“The Sanatoga Fire Massacre of 2003”
by John Gotheborg
COVER LETTER
Hello, God’s True
Patriot here, John Gotheborg.
I am trying
something new with this story. I have invented a completely
fictional character
who is nothing like myself. In fact, only small
portions of this
story are based on my true life tomfoolery shenanigans.
This is a story
about a character named William Cahill -- an investigative
reporter for the
Sanatoga Courier who is also an amateur pool champ and
sometimes private
eye. I should also mention that he is a veteran and a
firm supporter of
home schooling. I do not know if I will write a full
series of adventure
stories featuring this character, but I do think he is a
daring and
intriguing man.
Suu Ni doesn't like
this story, because there is no romance. Maybe it needs
romance. There
is one character I think Cahill could have a tragic romantic
moment with, but I
just couldn't work it out. I'm talking about Heather
Donahue here -- I
know what you sick people are thinking. William Cahill
isn't like that.
Enjoy and please
share your comments.
SANATOGA -- December
14, 2003
Protest erupted
outside Patriot Hall yesterday as the Sanatoga Fire defended against the Quad
City Steamrollers. A large congregation of Native Americans protested the home
team’s use of what they characterized a “racist Tomahawk symbol.” Meanwhile,
several quadriplegics also gathered to protest the Quad City team’s
“discriminatory and insulting mockery of the disabled.”
The Indians arrived
early in the morning, pitching teepees and lighting bonfires, which they danced
around in full war paint, singing “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee.” This drew
immediate media attention, with this reporter arriving first on the scene.
The noble spirit of
the Native Americans struck me. Their red leather faces beamed with pride, and
a healthy glow that comes only from repeat visits to Tiki Tan, “Where the sun
is always shining!” Tiki Tan offers first-class service and the latest in modern
self-tanning solutions. Located at 768 Wilshire, Tiki Tan is your one stop
tanning solution.
I spoke with Heather
Donahue, 23, a resident of the Highlands district who did not appear to be an
Indian, though she did state loudly that she is a vegetarian. “This is totally
offensive,” she hollered. “The U.S. government committed an act of genocide against
the Native American people, and here they are rubbing it in with crap like this
Fire logo -- depicting the tomahawk in a totally racist type fashion.”
When asked if she
was aware that the Sanatoga Fire logo is actually a fireman’s axe, and that the
semi-professional football team is not endorsed by the U.S. government, the
woman appeared confused. “That’s totally racist,” she said. “I see what you’re
insinuating. Sanatoga Fire Water?”
With the arrival of
the quadriplegic protestors, it seemed as though things may get out of hand.
They arrived with bullhorns blaring, the Superman theme song oddly reminiscent
of “Flight of the Valkyries” from the helicopter attack scene in Apocalypse Now. The crowds parted
before them and they proceeded directly to the center of the Indian encampment.
They chanted, “Quad
City! Quadriplegics are people. Quad City! Your racist minds are feeble. Quad
City...” The leader of the group, identifying himself only as Kal-El, whom I
interviewed at the hospital after he’d received a concussion in a freak hair drier
accident, stated that his people came to this planet to escape the prejudice
they faced on Krypton. They were in fact completely paralyzed on Krypton, but
the red sun of our world gives them the power to move their bodies above the
neck.
With Kal-El at the
lead, the quadriplegics steamrolled through the Indian encampment, setting fire
to teepees, trampling women and children.
“This is the problem
with protest marches,” Police Chief Danny Thomas stated in a press conference
days after the terrifying events, during which several officers were awarded
gold medals for bravery in the line of duty. “It starts out peace and goodwill,
holding hands. Then a pack of anarchists like those radical quadriplegics comes
in and people get hurt.”
It was then that the
police moved in, wearing full riot gear and firing tear gas canisters. It was
an awful scene. The police fired indiscriminately, wounding protestors and
innocent bystanders alike. The ceramic plates in their body armor made them
look oddly like gorillas, which prompted some environmentalists to draw up new
signs: “STOP MONKEY VIOLENCE.”
This reporter
watched in shock and awe as an unidentified officer sprayed tear gas directly
in the face of Heather Donahue. Then, a group of officers smashed in the
windshield of my car with their batons, claiming it was illegally parked.
Forest Walker, 29,
also of the Highlands, chained himself to the doors of Patriot Hall. As police
closed in he shouted, “I lived in a tree for seven months. You pigs don’t
intimidate me!”
Then all hell broke
loose. The victorious Sanatoga Fire football team emerged from Patriot Hall,
trampling Forest Walker underfoot, having trounced the Quad City Steamrollers
60-0 in what semi-professional sports experts have called, “The worst beating since
1970 when the Harlem Globetrotters appeared in Hanna-Barbera Studios’ ‘Football
Zeros.’”
Unbeknownst to the
rioting protestors, the Quad City team actually was comprised wholly of
quadriplegics. It was a charity benefit for the promotion of stem cell
research. Oh, the humanity...
The Sanatoga Fire
tore through the crowd like a stampede of buffalo, crushing all who stood, rain
danced or wheeled in their path. I watched in horror as several linemen lifted
my battered car and flipped it. Then it exploded.
I could hear the
wounded cries of the dying everywhere as the sky turned black and I crawled
over the piled bodies in a desperate attempt to find safe passage out of the
killing field. By some twisted act of fate, the blood stained my lips and the
ash completely covered my face. Between that and the tuxedo, I looked like a
minstrel show performer.
The police certainly
had their hands full as this morning of protest turned into a night of riots
and fires. Those brave officers were fighting on two fronts. A call on my cell
phone from a colleague at the Courier confirmed it.
“In front of the
Sanatoga Science Center downtown, the Brotherhood of Aryan Knights, a radical
rightwing militia group, has been protesting the presence of dinosaur fossils
since well before noon,” my colleague shouted over the hysteric din.
They had shouted
“sieg heil” several times and raised their hands in the Nazi salute. Then,
according to several eyewitness reports, they hauled a caveman mannequin out of
a white cargo van and forced their way into the building.
That protest became
violent as one of the Nazis forcibly attempted to place the caveman mannequin
in with the dinosaurs. When Science Center security attempted to stop him, he
took the caveman club and brained one of the guards with it. I sympathize strongly
with the man’s act of Christian patriotism in standing up for the presence of
cavemen alongside dinosaurs, but those militants go too far sometimes. The
rioting spread all the way to the Hilton, ruining the evening for many wealthy
tourists.
Meanwhile, back at
Patriot Hall, Harvey Dowd, the 6’ 3-1/2” quarterback from UT Austin, managed to
snatch a tear gas canister from one of the officers. He lobbed it with such
force that it exploded on impact, permanently blinding innocent teen Lemonjello
Jefferson in one eye.
My instincts as a
veteran compelled me to drag the wounded young man to cover.
“Why did this happen
to me?” Lemonjello moaned. “I was just here because I hate black people.”
“Perhaps you
attended the wrong protest,” I said. “The Brotherhood of Aryan Knights is
protesting downtown in front of the Science Center.” I held the boy in my arms,
fearing that at any moment he may die from his wound.
“I know that,” he
said. “It’s just that I wanted to see the game first. Then I went to the
restroom and I saw a black man in the mirror. When I turned around, he was
gone. So, I figured he must have ran out here.”
“Lemonjello, I hate
to tell you this, but...”
“Wait a minute. You
kinda look like him.”
It was then that I
realized how the blood and ash made my face look so ridiculous. I untucked my
tuxedo shirt and wiped my face clean. Lemonjello was visibly relieved to see
that I was a white man beneath the black face.
“What were you going
to do when you caught him?” I asked the boy.
“I was gonna hang
him!”
I helped Emergency
Medical Transport personnel (EMTs) lift the troubled young man onto a gurney
and rode with them towards the University of Sanatoga School of Medicine, where
I am told the underprivileged often receive cheap medical treatment at the hands
of student nurses.
“It’s going to be
okay,” the EMT shouted. “We’re going to get you a new eye. You’ll see clearer
than ever before. You won’t be able to see in color, and may suffer double
vision, but dog eyes are very sensitive on levels that human eyes are not. You
may be able to see ghosts, and you will definitely be able to predict the
weather...”
I have always been
fascinated by medical and technical jargon of all kinds. I took lengthy notes
as the EMT soothed the boy. However, University Hospital administrators asked
that I not publish my findings. I had to fight tooth and nail for the one quote.
“That man is no
longer employed by the University,” said spokesperson Ray Goldberg. “I am not
at liberty to disclose the exact substance at this time, but a mind-altering
chemical normally extracted from cactus stalks was found in his blood stream.
In fact, that entire EMT crew has been dismissed. They are sick, deviant,
psychotic individuals who do not in any way represent the School of Medicine.”
As the siren blared
and the driver ran over several pedestrians, I saw that the riots had spread
with alarming speed. The entire city was engulfed in raging chaos.
Quadriplegics zoomed alongside the ambulance in rocket-powered wheelchairs,
pursued by vengeful Indians on horseback; and in the distance, I could see
fires left in the wake of the rampaging Nazis.
Then the ambulance
rammed into an oncoming Greyhound bus and overturned. Tumbling within the
confines of the careening vehicle, everything seemed to go in slow motion. For
a moment, I felt completely weightless, as though the EMTs, Lemonjello and
myself were astronauts aboard the space shuttle. It was a miracle I escaped
serious injury, but we were all banged up pretty good and I lost consciousness.
Imagine my surprise
when I was awakened by Fred “Curly” Neal of the Harlem Globetrotters. “As you
may know,” he said. “I received my Globetrotter ‘Legends’ ring in 1993 and have
since traveled the country as an Ambassador of Goodwill. It just rips my heart
out to see people riot like this.”
And so it was that
the Harlem Globetrotters -- whose tour bus seemed fated to cross our path --
came up with an ingenuous plan to stop the quadriplegics. Curly Neal and
Meadowlark dressed up like barbers and painted a crude sign which read: “FREE
HAIRCUTS FOR QUADRIPLEGICS.”
I could not believe
the beautiful simplicity of it all as the wheelchair-bound anarchists lined up
in front of the makeshift barber shop. Then, when they wheeled themselves under
the “hair driers,” the Globetrotters clamped the lids down over their heads and
the quadriplegics were trapped. However, the danger had not yet passed.
Things had become
hectic as the rioting mobs clashed in front of Try Angles, a popular gay
bar/nightclub in downtown Sanatoga. While I was unconscious in that ambulance,
the Nazis and Indians had faced off in a Battle Royale.
It was a massacre.
The Indian braves on horseback used their tomahawks and fired flaming arrows.
Some of the Nazis cleverly changed into leopard print caveman costumes and fled
into Try Angles. Most, however, were not so lucky. By the time I arrived on the
scene, there were scalped Nazi corpses everywhere and the Indians were kneeling
over them, wishing them safe passage to the Happy Hunting Grounds where they
might dwell for all time with spirits of Moose and Squirrel.
Danny Beaucoup, 26,
approached this reporter and offered a limp handshake. The fancy lad said,
“Hi, my name is
Danny Beaucoup; how do you do?”
“What can you tell
me about this conflagration?” I asked, wiping my hand on the tuxedo shirt.
“Oh, it’s like this
every Friday.”
“What are you
talking about? There was a riot here. Indians just massacred a party of Nazis.”
“Oh, that... I
thought you meant Roman Toga Night.”
“No, damn you! I’m
talking about the riot -- the riot that’s been raging across Sanatoga all
night.”
“Hmm... Those cuties
in the leopard print togas were kinda rough. I don’t know if I’d call it a
riot, though. Maybe a laugh riot!”
“Damnit, I’m
serious. Now give me a straight answer, you fruitcake. There are important
social issues with which the community must grapple.”
I watched in
bewilderment as a Nazi in a caveman costume, still wearing his SS helmet,
peeked around the doorjamb of the nightclub entrance and muttered, in a thick
German accent, “Very...interesting.”
Then huge pieces of
the wall rotated outward, revealing that the building itself was made of
cardboard, and then minor celebrities such as Jim J. Bullock and Bruce Vilanch
appeared, making extremely odd and inappropriate quips which I unfortunately
could not hear over the Indian chanting and the explosions that rocked the
city. I am told they were quite disturbing, however.
I felt like I was
losing my mind, when I realized Danny Beaucoup was still talking.
He said, “Well, I
did get a rock thrown at me earlier. You see, one of those Indians saw my
‘Pride Not Prejudice’ tattoo and mistook me for a Nazi. I said, ‘Jesus! Please!
Can’t you see the rainbow flag? It’s a rainbow flag, not a frigging Confederate
flag!’ Those Indians are savages!”
Then I heard a voice
yell in halted English, “I heard that, stupid white man!”
Suddenly another
fight broke out, this time between the gays and the Indians. Ironically, one of
the gays was dressed like an Indian. If I were him, I would have played it
smart and blended in. The gays had superior numbers, but the Indians are a
warrior people with fierce fighting spirits who will show their enemy no
quarter.
As the Indians
charged, a spunky short-haired blonde transvestite shouted, “Sock it to me,
baby!” Then the gays, Indians and Nazi cavemen all broke into a song and dance
routine reminiscent of MGM musicals.
And so it was that
the constant bloodshed and sycophantic protestations of the rioting mob came to
a close and I staggered across the street to Side Pocket Billiards.
It was Friday night
and I knew the place would be packed. Even when all hell breaks loose and the
streets are on fire, some things never change in this town. My town. Sanatoga.