Sunday, March 29, 2020

You Could Have a Treasure like This in Your Attic/Closet Right Now!



He found it in the third box he dug through.

Tsuris was in his parents’ attic, going through old boxes for things to add to the community yard sale. So far, he’d discovered some old M.A.S.K. action figures, a couple of puzzles and a Heffalump named Woozle. All great memories, but none as good as what lay in the bottom of the third box.

After digging through old baby clothes, his blankie as a kid, that weird Barbie phase he had at age 17 and his collection of Garbage Pail Kid Cards, Tris found the book.
Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie.

Oh shit! He thought to himself. I haven’t seen this thing in forever! I remember when dad used to read this to me at bed time a long time ago, back in the before time, when we all lived together. Gosh I miss this shit!

He flipped through the pages. It was a kid’s book, more colorful illustrations than words. And that’s just the way he liked it. Reading is for chumps! He flipped to the back inside cover and made an interesting discovery.

“Property of Rose County Public Library Department” the sleeve glued to the book said. The card inside the sleeve had a date stamped on it with one of those generic rubber stamps where you could spin a wheel to change the numbers to whatever month, day and year you wanted. The date stamped on this card read: Dec. 8, 1994.

Oh shit, Tris realized with surprise, this was an overdue library book!

The current project at hand forgotten, Tsuris rushed out of the attic, tripping over a rocking horse and accidentally falling into a very cold wardrobe. After brushing snow off his shoulders, he took the ladder two steps at a time. He hit the landing and made his way upstairs*, and outside to his car. He turned it on and peeled out of the driveway like a bat out of hell, eager to get to the library.
Fifteen minutes and two neighborhood pets trapped in his front grill later, Tris made it to the Bill H. Cosby’s Reputation Memorial Library. He raced up the steps like his name was Ferris Bueller and sprinted to the checkout desk, where he spent the next two minutes trying to catch his breath. Tsuris was pathetically out of shape.

“Here you go ma’am,” he said, passing the book to the librarian.

“Excuse me,” the librarian said condescendingly, “I identify as ‘papyrus’ and I need you to respect my pronouns.”

“Ok,” Tris said, slightly confused. “What are the appropriate pronouns when addressing…yourself?”

“That would be ‘paper,” “sheet,” or the more informal, if we’re friends, (which you and I are not!) ‘my scroll,’” sheet replied.
“Okay, paper. Sorry for the trouble. I would just like to return this book. Though, to be honest, I haven’t borrowed a book from this library in decades, I’m not sure I even have an account here anymore.”

“Let’s see. Name?”

“Tsuris Macher.”

“Alright Tsuris, looks like you checked out…Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie? What the hell is that? Anyway, you checked it out Nov. 2, 1994. Yeah, it’s overdue alright. And yes, you do still have an account with us. We’re like the IRS, we never forget. Your overdue fee is $73,284.29. But, since I’m in a good mood, I’m willing to wave the 29 cents. So how will you be paying today, sir?”

Tris began to panic. The sweat rolled down his panicky face in a monsoon. His eyes flicked back and forth, like a poker player with a hundred tells. Overdue fee? The hell is she talking about? That book is 25 years overdue; they can’t seriously be keeping track of that shit? I don’t have anywhere close to that kind of money. This has got to be a joke, he thought.

“Ummm, you’re kidding, right paper?”

“Sir, I am a librarian. We all have our sense of humor surgically removed upon employment. Now, I ask again, how will you be paying?”

“Like this!” Tris yelled. He then turned and ran to the door. He got about five feet from the exit before he felt the electrical shock hit him between the shoulder blades. All of the muscles in his upper body contracted and spasmed like he was having a seizure. He lost control of his legs and fell into a miserable heap on the floor, unable to move any of his body parts in the way he wanted to. The damn librarian had tazed him!

That’s when the security guards walked up to him in their hobnailed boots and began to practice their Irish dancing skills on his face and body until the pain turned into numbness and shock sent him blissfully into unconsciousness.

Tsuris woke up sometime later in a dark room. Well, he assumed the room was dark, he couldn’t tell, he had some kind of a mask or bag over his head. All he could tell about his situation was that the room he was in was frigid, whatever he was sitting on was very uncomfortable, his hands were tied behind his back, his feet were tied together and he was barefoot, which really sucked, because the floor was rough stone and it was like ice.

Out of nowhere, there was the sound of a heavy door creaking open and a light switch was flicked on. The bag was pulled off his head and he saw the librarian.

“Well Mr. Macher, welcome to your new home. Don’t try to escape, nobody has ever been successful. Just cooperate with us and the rest of your life can be as trouble-free as you make it.”

“Through the fog of pain, concussions, broken bones, blunt force trauma and who knows what the hell else, sheets words clawed their way into recognition.

“Rest of my life?” he squeaked.

“Yes. To pay off your debt to the Rose County libraries, your parents have agreed to make you a permanent ward of the state, so you can work off what you owe. And with what you owe, you’re going to be working your ass off and staying in this cell until you die.”
“Please no, paper! There must be something else I can do!” Tsuris pleaded.

“You’re doing it already,” the librarian said with a smile. “And please, call me ‘my scroll.’ I have a feeling we’re going to become good friends…”

^^^Laughter fades out as screen slowly goes to black. After a good twenty seconds of silence on a dark screen, right when people are wondering if it’s over or what the hell is going on, the words DON’T BE A TSURIS MACHER appear.^^^

*Tsuris’ childhood home was built upside-down. Life wasn’t easy, but man, the price on that house couldn’t be beat!

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