asked Prime. ‘And we’ve considered it.’

‘It makes sense,’ began Marcus.

‘We’ve been over this,’ Elvis interjected. ‘There’s not enough information.’

‘What about the envelope,’ asked Donnie. ‘the one you left in there. What was in it?’

‘Two invitations,’ said Prime. ‘For the leaders of the BSD and Sisterhood care-of The King of Rock and Roll.’

‘You were throwing a party and didn’t tell me,’ asked Donnie, taken aback.

Prime gave him a look and he twitched backwards momentarily.

‘We asked to meet with them all, to thrash out some kind of peace-deal,’ said Marcus.

‘Oh,’ said Donnie merrily, then with sarcasm slipping through the light-hearted humour, ‘so that’s why we sat and shagged on it!’

Prime gave him a look, which he was able – at this juncture – to ignore.

‘Makes perfect sense,’ he concluded with a cynical grin, and glanced away. ‘Silly me.’

‘We needed enough of a distraction to get their minds off of what they intended,’ said Prime.

‘Which was?’

‘They’d been itching for a reason to go to full-blown war for over a year,’ explained Marcus. ‘As ex-members–’

‘Traitors,’ Prime interjected. ‘Remember? Donnie and I are officially designated traitors. Got our own web-pages and everything.’

‘Gosh,’ murmured Donnie. ‘Fame at last.’

‘As ex-members of both groups–’ Marcus tried again.

‘Shagging like rabbits,’ continued Donnie, with a small and almost imperceptible nod. ‘Mustn’t forget that.’

‘Wouldn’t go that far,’ murmured Prime, and glanced up at Donnie with humour in her eyes.

‘Which neither group condones,’ said Marcus, ‘and indeed loathes the whole idea of… well, it doesn’t take a physics professor in a wheelchair to work-out how pissed-off they would have been.’

‘I got it,’ said Donnie, slightly downcast. ‘Oh well.’

He looked up at Prime.

‘Did they reply,’ he asked.

‘Returned to sender,’ said Prime. ‘Address unknown.’

‘No such number,’ said Marcus, with a concerned tone.

‘No such zone,’ murmured Elvis, squinting into the mirror.

‘What,’ asked Marcus.

‘I think we’re being tailed,’ Elvis explained. ‘That four-wheel-drive; been behind us for the last ten minutes.’

‘There’s a lot of them on the road,’ said Marcus. ‘Sure it’s the same one?’

‘Sure enough,’ he said ‘It ain’t the Mormon Tabernacle Accounting Department, either.’

‘Righty-ho,’ said Marcus with a cheerful nod and pressed a button next to the GPS.

‘We need to lose them,’ added Elvis, making the point clear for all to hear.

The GPS screen burst into life. A police-force logo with the words Protect And Serve written across the bottom was displayed, followed by a bored looking officer.

‘Emergency,’ he said. ‘State your business.’

‘Need Major Smith’s unit, please?’

‘The situation,’ asked the officer.

‘Tailgating,’ said Marcus.

‘Account details,’ asked the officer.

‘They’re on-record,’ added Marcus. ‘Church of Elvis.’

‘Got it here,’ said the officer. ‘They’ll home-in on your signal; should be less than five minutes.’

‘Ta. Keep up the good work,’ Marcus replied with a smile.

The connection was broken.

‘But they were raiding the church,’ said Donnie with considerable concern. ‘Won’t they–’

‘Money’s money,’ said Marcus. ‘We’re customers same as everyone.’

‘So?’

‘So they’ve now been hired to address a tailgating issue.’

After a moment, one of the black, slimming helicopters approached and hovered over the black vehicle. Officers rappelled down and, after a brief altercation in which the driver of the vehicle was shot repeatedly, the four-wheel-drive screeched off of the road rolled fifteen times, and collided with a pylon, a large tree, then burst into flames.

The men returned to the helicopter and, just before it departed, two air-to-surface missiles were fired into the vehicle for good measure.

‘Subtle,’ said Donnie, still watching and wishing it was he at the trigger; he hated four-wheel-drives.

However, he was left, not for the first time, with a feeling of serious worry. He’d always been taught to trust coppers. Now he wasn’t quite sure about them. Yes, Protect and Serve, but not on a platter after a barbeque.

He glanced back once more. The fire was still raging, but had achieved its goal: there were no more vehicles following; they were all gridlocked behind the wreckage.

Donnie turned to the front once more, a question on his lips.

‘So what about Tassie?’

‘Bombed,’ said Elvis.

‘Yes, got that,’ said Donnie. ‘Why though?’

‘That’s what we’ve got to find out,’ said Elvis. ‘I’m having a bad feelin’ about this. Like I’ve had a few too-many deep-fried mars-bars… like I got in the old days.’

* * *

They walked into the main terminal and were met by a woman in black business attire.

‘High Priest, your graces, welcome to the airport,’ she said with a bow. ‘My name is Tina. Would you kindly follow me, please.’

Donnie kept an eye out while they were led into the building. In the near-distance, men, women and children of all financial obligations milled around, some in queues, some in retail outlets. All were oblivious of the black-suited officers standing in strategic positions around the terminal, clearly armed and dangerous.

Donnie frowned as he caught sight of a fat man with a pudgy expression standing nearby chatting with a woman.

No, couldn’t be, thought Donnie. Panix wouldn’t have been caught dead around a female.

There wasn’t time to check for sure; they were led into a corridor away from the proletariat travellers and past CCTV cameras which tracked their progress silently and without effort.

‘We’re being watched,’ said Donnie.

‘Security cameras,’ said Prime. ‘Guaranteed closed-circuit. No-one can get into them. And anyway, they’re for checking after something goes wrong.’

‘Oh,’ said Donnie and sniffed.

‘Put a face to the perp, that sort of thing,’ Prime continued. ‘Useful for tabloid television to display their next victim.’

As they were led deeper into the airport, the Rock-and-Roll quartet remained silent. The only sounds were a general background hum of electrical systems and that of footsteps on the thin grey industrial carpeting.

Tina led them into a section of the building reserved for visiting dignitaries and their minions. There was a  short queue of people stood between them and the departure-lounge.

Donnie stared briefly at the signs arranged across the stark white walls; various warnings against falsifying biometric data and threats to imprison, or deport anyone found to be doing this.

The posters included a face-shot of the current Australian Prime Minister, a weasley looking man with feral eyebrows, who stared meaningfully at the surrounding area.

‘Big Wanker is watching you,’ murmured Donnie.

In the queue before him was a woman who was undergoing the screening. A retina-scan, mouth swab and blood was taken and compared against the biometric data contained on her card.

The machine screeched and a trap-door opened beneath her. She fell without a sound.

‘Perpetrator detained for processing,’ said a computer voice as a guard dragged the woman’s bags over to an incinerator. They were thrown inside.

A moment’s worry and Donnie was relieved to be through. He emerged in a large lounge area. The others had been led over to some rather luxurious seats and awaited the call for their flight.

As Donnie approached the others, who were sitting on a dark leather couch chatting in hushed tones, he heard the end of a conversation.

‘The bombing of Tasmania was just the start,’ said Elvis, puffing on a stogie, despite the non-smoking signs that were emblazoned across every wall in seventeen different languages. ‘We dropped the ball and it cracked like an egg.’

Ignoring the mixed metaphor, Donnie looked around. The lounge was filled with people, all owed money by the rabble in the public areas. There were more cameras on the walls.

‘Yes,’ Prime agreed ‘Just when we thought things were going our way, the rules got changed.’

Tina walked up, oozing efficiency.

‘Here are your tickets,’ said Tina, ignoring Elvis’s blatant breach of federal law. ‘Did you have any baggage?’

Elvis shook his head. A puff of smoke expanded in the air.

‘That’s fine,’ said Tina. ‘Follow me please. Your plane is waiting.’

They were led from the plush surroundings of the lounge, deep into the bowels of the airport’s restricted area and past more cameras before emerging on the tarmac outside.

It was one of those nights where the rain had fallen just enough to make everything slippery and icy cold. A fine mist hung in the air like like the final breath from a condemned man.

A slick white jet waited, about fifty meters away, its engines roaring.

Donnie glanced upwards, cooling his face on the light drizzle. He slowly turned, extending his arms slightly in the rain. He breathed slowly and deeply, then opened his eyes.

Colonel Panix stood on a balcony just above the door. He was not alone.

‘Ambush,’ screamed Donnie.

‘Dammit,’ Elvis cursed, turning and pulled his guns. Two quick shots destroyed the spotlights and dropped them all into inky darkness.

Prime whirled and bitch-slapped Tina, who fell to the ground.

‘Long live Madame Pink,’ yelled Tina, and yanked a pistol from a holster on her inner thigh.

Prime was faster. She kicked the gun from the woman’s grasp, reversed and spun on the ball of one foot to thrust the flat of the other into Tina’s face. The gun slid over the ground into the shadows while Tina ended up horizontal, unconscious, with a bloodied nose and probable concussion.

The captain of the plane had his company’s reputation to uphold: no accidents, ever. He throttled-up and the plane began to accelerate away.

‘Marcus! Go!’ yelled Elvis.

Marcus was closest to the plane and sprinted the short distance, grabbing the door before it closed fully. He yanked it downwards and managed to get inside.

Elvis, Prime and Donnie, however, were still in firing range and as prone as chickens in a factory farm. Cover was only meters away.

They moved as quickly as they could, knowing that at any moment the BSD men on the roof could terminally perforate them all.

Prime fell, which annoyed her as her footing was usually so true. Of course, it was not usually obstructed by rabid members of The Sisterhood.

Tina had Prime’s ankle held fast and clawed her way along the ground; her concussion only making her all the more batty.

‘You should know better than to have joined these scabs,’ she hissed. ‘You’re one of us! You filthy traitor!’

Prime rolled onto her back and used her free foot in a percussive argument to the contrary.

‘You’re… working,’ said Prime, thumping at Tina’s face with the sole of her boot, ‘with the B-S-Fucking-D.’

Thump went her foot once more.

‘What do you call that,’ asked Prime through , continuing to thump Tina’s face. ‘Community Service?’

Tina stopped moving and as Prime rolled backwards and pushed up onto her feet, she found herself bathed in a spotlight; Panix’s men had shed further light on things.

* * *

‘We want her alive,’ said Miss Rook, standing next to Panix and staring down at Prime with an expression of repressed fury.

‘Fine,’ he said huffily, then to his men, ‘legs please.’

Two well-aimed bullets ripped through Prime’s dress. She collapsed again, screaming agonisingly.

* * *

‘Cover me,’ said Elvis shoving one of his guns into Donnie’s hands.

He ran out into the light to retrieve the fallen Cardinal.

Donnie stepped forwards a little, just far enough to have a clear-shot and blasted in the general direction of the attackers.

He felt like a little boy firing a cap-gun. The bullets were enough to distract the men momentarily and give Elvis enough time to drag Prime to temporary safety.

She was in a bad way; unconscious with blood draining slowly from the wounds.

‘It’s not arterial,’ said Elvis, giving her the once-over.

‘We’ve got to get her to hospital,’ said Donnie, stating the obvious.

‘You’re caught,’ yelled Panix. ‘Like rats in a trap.’

‘Can’t we call the police,’ whispered Donnie.

‘This is federal territory,’ whispered Elvis. ’No jurisdiction. We’re on our own.’

‘If you come out, we promise not to treat you well,’ yelled Panix. ‘But we definitely won’t kill you. That’s someone else’s job.’

Elvis and Donnie stared ahead. In the distance the plane continued along the runway.

‘Now what,’ murmured Donnie.

Nearby, a CCTV camera turned slowly and pointed at Donnie’s face. It slowly zoomed in, focussing on his face.

* * *

Two pale, perhaps albino, faces floated against a pitch-dark background, their faces illuminated by the images on a number of black-edged computer screens.

It was difficult to tell the two apart; they both wore black lipstick with a hint of red, they both wore eyeliner, both had hair cropped almost, but not quite, to the skin of their scalps. Both had striking grey eyes and identical noses.

For the sake of argument, you could say that the one with the long eyelashes was female and the one that didn’t wasn’t.

Only the most skilled beautician could have been able to guess how old they really were; they both had youthful faces, but their eyes betrayed their true age.

One pressed a button and Donnie’s worried face was displayed on each screen.

The two uttered a single word, their accents hinting at their French origins:

‘Finally.’

Click to see the next installment: Porn Free (part 1)

Thanks to Stacey for Piltdown and Monika for editing suggestions.

Huntingdale and South Yarra, January 2006

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1-14:Porn Again (part1)

Posted: January 19th, 2006 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Porn Again (part 1) | Tags: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

She woke with a murderous headache and instinctively groped between her legs.

She found something unexpectedly large and hairy

‘Cut!’ screamed a man. ‘Cut! Cut! Cut! Cut! CUT!!’

The earth moved; more a rumble, really.

Wow, wondered Donnie. Was that me?

Donnie opened his eyes and toppled backwards off of the shoulders of the young lady he had so improbably been sitting on.

‘Gosh,’ she said, turning and rushing to his aid. ‘Are you all right? I said to hang on tight. The earth moved and you just fell off…’

Donnie twisted himself off the couch while cursing multi-lingually. He stood unsteadily and was verbally accosted by a youngish man in drag.

‘What are you doing,’ screamed the drag queen.

Donnie took a step backwards.

‘Whoa,’ he murmured, raising his arms into a vaguely defensive posture.

‘Well?!’

Donnie glanced around himself and said the first thing that came to mind. ‘No idea.’

He wore a rather tasteful example of existentialist angst; on top, a black turtleneck sweater which was complemented by straight pants on the lower-half of his body. These had a slight flare which almost – but not quite – covered a pair of elastic-sided cuban heels, in black of course.

The man slapped his forehead with the open palm of his right hand, leaving an angry red mark through the caked-on makeup.

‘I told you the Korma position! Korma! Not Dahl, not Roti, KORMA!’

He spun on his stiletto and stormed off in a theatrical huff.

Just like a drag queen to exaggerate things, thought Donnie; to even have a crack at a Korma he’d need three bibs and a fire-engine standing-by.

Oh well, he thought and sat down on the slightly dented couch, glancing up and smiled at a harassed young lady that rushed up in the drag-queen’s wake. She was clearly an assistant-type. Donnie could tell this was the case because of the tweed jacket, long skirt, sensible shoes and the fact she was wearing a baseball hat with the word ‘Assistant’ printed on it in large yellow letters. The hat was blue, which formed a nice contrast for the letters of the word and an amusing pun if you understood what was actually going on.

As she opened her mouth to speak, there came a roar of pain from across the room.

Donnie and the Assistant’s attention jerked upwards to the source of the sound, their eyes fixing upon a large prehensile man with more hair on his body than the average Gibbon who was gasping and yelling in pain.

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1-11:Christmas Crackers

Posted: December 18th, 2005 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Characters, Christmas Crackers, Donnie, Elvis | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

(the first DaisyDonnie Christmas Special)

She woke with a killer headache and instinctively felt between her legs.

Daisy stiffened slightly as she realised there was someone sitting on her lap.

‘An I wanna x-box, anna zap gun anna–’

‘Who’s Anna?’ she asked with Donnie’s voice. Well, that sorted the gender thing out. ‘And who are you?’

‘I tol’ you. Jason is my name. Except it’s spelled with a K instead of a J and a Y instead of an O. And it’s got a U and an M instead of an N. An I want a whole bucket of chocolate an–’

Donnie zoned out momentarily, trying to work out how the child’s name was spelled and how to actually pronounce it. The child continued to talk, going off like a junkie on speed.

‘You listening Santa?!’ screamed Kasyum (pronounced Jason).

Santa?!

Oh sweet prophet of choice!

He glanced past the child and his shoulders dropped

‘Oh no.’

There were forty or more children waiting in line, and it wasn’t even close to closing time.

The midday rush was in its third hour and counting. The signs screamed:

One day til Xmas!!!
Open 24 hours!!!!

Donnie rapidly examined the parts of his body that hadn’t fallen asleep from the pressure of a junk-food addicted child sitting on them. Padded belly, fluffy beard, fizzy-drink red jacket and matching pants.

Jesus.

Standing beside him was a scantily-clad young woman, pushing all of sixteen, grinning like a maniac.

Perhaps, mused Donnie, she’d been forced to superglue her lips back and use the remainder to stick her teeth together as a condition of employment.

Her smile was like a searchlight across the faces of the thirty and forty-something fathers. They beamed back, presumably wishing they could sit on her knee, or that she could sit on their –

‘I think Santa sucks,’ screeched the dyslexically named child and jumped off Donnie’s knee, not before the one bony part of his body collided with Donnie’s nethers.

Donnie gasped and screwed his eyes up while his legs instinctively pushed together.

The child ran over to his parents, who handed him a container full of fizzy-drink and a toffee-apple.

‘Happy Christmas,’ he wheezed, and glanced up at his assistant. ‘Does that hurt?’

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1-10:When Seafood Bites Back

Posted: September 18th, 2005 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Colonel Panix, Daisy, Elvis, Marcus, Prime, When Seafood Bites Back | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

He woke with a killer headache and instinctively felt between his legs. He frowned, momentarily confused and felt again.

Oh, this again, he thought.

Daisy opened her eyes. Blinked and frowned.

‘Who’re you?’ she asked the man directly above her. He had a very goofy expression on his face.

There was no reaction, no change to the rhythm, nor a hint that he’d even heard her.

She rolled her eyes and repeated the question.

‘Who…are-’ she said, then exclaimed: ‘ohmygod!’

Marcus was on top of her, having his manly way with her. It was the absent beard and slicked back haircut that had confused her.

It was a pity he’d lost the goatee; it was actually a turn-on and useful in ways other than just looks. Without it he looked like a square-jawed 1960′s secret agent, which had never been her thing.

Her mind raced, trying desperately to work-out where the hell she was. As she glanced from side-to-side she realised the room was decorated in the unmistakable style of the decade of protest; and it wasn’t just cheap knock-offs either.

‘Hnyahhhh…’ gasped Marcus, then collapsed on top of her, breathing heavily. After a moment, he rolled onto his back, and reached across to the bedside table where he picked up the telephone and dialed a number that appeared to feature mostly fives.

‘All done here,’ he said. ‘You can come at any time.’

Nice, thought Daisy. First I’m subjected to the Missionary Position and now I’m brushed-off like cat fur.

He hung-up and picked up a small, flat silver box.

‘Cigarette,’ he asked, offering her one, speaking with perfect the perfect intonation of a BBC announcer. ‘My own blend.’

‘No thanks,’ said Daisy, conscious of her slack Australian accent. She only smoked Menthols anyway.

He reached over and picked up a zippo lighter with an engraved bird on the side.

Daisy slipped from the bed and picked up a robe that had fallen onto the floor. Putting it on, she stepped past the underwear, the shirt, trousers, top, shoes, socks and skirt, and wandered over to the window.

‘You’re a quiet lover,’ he said, exhaling the smoke. ‘Different to other girls.’

That would be because you’re crap, thought Daisy, but ‘hmm’d’ a bemused affirmative. These curtains were amazing and the view beyond was stunning. They were quite high-up. She glanced down and tried to orient herself.

‘Lazenby is Bond,’ she read from a large poster in the distance. ‘Diamonds are Forever.’

Well, that nailed it; definitely a different world. She made a mental note to go see that movie. She’d often wondered how the Bond series would have worked out with a different actor in the part.

‘Why do Australian girls taste different from other girls?’

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1-7:Wine, Women and War

Posted: August 16th, 2005 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Colonel Panix, Donnie, Elvis, Marcus, Miss Rook, Prime, Wine Women and War | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

She opened her eyes and winced from an eye-watering, skull-splitting headache. She felt instinctively between her legs and found something different.

Donnie looked down and saw an empty plate. On a table.

He looked up with a frown.

‘Would sir like to see the wine list,’ asked the waiter.

Donnie fell sideways from his chair, pain the only thing registering through the violent headache exploding through his brain.

‘Ahem,’ said the waiter. To Donnie he sounded like he was yelling through a 6000 watt PA system with the volume set to 11.

‘Please don’t speak so loudly,’ hissed Donnie as he clawed his way upwards again.

‘Terribly sorry sir,’ whispered the waiter, playing along. ‘Would sir wish to see the wine list?’

‘Ooo,’ said Donnie, a grin on his face. He winced from additional movement and while his conscious mind tried desperately to work out which muscles should stop moving, his unconscious formed a rather useful algorithm:

Begin
Repeat
If MyHeadHurts = true
and
Booze = true
then
Drink Booze
Until MyHeadHurts =False or LiverGivesOut=True
End

Donnie blinked a couple of times, and the logic made sense. He looked up and smiled some more, though not without further pain.

‘I would love to see the list,’ he said in an agonised whisper.

The waiter handed him the document with considerable distaste; it wasn’t becoming to lust after alcohol.

‘Hmm, old and dusty, old and dusty… ‘murmured Donnie. He looked up and addressed the man in another whisper.

‘I’ll have the Chateau Neuf ’35.’

‘Very good, sir,’ said the waiter. ‘And something to eat? Sir.’

Donnie gave him a blank stare.

The waiter coughed an ‘A-hem’; politely pointing out that he was making some kind of point which had hitherto not been noticed by Donnie.

‘Just the booze,’ whispered Donnie, now sure his brain was being pushed out of his ears like mince through a mincer.

‘The Armenian salad is particularly good tonight,’ insisted the waiter.

‘Does it have alcohol in it?’ whispered Donnie, checking his ears. No blood; of course, all that proved was that he was fundamentally brainless.

The waiter looked uncomfortable.

‘I am not aware of this possibility, sir.’ He coughed another ‘a-hem’.

‘Right, off you go then,’ said Donnie, fingering his ears; there had to be something coming out, surely? Other than earwax of course. ‘And bring my plonk forthwith.’

The waiter turned on his heel and stalked off.

Donnie closed his eyes in an effort to reduce the pounding agony he was experiencing, slowly letting the pain migrate from hemisphere to hemisphere and finally coalesce in his upper neck.

A can rattled loudly beside his left ear.

Donnie screamed and fell sideways from the chair, holding his head in his hands in an effort to stop the agony.

‘Would you like to make a donation,’ asked the young man standing beside the now vacant chair. ‘It’s to save endangered sea life.’

‘Only if you stop shouting,’ hissed Donnie. With white spots popping in front of his eyes and the pain back in his cranium, he crawled back onto the chair.

The waiter placed the requested bottle on the table and, in a most contemptuous way, paced off once more without even so much as pouring a sample for Donnie to try.

Not that it mattered of course. Donnie focussed on the bottle while murmuring to himself.

‘MyHeadHurts is true, Booze is true.’ He nodded with a smile. ‘Repeat…’

One of Donnie’s great unsung talents was a total lack of a gag reflex. He synchronised his breathing and guzzled the contents of the bottle in one go.

The man with the can winced slightly at the sound of the last of the expensive wine being sucked from the bottle.

Donnie pulled the empty receptacle away from his mouth. He gasped and sniffed, then wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.

‘Oh,’ he said after another moment, and noticed the pain had dulled substantially; the nuclear bomb tests going on in his skull had been successfully disrupted by a protest flotilla of nearly a liter of a good quality French red.

‘Oh yeah,’ said Donnie with a grin. ‘That feels better.’

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1-5:My Little Pony

Posted: May 16th, 2005 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Daisy, Marcus, My little pony | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »
image by Zuzanny

image by Zuzanny

She opened her eyes cautiously and was greeted by a lovely sunny day and the most gorgeous blue sky she’d seen in ages. She quivered from the still fresh memory of the last reality and bit her bottom lip.

She felt between her legs and all was well.

In the near distance she heard a little music, it sounded like a Motown hit; perhaps something by The Supremes.

Daisy sat up and immediately noticed the absence of a headache. And the jump sound had also been different; quieter and not quite so sharp.

So that’s what good sex felt like.

Wow!

A shadow crossed her legs. A man-sized shadow.

‘It’s about bloody time,’ said The Assassin.

‘Oh crap,’ said Daisy, closing her eyes. I’m done for.

They flew open at the screaming sound of something moving towards her very, very fast.

AAAAEeeeeeeeerrrr!!!

The sound terminated just above her head with two meaty thumps.

‘Oh for crying out loud,’ wailed The Assassin, and fell backwards with two arrows protruding from his chest.

Daisy regarded this development with some surprise, but there was also the feeling of being a stray mushroom that’s fallen from the pan to the gas burner below.

She stayed where she was, closed her eyes again and calmed her breathing. It’s fine, she thought. The enemy of my enemy is my friend, that’s what they say isn’t it?

Of course, if you’re a trespasser, everyone’s your enemy…

This wasn’t calming her survival instinct all that well.

Another shadow crossed her legs. Daisy opened an eye, hoping for the best and realised this could conceivably include being killed quickly rather than horribly slowly.

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1-4:Cake and Eat It…

Posted: January 6th, 2005 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Cake and Eat it, Colonel Panix, Daisy, Elvis, Miss Rook | Tags: , , , | No Comments »
image by Rose

image by Rose

He woke with a killer headache and instinctively felt between his legs. He found what he’d needed in the last reality, which was a pity, really.

Daisy opened her eyes and saw stars.

‘What a pretty night,’ she said.

She sat up and looked around. There was a mucky looking river in front of her and a slight breeze in the air, flowing from the river and up the banks. There was something amiss, though. Something not quite right, something missing…

‘Where are you?’ yelled a familiar voice. There was real anger there. ‘You fucking bitch!’

Ah, that was it. She nodded to herself, there being no-one else around to nod at.

Panix was definitely unhappy about something. Perhaps it was as a result of Donnie’s knee-jerk reaction in the last reality. Oh well.

‘When I catch you, I’ll make you pay for what you did to me!’

Yeah, yeah. Blah, blah, blah.

Something tugged at her memory. Oh yes, that kiss! Of course, it only came about because The Assassin had, quite unexpectedly, blown a hole in her chest. Well, Donnie’s chest.

Ugh. She held her head to try to stop it exploding. She had never been able to adequately get her head around the dual-personality dual-gender issues. If she kept thinking about it, she’d need to hunt down a warm bath and a couple of Gin and Tonics to accompany the pain.

She shuddered to think what Donnie would do. Probably something involving video games and pornography. Boys!

Panix screamed again, this time in a particularly blood-curdling fashion. He was really mad. He would also need a good vocal surgeon.

She rolled onto her chest and looked around furtively. The wind picked up and blew cold air up her skirt.

‘Oh,’ she exclaimed, then slapped her hand over her mouth. Bugger!

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1-3:Harem Scare ‘em

Posted: November 6th, 2004 | Author: Lisa Sinclair | Filed under: Colonel Panix, Donnie, Elvis, Harem Scare 'em | Tags: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »
image by FroggyFrog

image by FroggyFrog

He woke with a killer headache and instinctively felt between his legs. He found something familiar,  but something was missing …

His eyes flew open and he quickly sat up, ignoring the painful drumming in his head.

He was totally naked and sitting on an opulent four-poster bed in an equally opulent room. But his surroundings were of secondary importance right now.

With a grim sense of irony, he glared at his mutilated crotch and ran his fingers through his hair. His thick, luxurious hair …

“Oh bugger”, he piped, in a soprano that brought tears to his eyes.

This could cause problems …

He reached across the bed for the robe that lay on its edge and draped it over his shoulders. Then he stood up and looked around.

The room would not have been out of place in the court of King Louis. Opulent had been his first impression, and it remained accurate.

Maybe he’d turned up in Graceland? He’d always wanted to meet The King.

Donnie wandered around the room, picking things up and putting them down. He stopped at the dresser and examined the photographs. They featured Donnie in various poses with another man. He peered closer, trying to make out the face.

Colonel Panix.

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