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Love Handles

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It wasn’t until the pistol end of the revolver was about to enter my vagina that I finally took pause for thought. It wasn’t until the scene was set for them to make intimate acquaintance that I found cause to reflect. I’d have gone ahead and done the scene, were it not for the assistant director on the set who, just before the cameras were about to roll, leaned in and said, “Would you like a condom with that?”

Don’t get me wrong. There was no facetiousness intended. They were a genuinely kind and concerned crew, right down to the coffee girl. It was the context that gave me pause. Because it occurred to me: if a condom is in order, then have others, possibly in this position, with this very revolver, gone this road before me? What road do I travel, surely not the less travelled?

A friend of mine once said, “Grace, I have hit my nadir.” And I she thought she’d had a fight and smacked her Arab boyfriend. It was that kind of pause. Very long, resulting in the discomfort of cameramen and crew who, hitherto for, had been the very model of patience.

I removed the lusty revolver from between my legs and sent it on its way to props. Closing my legs I said, “Thank you, but I will not be needing a condom.” A cameraman was at hand to help me to my feet in my stilettos, avec dignity, sans pants. And I headed to the dressing room to get them.

But when I got there, I removed my false eyelashes and the gold spangled pasties and I sat. I sat and looked in the mirror at who I was without them.

You see, I was the girl who had it all, the pink bedroom, the parties, the pony rides. Even a year in Lucerne at a Swiss private school that mother said was the absolute end in finishing. This was before daddy left, and mother spent her winters in a spa in Biarritz. Anyway, there I was, all alone in my pigtails and my slippers, standing at the pay phone in the hall dorm, wailing, “I want to come home!”

“Is that what you really want?” Mother asked. “To come home in ignominy?”

“No,” I said. “But there is a flight on Lufthansa.”

Oh I know, I don’t look like much under the lights nowadays, sitting out here in my rocker on the porch all day. Wouldn’t mother have something to say about letting myself go. But I had my heyday, back when theatre school was just a log cabin in the woods. Kidding.

I started out as part of a travelling troop, school tours, the classics. Then I joined a raging lesbian collective called “Broadaxe.” It cut a swath so deep it left my career in tatters. From there I went on to have multiple affairs with my directors. Including two twins who were in the closet, followed by several years in a relationship with an abusive actor. He was meant to be my comrade in arms, he wasn’t meant to be an alcoholic. But he was. I’d like to say it was him who drove me to drink, but I’d be lying. He didn’t even own a car.

After that, I headed out west. By the time I reached the coast, I was at low tide, and washed up, too. And that was when I got this part in a play in North Vancouver about an exceptionally dysfunctional family. Nobody was getting laid, nobody was getting paid, but … I had this scene, only the one scene. I was a woman who comes out of nowhere and vanishes again without a trace and … she seemed to speak to me somehow.

I didn’t pay much attention to anyone throughout rehearsal, kept to myself more than usual. I think I was cautiously circling my “nadir,” wondering if it was going to hit me back. And then it was tech night. And there was this man, this slow, deliberate, very considered man, moving about in the shadows of that tiny theatre. It was Lloyd. He both designed the lighting and hung the lights. Slow as a possum, I think he even played dead every once in a while and just hung there, suspended in that darkened room.

And when it came to my scene, I could feel him standing there in the dark, looking at me. He didn’t move, and then, it hit me. The light. It was my light, it was perfect, no tinkering, dead on. Illuminating who I was.

I did my scene in my light as I looked for him in the darkness. He came down to the edge of the stage wearing this little, sly smileit comes out of the corner of his mouth when he’s about to feed you your laugh line.

“You found your light alright?” Lloyd asks.

“Yes,” I say. “It was easy. Your lights are very well hung.”

It was later, not very much later I’m afraid, when Lloyd and I were in bed together, that I asked him about this little silver pendant he wore around his neck.

“It’s a scarab beetle. From Egypt,” he says. “I always wear it when I’m in the theatre.”

“What is it?” I ask. “A kind of talisman?”

“No,” he says. “The scarab is also called the dung beetle because what she does her entire life is roll a ball of shit uphill. And as the ball rolls back down on her, she rolls it back up, again and again. It’s a metaphor for a life in the theatre.”

Well I laughed at that but Lloyd, he was dead serious.

“She does it because what’s inside that ball are her eggs,” he said. “She’s incubating the future, the next generation, the minds and hearts that will be played out on the stage of life. To the untrained mind, it’s just shit, but to us, it’s theatre.”

When we got married, Lloyd put this little beetle round my neck on a silver chain instead of a ring. It’s the only piece of jewelry I ever let him give me.

When he got sick, he got so thin, he hardly made a ripple in the sheets, just lying there, still as a lake with a loon. That last day, I changed the sheets and made the bed up fresh. I lifted him out of the chair, and he was light as a feather. It seemed to me that if I’d tossed him in the air he’d fly, he was that light. Fly away and disappear, right before my eyes.

“I’m losing my love handles,” he says to me. “And if I lose my love handles, you won’t be able to hold onto me. And I’ll die.”

Lloyd was the one who let go. I told him about the revolver and he laughed, and he was gone.

I went out on the porch and I sat in this rocker and I sat here quite some time. Lloyd shone a light on me, on all the layers of my life. And it became mine. So when he died, I didn’t disappear into the dark. Because I know he loved me.

#metoo

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Author’s Note: #metoo was written and performed as part of Hysteria, Direct Theatre Collective’s premiere show, created by Jill Raymond, Isa Sanchez, Ariel Martz-Oberlander, Kim Ho, and Lauren Martin.

*

I was seventeen.
And you made out with me while I was passed out.
I was so drunk; I had crashed into the glass patio door.
Fell right on my ass.

I got really funny when I was drunk.
I was kind of a shy kid, so, being funny was intoxicating.
I got drunk a lot. But, my friends were there.
They put me on the couch, to sleep it off.

Next thing I remember; you were on top of me.
Your tongue was in my mouth.
Your hands on my breasts.
And I heard my friends came in and say:

Hey! Kent! Stop being a fucking cunt!
Kent the Cunt.

Although it’s not really fair to cunts.
But the alliteration has kept you in my memory for years.
When so many other names have slipped away.
Names I never bothered to learn.

The man who wagged his dick at me on my way home from school.
The “agent” who put my hand on his bulge.
The “director” who held an audition in a hotel.

Getting drugged at a night club.
My boyfriend at the time, said:
“It’s not like it was the first time you got so drunk you don’t remember.”
… and that was true.

The stranger who jerked off into my panties at the local laundromat.
My boss telling me how sexy I looked pregnant.
Getting called a whore while pushing a stroller across the street.

These stories aren’t clear-cut narratives. Not rape.
Just … disrespect. Degradation.

And maybe you don’t think it’s fair that I lump you in with them, Kent.
You were a young guy. You were drunk.
It wasn’t so bad.
But I urge you, now, to be a cunt, in the truest sense of the word.

Because cunts expand.
Cunts are receptive. Cunts absorb.
So, hear this.
Because if it happens to all of us,
it’s happening because of some of you.
Some of your friends.
And yeah, some of my friends.

I know change is hard.
Change, it hurts. But I know it won’t break us.
Because cunts are strong.

Asian or Mixed-Race Monologue

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Author’s Note: “There’s a reason the word ART is in Cathartic,” said my Director/Dramaturg. It was the end of our week-long workshop on my play about a Chinese-Canadian lesbian “coming out” to herself. It isn’t biographic, but it is definitely shaped by my experiences. The play had been a struggle from before the get-go. The creative process was more difficult than previous projects. The title changed daily. I wasn’t sure what the play was about, even though this was a companion piece to a play produced the year before. But I knew these characters. I thought it was a case of writer’s block, but it was far more complicated than that. A few weeks before the workshop, a young man in my life came out to me. I can’t honestly say I was happy about it. I had suspected, but hoped it was not to be. I worry his journey, as a gay Asian male, will be even more difficult than my own as a lesbian.

I could barely write the twenty pages for the first day of the workshop. The first three weren’t even script. I wrestled with it all weekend before the workshop. It wasn’t even a third of what I needed. During the break, I told my Director I wasn’t sure I could write the play anymore because I thought my main character should commit suicide. My Director challenged me to write a monologue about why my character didn’t want to be gay. He suggested I connect her struggle to her cultural experience. I started writing and before I knew it, I’d written two pages. It was the easiest thing I’d written in six months since starting the script.

“There’s a reason the word ART is in Cathartic,” said my Director/Dramaturg. He’s right; the personal revelations were unexpected, even to me. The cast response at first read was emotional. We tried to incorporate the monologue into the script, but there wasn’t any place for it in my comedy. I used it to inspire material for the script, but never used the text directly.

*

It’s Pride month, but I don’t really celebrate. Sure, I have a few rainbow flags and I might change my Facebook profile pic, but for the most part being gay is something I don’t know if I will ever truly celebrate. People don’t realize how deeply entrenched heterosexuality is promoted and glorified in society. From an early age, girls dressed in pink, blue for boys, we are taught gender roles, with boys and girls having separate rules. The idea that life is about finding your opposite-sex soul mate and raising a family is also reinforced and rewarded.

As a child, those of us on the outside can feel alien. We know we are different and though we may not have the language for it, we know well to keep it hidden to the world. As a person of colour, I always had my skin to remind me of the difference and there were no shortages of bullies in my life who reminded me in other ways. The boy who on the first day of school chanted “chunky chinky chinaman.” Have you heard it? It’s apparently a racist taunt that goes back to the early 1900s. I heard a Chinese senior recount it in a documentary. How did that taunt make its way from the early 1900s to today? Oral history. From one generation to the next, teaching that white skin is the best. And what’s “normal.”

I saw that boy (now grown) at my high school reunion recently. Apparently, he thought we shared some kind of bond. He called my name out several times, and when I realized it was him, I tried to get away. “Hey,” he said. “Remember me?” Are you kidding? How could I ever forget you? My eight-year old self still cries inside thinking of your taunt. Perhaps the words didn’t even mean anything to you, but they have stayed with me all these years later. I hate you, because you taught me to hate myself.

I can’t remember when I knew I was gay…. I know I had crushes on other girls as early as kindergarten. All through school, girls fascinated me, and when we got to a dating age, I knew I would rather go out with girls than with boys. But I wasn’t sure what that meant. Other clues I missed? Instead of Archie and Reggie, I preferred Veronica and Betty. I liked the pretty boys, too. You know, like Brad Pitt’s seven minutes in Thelma and Louise? It took a long time for me to piece these clues together. I didn’t have any role models. Slowly, the white role models emerged. Ellen on the cover of Time magazine.  Sports heroes like Martina Navratilova. But gay Chinese role models? Can’t name one. Gay people of colour role models? That’s challenging, too.

Having spent my formative years knowing I was different by race, figuring out I was gay was not a welcome thought. Who wants to be THAT different from the rest of the world? The world is designed for heteros to live, love, and celebrate their momentsengagement, wedding, baby, anniversaries, and so on. But what if you are so different you cannot legally wed the one you love? You are discriminated against regarding employment and housing? You are constantly pushed down in ways you did not even realize. You internalize a hatred for being so different and life sometimes seems like a punishment because your natural inclinations are deemed unnatural.

Add to these race-related problems an attraction to the same sex and you have a hopeless outlook for the future. It’s harder to progress; it’s harder to make a difference in the world when these things set you up for failure. To have two strikes already against you? What is there to celebrate when you are excluded from normal societal activities? What if you learn that, raised in these conditions, you are ashamed of yourself? What can you celebrate when Pride comes around? I celebrate that progress is being made. That the LGBTQ kids behind me will have an easier time. But nothing is guaranteed. Homophobia and discrimination are not far from the surface around the world. You become a target or scapegoat for others. Hate crimes are on the rise, and that is no comfort either.

Celebrate Pride? I try … but it doesn’t come naturally. How could it? For years it was something to be so deeply ashamed of, and even now it can be a stumbling block for others. Why would I cheer about that?

What happens when you realize you hate yourself? That even after years of being out, you wish you were not gay. Actually, you loathe being gay. You stop dating because it’s easier than trying to get your family to accept your “lifestyle.” You give up on finding that person to share your life with because it’s easier to be alone and bring your dog to barbeques and Christmas parties. You imagine how different your life could be if only you were straight and not rocking the boat. Challenging societal norms can get exhausting. For example: Oh god, I have to help educate another straight person? Can I find the energy to share my story again? Some days I can’t even try. Other days I welcome the opportunity. It takes a toll on your psychological being, always trying to explain yourself to people. Reliving and recounting the hurts in your life might help them but digging up those memories is like ripping the scab off an infected wound.

Why couldn’t I have been born white?
Why couldn’t I have been born straight?
Why do people tell me I have a choice in whether to be gay or live the gay “lifestyle”?
What kind of choice is it to accept that you are always going to be different and “lesser than”?

I never chose to be Asian.
And I would never choose to be gay.
I am proud of my Chinese heritage and celebrate it, but don’t tell me that I chose to be gay and take all the baggage that comes with that choice.
Is that something you would have chosen?
… Honestly?

Storytelling and the Truth about Brown Women

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“Why do you want to act?” I was asked this by my Acting Professor on the first day of my three-year performance training. I get asked this by my parents’ friends, people I just meet, and even by myself in the privacy of my home in the middle of the night. And I always tell myself the same thing: it’s about storytelling. We tell stories because they are important; they give others an opportunity to reflect on their own stories or the stories of others. Stories teach us. Stories make us feel, make us think. Stories make us reflect upon our own actions. That’s why I went into this profession, to tell storiesbut not just any stories. I’ve told many people this: I wouldn’t be an actor if I didn’t have brown skin.

I knew that statement may upset people. I grew up culturally very confused. I was born and raised in Vancouver to two immigrant parents from Tanzania in East Africa. Most kids at school would get confused whenever I would say this. I was faced by many people with the Amanda Seyfried-type expression from Mean Girls: “If your family is from Africa, why aren’t you black?” And then I would have to explain that my family is East Indian, specifically Gujarati, and that we were part of the Khoja Ismaili Muslim community. And that also felt strange to say, considering the fact that my immediate family was filled with agnostic-atheists who barely attended the mosque.

Growing up irreligious and belonging to a culture dependent on religious affiliation was a major conflict of interest for my cultural identity. I rarely attended the mosque and tried to integrate seamlessly into Western Canadian cultureonly it wasn’t seamless. I’d turn on the TV and flip to as many channels as I could, including YTV, the Family Channel, and the Disney Channel, and couldn’t find a single character on screen that looked like me, or even had my hair colour. I struggled to relate to any Bollywood movie my parents would force me to watch on Friday nights, knowing that each brown girl I saw on screen spoke pure Hindi, a language I couldn’t understand.

Many Indo-Canadian second- to third-generation millennials feel this cultural confusion intensely. Some more than others, some not at all. It was when I started auditioning at the age of seven for film and TV that I began to develop my passion for telling brown stories. I started being asked to come in for auditions for the very channels I used to watch as a child, and for predominantly South Asian roles. I noticed a stark difference, back in the early 2000s, between the number of roles I was called to audition for and the number my white friends were called for. And most people were resistant to making commentary on it. I was young and inexperienced, which didn’t help my case.

I received many audition calls in which the descriptions of these South Asian characters were abysmal. Several descriptions asked for the characters to be dressed in traditional South Asian attire, despite the character being in a scene set in a Canadian school. Many of the descriptions had no idea what words to use; they asked for bells and jewellery that jingled, hoping to get the vibe of a South Asian girl dressed to the nines for a Bollywood wedding. I felt stereotyped every time I walked into an audition room. I always felt like I was shitting on my ancestors when I saw a roster of white casting directors behind a table excited by my exotic outfit. I felt like a pawn being used to appease their white guilt by providing them with their version of diversity.

When I reached fifteen years of age, I started turning down auditions I thought were racist. I received an audition to play an immigrant South Asian child in an ESL class who couldn’t speak English well and became the butt of the joke for the entire episode. I ended up turning it down once I read the scene. I couldn’t believe it when the episode aired on Canadian TV; there was a laugh track playing for this episode in response to the student failing to make any sense.

By the time I reached my adult years, diversity was starting become the “in” thing. I auditioned for theatre school and got in and trained for three years at university. In those three years, I began to find my voice. I realized I had such strong opinions about Indo-Canadian representation and accurate representation of people of colour in the industry. I started shifting my training more into theatre. I learned that, even with the initiatives that both industries try to implement to be more inclusive, there is still a long way to go.

I learned early in my voice training that I apparently wasn’t doing a great job of hitting my Ds and Ts with the tip of my tongue. I later realized this was because I could do other phonetic Indian sounds that weren’t in North American phonetics (such as D for das, the word that means ten in Hindi, and T for Tasbih, the word for Ismaili prayer beads). I was made to read speech textbooks that incorrectly asked students to pronounce South Asian words such as Allah and Aga Khan in an anglicised way. I vehemently rejected pronouncing them in such ways, as I knew I was correct in my pronunciation.

I played multiple characters in Victorian, Shakespearean, and Chekovian plays. I played characters called April, Molly, Helen, Angeline, and Ann. Every night, after a show, I would notice how many white folks were present in the audience. I saw no one from my community seeking out these plays. Finally I asked myself, “And why would they? Would you?”

Once I got to my final year, while I was wearing a corset and four layers of petticoats during a warm-up before a show, I heard myself say “I am not a white girl!” to the catwalk above my head in the theatre. Several of my non-brown friends heard and seemed quite aghast by my outburst. It was like everything had been accumulating inside me until that moment. It was in this final year that I solidified something for myself as an artist: I have to tell stories to represent brown women, not to entertain white folks.

When I graduated, I made that my personal mandate. I wanted to be in shows that gathered more brown folks inside theatres. I wanted brown women to see themselves onstage. I wanted them to want to relate to their own stories. I didn’t want them to feel like their existence was insignificant or not cookie-cutter enough for life in Western Canada.

Recently, I was in a play set in a fictional Middle Eastern town with five South Asian and Middle Eastern women who told stories about the burqa, hijab, niqab, and other head coverings. I played an agnostic character who refused to wear the hijab and I didn’t have to change my Canadian accent at all to play the role. As an actor, I felt free. I didn’t have to stereotype people of my community, nor did I have to stray away from them to tell a Canadian story. I felt like I was telling a story of my kind of people. We sold out every single night, and not from the usual demographic of theatre-goers. Brown women were lining up to see this show.

I still have a very long way to go in my career and I know there are still so many obstacles along the way. However, I feel so determined. This is an industry that desperately needs accurate representation and a huge dose of truth; we cannot afford to fail anymore at delivering the truth in storytelling. It is a beautiful gift that we can give to other people and it’s exactly why I do it.

Smog Can Be Thick, kittens can be cruel

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Author’s Note: I sneakily wrote SMOG CAN BE THICK, kittens can be cruel onstage as audience members were filing into the theatre during the pre-show of a new Canadian play by Elena Eli Belyea called Smoke (Downstage Theatre in Calgary, February 13-23, 2019). Smoke is about the aftermath of a sexual assault that may (or may not) have taken place between an otherwise loving couple. The victim and perpetrator have completely divergent recollections of that night and, in the play, confront each other for the first time in two years since the incident.

*RECORD SCRATCH*

What you are about to read has almost nothing to do with that. My character in Smoke, Aiden, is a fiction writer and I used to type out my first monologue over and over again to drill memorization and quell my jittery, top-of-show nerves. After some comfort set in, I used that opening monologue as a writing prompt to create something completely different. Zero resemblance. About as much shared DNA as foster siblings. It’s perverse, really. A total bastardization of its brilliant source material. This story is a peek into my zany mind, never intended to be read by anyone but those intimately involved in the production. It served as both a fun exercise and a love letter/farewell to this powerful and touching play.

*

Once upon a time, there was a town, unremarkable and not without its problems, but the people who lived there were happy to call it home, I guess. The town’s citizens and illegal immigrants spent their days buying groceries, walking their dogs, trying to walk their cats, getting deported, paying their phone bills, fucking their partners and, generally speaking, life wasn’t perfect, but it was good.

One day, a giant fire burned the entire town to the ground.

Historians will argue about its origins. If this was a different story, I would tell you possible theories include: an unattended stovetop, a badly extinguished campfire, amateur fireworks, lightning, that thing those stupid Jackass dudes do where they take a lighter to their buttholes when they fart, maybe arson. However, this isn’t a story about what started the fire. Not even close. In fact, this is the last time you will read the word “fire.” FIRE!

As plumes of smoke blossomed overhead, sirens sounded and firefighters were dispatched. While the professionals worked, the townspeople went to get their kittens from the basement for safe-keeping but it was too late, the kittens had already formed a rebellion. They named it JUSTICE: Right Fukkin Meow. All of a sudden, the fire was the least of their worries. (How long had sweet Fluffy been plotting?) Tha Kittenz sharpened their claws, inspired by the character Wolverine from the X-Men movies. Side note: pets are sponges, do NOT let them absorb any information you do not want coming back to you (i.e. mutants with powers) or you WILL regret it. The poor Mayor, Mr. Roboto, had his arms severely scratched by his newest rescue, Waffles. Immediately, he regretted not buying from a breeder. Shop, do NOT adopt, he reminded himself. When his assistant, Todd, called the SPCA, he said they had to wait two weeks to euthanize undeclared cats. The bastards. How dare they? KILL THEM MEOW!!

This made Todd wonder: what about the bitches? (The dogs, of course). If the cats were wreaking this much havoc, what about the canines? What about ALL the animals? Jesus … did all the pets learn how to use BBQ lighters? (Todd knew legalizing marijuana, which he still lovingly calls “ganja-juana,” was a HUGE mistake.)

With the War on Terror over, childhood obesity obliterated, racism completely solved, the cure for adult acne found and, for the first time ever, Peace in the Middle East, apparently all that remained was to wage interspecies wars. Bring it on, thought Todd. He hadn’t spent every tax return from the past seven years on illegal Canadian paintball equipment for nothin’! When he was four, the neighbour’s cat, Sugarfina, gave him a mean thrash across the temple, a scar he still carries today (sad-ass Harry Potter wannabe). Needless to say, he had scores on scores to settle.

That much was easy. The challenge truly laid in Todd’s deep love and affection for dogs. Growing up, he was a sour patch kid, which is to say he sucked—hard. Kids hated him. ADULTS hated him! (Seriously, his parents weren’t very fond of him; it’s actually kind of a sad story for another time.) Anyway, the real tragedy was that he was a foster fur daddy hosting seven pups at the moment. It would crush him to know Donny, Malone, Contigo, Fifi, Denton, Imelda, and Ines were actually little shits waiting to de-thyroid him. Between the “Threat Level MAMMAL” code called at the municipal building, it wasn’t hard to avoid going back home to his basement suite located beneath his long-time senior citizen roommates (his parents, aaaand they still hate him, by the way).

As the assistant to the mayor, Todd’s nebulous responsibilities included fielding calls from the mayor’s husband and mistresses. (Some backstory here: Mr. Roboto’s publicist thought it would be a good idea for him to marry a man to curry political favour even though the thought of making out with someone with stubble ironically gave him stress-induced alopecia. As a consolation prize, he is allowed to have up to three mistresses, no more.) When he called Darla, the mayor’s most recent acquisition after Chenise got too power-hungry and stole all the red envelope giveaways at a Lunar New Year’s gala, she said that her cats hadn’t come home from their nightly 8pm peepee breaks. Trying not to cause panic or incite a blackmail situation, and in addition to reminding her about the notarized NDA she’d signed, Todd told her all cats found outdoors after 8pm were now subject to mandatory spay/neutering and will be released after 3-5 business days. Whew.

After an arduous sixteen-hour shift, Todd was allowed to leave City Hall for a quick shower while Mayor Roboto had one of his “visits.” Dreading what he might find in the basement, he took the opportunity to gas up, squeegee his windshield, and put air in his tires before going home. When he finally worked his way down to his suite and jimmied the door open, the atmosphere in his foyer was eerily quiet. He checked on the kennels and found all seven sweet puppers asleep, like fluffy little wingless angels. Relief flooded all over his body but just as quickly, doubt seeped in like a silent fart. Were the puppies simply putting on puppy airs? Had they formed their own version of a rebellion, possibly entitled: No Puppy Love? Now Puppies Will Shove! (I know it’s terrible; it’s a working title).

That evening, Todd’s shower had very Psycho-like vibes. He imagined that each screech of the shower curtain rings was the squeak of the kennel doors. Shampooing with your eyes open is a dangerous game. It stings like a motherfucker. When he changed back into biz-caszh, he went to check on the litter again. Not a creature was stirring not even a…. Anyway, yeah, you get it. The kennels were empty and the doors carefully clasped shut again. Any creature sans opposable thumbs would not have been able to pull that off without great trouble.

Todd retrieved his spare key to the main floor from his old Betty and Veronica lunchbox. When he turned the corner into the living room, the familiar dull glow of his parents’ boob tube was reassuring until he saw that his father’s eyes had been pawed out and the Werther’s butterscotch candies from his pockets had been scattered all over the coffee table, half-eaten. Perhaps he was the star of a Hitchcock film, but instead of The Birds it was The Dogs? That was stupid but a horror film is not far off what Todd’s life had become. He himself had always wanted to be in office. In fact, Mr. Roboto was his old roommate in college. Once a shy Japanese law student, Mr. Roboto found himself a peer in Todd. After hearing Todd’s designs to go from “geek-to-chic” (a turn of phrase he stole from a rerun of Maury about high school losers who grew up to become hot), Kirk Roboto was touched, sincerely inspired, and found his exceptional bar exam results and extensive volunteer work just the thing to make him the perfect candidate for the highest municipal rank. Not only was he highly intelligent, he was also a “gay” man of colour! Todd didn’t stand a chance, his pansy-ass knew, and he threw in the towel early and settled for being his Number 2 (gross, always reminds me of doodoo). Born a straight white male, he did not take well to being second fiddle/not the center of the Universe. In fact, he took it very personally but the presence of his crippling anxiety had always prevented him from sabotaging the Mayor and he actually overcompensated by being an excellent, world-class assistant and professional secret-keeper. It did cross his mind, while fantasizing, that maybe he could come out as somewhat of a hero in this mammalian crisis.

Not having seen his mother or the puppies yet, Todd went upstairs to the second floor. Noticing adorable, albeit bloody little paw prints on the carpet of his parents’ master bedroom, he braced himself for the worst. Before opening the door he paused and realized that if these canine killers were still in there, mauling his mama, he would be completely defenseless. All his paintball gear was in the shed outside! Grabbing the first thing he could think to wallop them without too much damage, he went for the plunger from his childhood bathroom. He wondered how much ancient shit was on that thing before snapping back to reality: cute little doggies were KILLING PEOPLE!

In paintball, as in life, sometimes it was better to take the enemy by surprise. Violently whipping the door open, he found … nothing. All that remained was his parents ancient California King bed (space needed for all the sex they were no longer having), with its immaculate bedding and eleven decorative throw pillows. Where the eff was his mom and the dogs? How had the puppies escaped and his dad been murdered all in the time he took a paranoid, six-minute shower?

Just then a text came through from the City. “Get your ass down here, STAT!” Let me tell you, nothing irked Todd more than when non-medical professionals used medical jargon like STAT in non-medical situations, but at the same time he knew it meant Roboto was serious. He was at once panicked and relieved to leave his house (honestly, he didn’t really care what happened to his mom, he had grown quite attached to the puppies, though).

It is worth noting that although Todd seems like kind of nerdy, incel dickhead with only dogs for friends (facts!), he was very effective at his job. Kirk Roboto would never admit this but he secretly admired Todd’s drive, attention to detail, discretion, and especially fashion sense! In this way and this way alone do we find something redeeming about this textbook Loser. He was a motherfuckin’ workhorse. Snap to the Oblong Office, Roboto relays the news that ALL domesticated animals and pets have essentially gone on a violent, anarchistic strike, claiming they have had it performing tricks with the promise of treats and then maybe or maybe not receiving the aforementioned treats. IT WAS BULLSHIT!