(This is what happens when you Google "Racist Fish.")
Another one of those great Chuck Wendig flash fiction challenges over at Terrible Minds. Last week, the challenge was to write a very simple but very powerful single sentence. This week, the challenge was to pick one of those sentences and create a story around it. The sentence I chose, from someone named Noel who didn't link to his website, is the first line of this story.
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She couldn’t be sure that the fish was a
condescending dickhead, but she was starting to suspect as much. It was neither
its look nor its body language, but more his never-ending screed of racial
slurs aimed at passersby.
Donna had gotten over her amazement at the reality
of a talking catfish quickly after hearing its taunts of “Look atcha, ya
fuckin’ beaners!” as a Latino family walked past. Shocked and mortified on
their behalf, they themselves acted as though they heard nothing, continuing on
to the other exhibits.
Edging slowly to the tank, she stopped only once
to watch for a reaction from the black woman who stopped briefly to look at
the fish. It had just let loose with some borderline criminal comments
regarding the woman’s lineage, but again, the woman seemed not to hear it. Donna
felt her face flush again in horror, but the woman looked at Donna and, smiling
a friendly smile at her, walked away.
Looking at the catfish, Donna leaned closer yet to
the glass partition separating her from the racist fish wondering if that
particular term had ever been used in the history of ever. Her nose nearly
touched the glass when the fish turned and made eye contact.
“Help you, fatty?”
She jumped back, stunned for a second, then angry.
“I’m not fat,” she whispered at it.
“OK. Wal-Mart called. They want their scooter back,
ya pig.”
“My weight is actually below the national average,
thank you very much,” Donna said, her voice a little louder.
“Yeah it ain’t. So you aren’t as fat as you could
or should be. That’s like being the lead retard at the Special Olympics.”
“You shut up!”
This hadn’t been whispered; in fact, it was yelled
rather loudly. People around her were looking at her. Did she just tell that
fish to shut up, she heard a teen-aged girl twenty or so feet away ask her
mother. Donna gave a shaky smile to those looking at her and turned back to the
tank.
The catfish (she definitely felt ‘it’ was a ‘he’
based on tone of voice and the fact no woman Donna knew of, fish or not, would
be so crass in public) was still looking at her. Expecting the
newly-sexually-identified him to be scowling at her, he was, in fact, not.
Talking with a Philly accent must have anthropomorphized him enough.
“You shut up,” she said, much quieter. It dawned
on her when he spoke, the fish’s voice was clear as day. Odd, being in water
behind thick glass and, you know, a fish at all. She decided to try something.
Can you hear
me, she thought, looking the fish dead in his eyes.
He looked back at her, saying nothing.
So much for that, Donna thought. She began chastising
herself for thinking a fish could read her mind but shook that thought out of
her head. It was a talking catfish. Communications with such a creature haven’t
been, to Donna’s knowledge, established, so she should be proud of herself for
thinking outside the box.
“Yeah, I can hear you, chubby,” the fish said, interrupting
her thoughts. “And you are fat. Like I always say, can’t see the ribs, not
taking dibs, am I right? But I’m sure you’ve seen plenty of ribs at plenty of
buffets. Does it count as cannibalism when a cow like you piles a couple big
racks of ribs down your gullet?”
She was about to speak but remembered it wasn’t
necessary. Plus, she didn’t want those around her thinking she was any more
weird.
Why are you
so hateful? Donna glared at him. I’m
not fat and you’re not going to get to
me.
“Really I’m not?” the fish asked, a sneer in his
voice if not on his face. “You’re about to start bawlin’ and you’re talking to
a fucking fish!”
With that, he swam to the other side of the
aquarium, casting his eyes upon a group of children looking to be no older than
eight or nine.
“Jesus, the gay practically seeps outta that kid,” he said. “A haircut like that and those
shoes pretty much scream ‘Cock, party of one, please!’”
That’s so
mean and, well, doesn’t really make any sense, Donna thought at the fish. Does that mean he’s the one providing the
cock for another gay man or that he’s
a party of one requesting cock? I don’t get it.
“Huh? The fuck are you talking about, Chief
Walkswithawobble?” he asked, again with attitude in his voice if not on his
features. “The point is, he’s gonna have more men inside him than the locker room
at the Rose Bowl. And he’s not going to be a power bottom, either. Look at that
little fruit…you know he’s gonna be
someone’s wife.”
Just stop
it! Donna screamed at him in her mind. You’re
just a fish! Who cares what you think anyways? She was on the verge of
angry tears, staring daggers at the back of the fish (whom she kept thinking of
as Charlie for some reason) while he continued to look upon the children.
Charlie, sensing Donna’s eyes on his back, turned
towards her. He came at her fast, nearly hitting the glass, screaming “HEY!”
Donna started at Charlie’s yell. When she regained
her composure, the fish, the aquarium, and in fact most of the people, were
gone. She closed her eyes and gave her head a little shake, hoping to knock
whatever was loose back to normal again, the normal including a talking, racist
fish.
She opened them again, but Charlie and the
aquarium were still gone. In its place, a doctors’ office waiting room, filled
with people staring at her. Angrily. A security guard put his hand around her
bicep, lifting her to her feet.
“Ma’am, you have to go. Right now.”
“What’s going on,” she said, eyes moving across
all the angry faces. “Why are you staring at me?”
“I’m sorry you feel bad about your weight and all,”
the guard said, “but that’s no reason to say horrible things to all these
people. You’ll pardon me for saying so, but being overweight and angry doesn’t
give you the right to be a racist bitch. If you feel that way, just keep it in
your head like everyone else.”
omg, funny and sad at the same time. well done!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!
ReplyDeleteSuper clever but sad, too. I really liked the way you handled that. Well, done.
ReplyDeleteThanks! I appreciate it!
ReplyDelete