Miss Sweet Potato Pie
I meet the Muse. She expounds upon ancient astronauts and parking meters
The dog, a border collie, was waiting by the parking meter. She was staring
at a spot in the sky, somewhere above the heat exchanger on the roof of the Pick
N Pay supermarket. She threw back her head for a lonesome shivering howl, a
primal coyote crying down blood from the moon.
Pen Harrington*, walking past, stopped. The dog was talking, apparently to him.
“Heaven! and no one home, a fine state of affairs! The Enemy, the Hegemonist,
your Old Testament Jehovah, appears to be out for brunch with the angelic
swarm.” She had a schoolgirl voice with just the trace of an accent, a delicate
articulation with smoky overtones that hinted an experience beyond her years.
Appealing. Swiss? This voice had been raised in the convent, nipping out for a
cigarette with the more worldly sisters.
There was a whir of clockwork and a flag with a happy face popped up on the
meter.
“Oh fine!” She focused again on the spot in the sky. “Fine and dandy! You have
all the time in eternity and I am stuck here like this. You sonofabitch.” There
was a small, abrupt yelp and she sat down, flopping over with her back legs
open. She gave herself a few desperate licks then, with bared fangs, whiffled
relentlessly at an invisible perpetrator.
Pen waited.
Satisfied, the dog looked up. “I am the Lady, I am. But look at me! in hot
pursuit of some residual insect parasite.”
Pen Harrington looked at her. She was a medium-sized collie dog. Cute,
approaching adorable. Excitable, and talking.
The dog was talking. To him.
“Do you know who I am?”
Pen recalled the American Express commercials.
“You are a dog?”
There was a throaty, low-pitched growl indicating this was the wrong answer.
“I am the Lady of the Wild Things, Queen Rhea, the utterance of fear and desire
from before the dawn of creation. The Earth Mother, buddy.”
“Oh. That's nice.”
“Nice. Hmmm, I like that. I have been called by many names, but ‘nice’ has
heretofore somehow escaped me.” She was talking to herself, pacing as though
nervous for a cigarette, out of character for a middle-sized collie dog. She
stopped, seemed to remember where she was, and sat, her head cocked to one side
so that her ears flopped over. Adorable, take me home. It was a contrived pose;
she didn't quite pull it off.
“Your mouth is open. Close it, please.” Pen closed his mouth. She checked the
sky again. “Nobody home. Well, you'll do.”
“Do? Do what?”
“That will come later. I must first inspire trust. Would you like me to do an
apparition? You know, like Lourdes? Where is my large-eyed dewy-fresh young
innocent full of awe? Where is my Bernadette? You? I laugh: Ha-ha! Look at me,
just look at me: I cannot laugh for choking back the tears.”
She essayed a four-shouldered shrug. “Screw Bernadette. You shall be my Tom
Sawyer. A boy and his dog. Mark Twain. Surely you have read Mark Twain? Good! I
hate to be always explaining myself. Are you ready to be a freckle-faced boy and
cater to my every need, you there with the middle-aged spread?”
She regarded the parking meter. “This silent sentinel doesn't really care what
time it is. It doesn't care if you get towed or if the world goes to hell in a
handbasket. Artifacts have a different schedule of priorities than living
creatures.” The schoolgirl voice took on a stagy confidentiality. “For all you
know this is a landing beacon for some ancient astronaut. Me. Now what do you
think of that? Puts all your petty concerns in a new perspective, I'll bet. This
parking meter is obviously the superior local life form. Look at you: full of
pride, all alive and strutting around; I'll just bet you think you're the bee's
knees.”
Pen looked more closely at the parking meter. It looked pretty usual. “Uh, you
are an astronaut?”
“No. I am simply trying to educate you, broaden your worldview. That was only a
hypothetical scenario.”
She was pacing again, walking circles about him. “A wee mite long in the tooth
if you ask me, and of course you do. That is your first lesson—defer to your
betters. Me. I am better than you. Remember this always.” Her lip curled back
exposing polished incisors. “Sorry for the outburst. I am the Queen of Heaven
and I have a flea bite.”
The dog sat and scanned the sky with a desperate look about her eyes. “You see
an adorable, fluffy blonde collie dog. This is not what I am.”
She wanted to play. “Uh, alright.” Pen bent to scratch between her ears. There
was a lightning snap of jaws and he quickly pulled back his hand.
“Don't patronize me. I am stranded here chasing fleas unless I can get
somebody's attention. Up there.” She indicated the heat exchanger on the Pick N
Pay. “Uh-oh. Get rid of this broad. I have to maintain a line of sight contact.
Your hat... put your hat over the meter.” The traffic flowing past them had come
to a halt. A woman was jockeying a minivan into the open parking space with the
happy face on the meter. “These are my landing coordinates. Like the great earth
sculptures on the Peruvian altiplano. This is where he'll find me if he ever
gets back from lunch. I can't believe he just dumped me here and wandered off”
“Uh, God? God is looking for you?”
“God is one of those big, epistemological terms, buddy. Don't play fast and
loose with the local theology, that is my job. No, not God, the local demiurge.
He and I had a turf war eons ago, probably even before you were born. I lost,
but now I'm back.”
“You're back. And your meter has a happy face. Dogs don't park. You are a dog.”
“Don't belabor the obvious; this is a disguise, or would be if I could get out
of it. Like this is the only way he'd let me back. Ten thousand years and I've
still got him scared. Now cut the crap and get your hat on the meter, this
bluehair is doing some serious cruising.” The woman was waving cars past her on
Main Street as she pulled out for a second attempt at parallel parking.
Pen removed his knit hat and snugged it down over the happy face, smiling
apologetically at the woman. She stopped where she was, engaged her hand brake
and emergency flashers, and started to get out of her car. There was an
irritated honking as cars backed up behind her.
* Pen Harrington,
when I think about him―who he is, why he is, and
what the hell is he doing mucking up the forward flow of whatever bit of
writing I am squirreling about with―is me. An alter ego, doppelganger,
avatar, you choose.
About
Alarms & Excursions
- Lovers, losers, and part-time demons
- Why Rain of Frogs?
- Jelly side down
- Aldo and the Bristleheads
- Death of a Species
- Alistair Cooke's bones
- Robert Sheckley and Basil Rathbone
- The Year We Invented Rock N Roll
- Mehitabel the Cat
- Hooray for the Pulps
- The Illuminati Owe Carl .57
- The Night Telegraph Operator
- The Fastest Hound Dog in the State of Maine
- The Nooz at Newn
- That Old-tyme Religion
- Why William Powell?
- Judge Crater's First Miracle
- Judge Crater's Second Miracle
- Necrophilia Jones
- Tom Ashley and the coo-coo bird
- Loose Lips Sink Ships
- Harry and the Mudman
- A Deuce of Moose
- Zeitgeist is the Right Geist
- 3 Days with Claudette Colbert
- 3000 Beatniks Riot in Square
- McMuckle makes a Minyan
- Night bowling in Taunton, Mass.
- The Death of James A. Garfield
- The Manticore's tale
- The Bookworm #1
- The Bookworm #2
- Miguel Santandrea
- Miss Sweet Potato Pie
- Lucy and the Mouse
- St Velcro™ and the Swan
More Stuff
- Platterland—2010
- Libby book—2011
- Mark Twain in trouble
- Play it (again), Sam
- Sylvester and Beany
- Scrotum, a wrinkled old retainer
- Fred Splendid, a radio relic
- A Rob Hunter Reader
- Acknowledgements
- Rob Hunter bio
Alternate Realities

- Anna Wilkenfeld
- Bobbie Jean Pentecost
- Charlie Hunter
- Jennifer Claire Hunter
- Markus Neidel
- Barbara Beeman
- Barbara Baig
- Tina Blondell
- Chris Dodkin
- Ray Korona
- Orange Crate Art
- Dum Luk’s
- Tony Trischka
- Ralph Lee Smith
- Elizabeth Ostrander
- Hot Club of San Francisco
- Marshall Payne
- Mom & Pop Culture Shop
- Mondolithic Studios
- Sara Jane Sparks


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