Pirate Dave and his Randy Adventures

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Pirate Dave and his Randy Adventures Page 9

by Robyn Peterman


  Clearly Kristy was not referring to the butt-plug trilogy or the contortionist sex-slave series LeHump had regaled me with when she wasn’t trying to run us off the road during our thirty-minute ride from hell.

  “I didn’t realize you had a day job.” I grinned at LeHump, shaking my head and removing my snow boots. She smirked and gave me a thumbs-up. She was crazy.

  “Where’s the john? I’m about to pee in my pants!”

  “Down the hall and to the left,” I interjected quickly. LeHump had no manners or social graces and while I liked her, I wouldn’t put it past her to relieve herself on my kitchen floor. I am so not cleaning that up. I yanked her coat off and shoved her down the hall.

  Kristy ran around the kitchen like a chicken with its head cut off, pulling open cabinets and sniffing things she pulled from the fridge.

  “Hey, we have a new neighbor with a rockin’ hot ass.”

  “I have no time to discuss body parts. Help me,” she hissed frantically, slapping cheese and crackers on our best platter. “Damn it,” she muttered, staring at the green mold on the corner of the hunk of cheddar. I grabbed a knife and cut it off.

  “Voilà!” I curtsied and tossed the offending cheese in the trash. “My Aunt Phyllis taught me that.”

  “Isn’t she the one with people in her radio?”

  “TV, not radio.”

  Kristy rolled her eyes, “That certainly makes all the difference.”

  She stopped moving and I watched her brain go into rewind. “What do you mean, you saw the neighbor’s ass?”

  “We have a new neighbor named Mr. Asstastic.” Fully clarifying I hadn’t humped the new neighbor.

  “Did you introduce yourself to his ass?” she asked, rearranging the hors d’oeuvres on the platter.

  “Hell no. I never even saw his face.”

  “His face is good. I met him earlier, but I didn’t get to see his ass. When you see his face, you’ll jump him. Hell, when he sees you, he’ll probably jump you first.” I rolled my eyes and she fussed some more with the tray. “Is this classy enough?”

  “Trust me, Sho . . . Sue will love it. I’ve been in her car.” I went for some crackers, only to get my hand slapped down by Kristy. “So, she’s really a professor?” The paradox was mind-boggling.

  “Not just a professor, she’s one of the foremost authorities on women’s studies in the United States. There are waiting lists to get into her classes at the U. Oh my God.” She froze. “Is Professor Sue in your writing group?”

  Hmm, how to answer that without giving up LeHump’s passion for all things anal? Thankfully I didn’t have to.

  “You bet I am!” Shoshanna loudly informed us as she marched directly to the cheese, cut herself a few slices, and shoved them in her mouth. “I love cheese.” She grabbed a handful of crackers and made herself comfortable on the couch. I guess she was staying.

  “So Kristy, I hope to the great God Almighty you are using your amazing brain to make the world a better place.” LeHump put her little feet up on the coffee table. “You guys got anything sweet?”

  “Yes, doughnuts. And get your damn feet off the table. Do you live in a barn?” I grabbed a box of powdered sugar minis and tossed them to her.

  “Rena!” Kristy screeched at decibels that could result in hearing loss. Her mortification made her eye twitch. Not a good look. “I’m so sorry, Professor Sue, for Rena’s horrific, disgusting, appalling behavior. Please, put your feet anywhere you like.” She shot me a look of death.

  Shoshanna/Sue LeHump chuckled and dug into the doughnuts. “Oh Kristy, Rena’s right. I tend to fall on the side of uncouth. I could use a good handler to keep me in line.”

  I made a face at Kristy and I literally felt her need to slap me. She wouldn’t dare, not in front of the legendary Professor Sue Whatever-her-last-name-was.

  I decided to make nice with my roomie. Last time I pissed her off, she froze all my bras. Very high school, but very effective. “Kristy started a nonprofit literacy program at the battered women’s shelter,” I explained to LeHump proudly. “It has a daycare, and she’s helped hundreds of women get their GED and find jobs.”

  “Goddamn it!” Shoshanna shouted, diving for Kristy and bear-hugging her for the second time in less than twenty minutes. “I am so fucking proud to call you my student! You are helping women help themselves. You are my hero!”

  After a bunch of crying, pride on Shoshanna’s part, joy on Kristy’s, and, if I’m being totally honest, a little jealousy on mine, we all settled down and finished off the buffet of doughnuts, crackers, and cheese. Shoshanna finally decided to hit the road, but not before we filled Kristy in on our project with Evangeline.

  She screamed in horror upon hearing my plot and laughed so hard she had to run to the bathroom to pee. Maybe I really should consider a career in stand-up comedy. I could pack a house with urine and all kinds of other liquids expelled through the nose. As I daydreamed about being a famous comedienne and hanging out with Stephen Colbert, I idly wondered if Shoshanna would carry the baseball bat into her sister’s house to get her money back. I didn’t for a moment believe she’d use it, but she did have a bizarre flair for inappropriate drama.

  “Rena, don’t bother bringing your lunch on Monday. When I was on the crapper, Nancy called. She’s going to stop by and bring us something to eat. She wants to make sure that we’re alive.”

  That didn’t sound good. The alive part and the Nancy lunch part. “Will it have cream of mushroom soup in it?”

  “Definitely.” Shoshanna grinned evilly as she walked to the door. “Just bring a couple of snacks!” She winked and left.

  We sat in silence for two minutes and forty-seven seconds. Kristy in heaven and me in shock.

  “I can’t believe Professor Sue was in our house, and she’s proud of me.”

  “I can’t believe she’s a professor.” I shook my head in disbelief and went scrounging for some chocolate. Nothing. I could find no chocolate. Damn.

  I didn’t need it after the carb fest I’d just indulged in, but I wanted it. My voracious appetite was demanding it. “Don’t we have any candy around here?”

  “You ate it all last night.”

  Dang it, she was right. If it wasn’t so cold outside I’d walk to the corner and buy six candy bars. Occasionally the subzero temps were a blessing in disguise for my ass. I decided to go to bed before I ate something unforgivable. Plus, I couldn’t handle any more weird.

  “Are you going to go for Casssssanova?” Kristy grinned.

  “No, but I may bring him a cassssserole,” I giggled.

  “I was thinking you might want to do some matrasssss wrasssssling with him and his fine tushy.”

  “That sounds a little too sasssssy for me,” I laughed and punched her in the arm before we got so assed out, we couldn’t stop.

  “Why don’t you ask him out?” she said, pulling her legs up underneath her on the couch.

  “No, I’ve only seen his butt. That would make me shallow. Why don’t you ask him out?” I cringed at the thought of the ass I considered mine, on my couch watching bad reality TV with my room-mate. What in the hell was wrong with me? I needed to get laid in the worst way. Soon.

  “Nope,” Kristy said. “He’s not my type, too built and too bad boy. Looks like a lawbreaker. He’s totally your type. You are so going to drop your panties when you see his face.”

  I rolled my eyes. Hell, I was ready to drop my panties for the butt . . .“Don’t think so. I don’t need anyone else with a rap sheet, no matter how fine his buns are.”

  “I realize you’ve been traumatized by your questionable taste in men,” she giggled, “but this guy is sexy.”

  “Whatever. Good night,” I muttered, determined to get Mr. Wonder-Butt out of my head. “Oh yeah, what’s Professor Sue’s last name?”

  “Lumpshclicterschmidt.”

  WTF? I almost choked on my own spit. Just when I thought the weird had left the building . . . That was by far worse than my last n
ame; it was the worst last name I’d ever heard in my life. No wonder she went by Professor Sue. I grinned as I thought up ways to use my newfound info about LeHump to make our time together more fun. I truly hoped being armed with her last name would give me a little leverage in the “you have to shave her bunions” department, but with LeHump, who knew?

  I crawled into my bed fully clothed and shut my eyes. Are you there God? It’ s me, Rena . . . please let tomorrow be a little less eventful than today.

  ***

  After the most bizarre Saturday of my life, Sunday was a breeze. Even brunch with my parents, Aunt Phyllis, my newly pregnant younger sister—the doctor—and her boring lawyer husband didn’t faze me. Normally being within ten feet of my overachieving younger sibling made me want to slap her, but today she didn’t bother me. Even the questions about my love life didn’t make me want to chew glass and swallow it . . . because I lied.

  Apparently I’m dating a really rockin’ guy I met at the library on Thursday. Named . . . um, Jack.

  “So what does he do?” Mom asked excitedly, separating her eggs from her bacon and hash brown casserole. She can’t stand it when her food touches.

  “He’s in, you know, like communications and stuff,” I muttered, quickly shoving pancake into my mouth to avoid speech.

  Why did I lie? It was so much harder to keep track of all the bullshit I kept spouting instead of sticking to the truth. My sister Jenny grinned evilly, enjoying my sudden discomfort. I grinned back enjoying her big butt and dark roots. Now that she was pregnant, she couldn’t dye her hair. It pissed her off royally that I was a natural blonde and hers came from a bottle. I was sure I’d get karmically kicked in the ass for taking pleasure in my sister’s shortcomings, but aside from her wide ass, which she inherited from Aunt Phyllis and her skunk hair, she was perfect. I was the fuckup, but at least I had a good rear end.

  “How old is Jack the communicator and stuff?” she smirked.

  “Thirty-fiveish. When’s the baby due?” Maybe turning the tables back to her favorite subject—herself—would get her off my fictitious boyfriend Jack.

  “October. Why didn’t you invite him to brunch, Rena?”

  I chewed a new wad of pancake I’d shoved in my mouth and stared at her. She hated that.

  “Is his last name Snuffleupagus?”

  God, she was a bitch. “As a matter of fact, it is,” I bit out sarcastically, “and I didn’t invite him because he’s in Russia doing . . . um, work.” Shit, shit, shit. Well, if that didn’t sound like a big fat hairy lie, I didn’t know what would.

  “How exciting!” Aunt Phyllis gushed. “Does he have a TV?”

  “Oh, Jesus,” my dad mumbled. He had a fairly low tolerance for Aunt Phyllis’s eccentricities. Jenny’s husband, Dirk, ate and pretended he didn’t know us.

  “I don’t know. I haven’t been to his place yet,” I murmured, praying this conversation would end.

  “Well, if it turns out he owns one, have him come talk to me,” she said.

  Mom’s brow furrowed with worry. “Phyllis, I don’t want you sharing your crazy ideas about people in your TV with Rena’s beaus. She has enough problems keeping a man without them knowing how crazy we are.”

  My mother and Aunt Phyllis took my single status personally.

  I’d sworn off dating for a while. I didn’t understand why it was such a big deal. My Aunt Phyllis repeatedly told me she would still love me if I decided to be a lesbian. Sweet Baby Jesus, if it were only that easy. Hence the mythical boyfriend . . . Jack.

  Being single in my family had gotten dangerous. I hadn’t had a date in two months, unless you counted the hostile takeover of three hours of my life last weekend. I thought I was going to poker night at the church with my mother and Aunt Phyllis. They’d lied. It was a singles mixer for Lutherans who couldn’t find dates without help from Jesus.

  “Mom, don’t worry about it. Jack likes insane people,” I muttered, reassuringly patting my aunt’s hand.

  My sister laughed, so I leaned forward, ran my fingers along my natural blond roots and started humming “I Like Big Butts.”

  “Mom, do you hear her?” Jenny hissed, pointing her butter knife at me.

  “Rena, don’t incite your sister. She’s hormonal and she can’t do anything about her hair stripe, so don’t be mean.”

  Jenny turned a very unbecoming shade of purple. She gave me the finger, pulled her beret out of her purse, and plopped it on her head, effectively covering her stripe. I had to think her bedside manner sucked. Dirk kept his head down and ate faster than I thought humanly possible.

  “What about the aliens in my toaster?” Phyllis inquired as if she were speaking of something as mundane as the weather.

  “For God’s sake Phyllis, do you have Martians living in your toilet, too?” Dad snapped.

  “Yes, sometimes,” she replied.

  That was new. I wondered if the sock gremlins in her dryer would come up. Crazy didn’t just run in my family . . . it stopped and strolled and hung out. And I was fairly sure it had taken up permanent residence at Aunt Phyllis’s. I listened while everyone shot down all my poor aunt’s hypotheses and quietly made my escape before anyone remembered to interrogate me about my new love, Jack the Communicator, any further.

  ** AVAILABLE NOW AT EBOOK RETAILERS **

  Books by Robyn Peterman

  How Hard Can It Be? (available now)

  Fashionably Dead (coming August 2013)

  Size Matters (coming December 2013)

  About the Author

  Robyn Peterman writes because the people inside her head won’t leave her alone until she gives them life on paper. Her addictions include laughing really hard with friends, shoes (the expensive kind), Target, Coke with extra ice in a styrofoam cup, bejeweled reading glasses, her kids, her super-hot hubby and collecting stray animals.

  A former professional actress, with Broadway, film and T.V. credits, she now lives in the south with her family and too many animals to count. Writing gives her peace and makes her whole, plus having a job where you can work in your underpants works really well for her. She loves to hear from her fans.

  You can follow her at http://www.robynpeterman.com.

  About the Author

  Robyn Peterman writes because the people inside her head won’t leave her alone until she gives them life on paper. Her addictions include laughing really hard with friends, shoes (the expensive kind), Target, Coke with extra ice in a styrofoam cup, bejeweled reading glasses, her kids, her super-hot hubby and collecting stray animals.

  A former professional actress, with Broadway, film and T.V. credits, she now lives in the south with her family and too many animals to count. Writing gives her peace and makes her whole, plus having a job where you can work in your underpants works really well for her. She loves to hear from her fans.

  You can follow her at http://www.robynpeterman.com.

 

 

 


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