
Canto 107 – A Group of Space Goons is Called a Goon-o-plex
The situation on Rimbaud Memorial Outstation began with a single Space Goon, as they all almost always do. Infestations, I mean. Space Goons reproduce asexually like microscopic amoebas do, by splitting into three parts after eating something. And then each part split off from the original grows into a new Goon. First you have one. It eats a cat. Then you have three. They eat another cat, a plate of unattended Italian meatballs, and a decorative plant. Then you have nine. Six of those get into the food pantry. One finds the last living cat on the outstation. And two more eat a small gambler who lost everything playing deep-space poker and drank himself into a coma with gargleblasters. Then you quickly reach eighty-one. You get the alarming idea, right?
“Mon dieu!” cried Banzai. “They will consume everything edible on my entire station! Please, friends, you must help me round them up and herd them out an airlock.”
“But isn’t that too cruel to do to a sentient creature?” asked Dana Cole, still shivering and naked at Trav’s command.
“They are not even as smart as Goofy Dalgoda,” said Ham Aero.
“That’s right!” cried Trav “Goofy” Dalgoda. “We must space them because they are too stupid to live.”
“No, they are able to live fine in space without space suits,” I told them all, calling upon my scientific acumen and nearly omniscient memory. “They will just float happily out there with nothing to eat, at least until they collide with a planet or asteroid, or some other place with gravity.”
“Do I recall correctly when I remember that in a feeding frenzy, a hundred Space Goons start eating people… at least those made of flesh and blood?” asked Duke Ferrari, showing something more than just mild concern.
“Naw, I think that’s just a spacer myth told because Space Goons come from unknown space and not enough is known about them,” suggested Ham.
At that same moment, a Space Nudist serving girl disappeared in a goon-o-plex of a hundred and three Goons. Muffled cries were heard, followed by munching sounds, and then no more serving girl was to be seen.
“How do we get them off the outstation?” asked Banzai.
“I has some middlin’ experience with Space Goon cat-nip recipes, I has,” volunteered Sinbadh, offering his cooking skills.
“What did he say?” asked Banzai.
“He says he’ll cook up some Goon-bait to put in the airlock,” I translated. “If the smell is right, they will all follow the bait out into space and reproduce out there.”
“But Oi will needs sum special Goon grub to make it with!” announced Sinbadh.
“What do you need?” Banzai was desperate.
“Ol’ shoe-leather, some turpentine, Samothracian onions, a dash o’ me own special sauce, and all the bar soap you can muster from every fresher on the whole outstation, me buck-o!”
Swiftly the star-dog cook got to his business. Banzai kept the ravenous Space goons, now over a thousand strong, occupied by throwing them a few non-paying customers and one or two of his ugliest serving girls.
Then Sinbadh returned from the kitchen with a pot of extremely smelly stew. He ran past the Space Goons to an emergency airlock, grabbed hold of a support beam with one hand, opened the air lock with his foot, and while Space Goons, outstation staff, and customers alike were sucked out into space, threw the pot of smelly goo out too. All of the Space Goons followed it out. As Sinbadh closed the airlock again, we could see that only about fifty percent of the people in the area the Space Goons had infested were lost to the void. None of those who were in our party failed to secure themselves against being sucked out of the station into space. So, the ploy was at least slightly successful.
“How did you fools manage to survive this?” cried Sorcerer 15, standing near the concourse doorway with an angry look on his white, Synthezoid face.
“You again?” Trav cried, pulling out of his hidden super-pocket that held items in an interdimensional bubble, his latest acquisition, a brand-new super-illegal Skortch ray gun.
“I’m ready for you this time Dalgoda!” said Sorcerer, pulling out a mirror-shield.
Trav shot Sorcerer 15 in the feet. As his artificial feet disintegrated, he dropped and broke the mirror-shield.
Trav then shot him in the torso and disintegrated the rest of him.
“I hate to admit it, Trav, but your obsessions prove useful at times,” Ham said.
“You will now politely give me the illegal weapon,” said Banzai Joe. “Be careful not to accidentally put a hole in the outstation that will kill us all…”
Trav grinned. First, he pointed the weapon at Banzai’s midsection. Then he handed it carefully to the outstation’s manager. “Of course. I will get it back before I leave, though. That weapon of massive destruction belongs to me. And you owe it to me to give it back. After all, I heroically saved your entire station.”
“Yes, yes… But only when you leave. I actually owe the star-dog much, much more.”
That little soiree was not the first time I had nearly lost my life to a Space Goon infestation. And it wouldn’t be the last. But it was easily one of the fastest and most ironically amusing.




















The Essayist
I have been working on compiling good essays from this blog into book form. It is becoming a sort of obsession. The problem is, I am likely running out of time. My health is getting worse in the middle of a pandemic that is killing thousands of people just like me. I have been having problems with passing out during the midmornings repeatedly for several days in a row. I fear I may be headed towards heart failure or a stroke. And if it comes down to an ambulance ride, I can’t afford it, and I will not economically survive it. And all the intensive care units around here in North Texas are swamped with COVID patients. It is important for me to finish and publish this book of essays. It is part of me as a writer that I simply must leave behind.
“Why are essays important?” you may ask. And here’s where I would normally insert a joke answer. I try hard not to take myself too seriously. It is the only way I can deal with what has been a very serious life. And at the point in my essay book where I will insert this essay, I will not need to review what those things are that are so serious. (Being a teacher and shaping young minds. Being a sexual assault survivor. Helping teenagers to live through suicidal depressions. I know, I know, I should’ve resisted the urge to list them.)
But I have spent a lifetime teaching kids to write four-and-five-paragraph essays. And I am also a serious reader of essays. I have read and thoroughly studied Loren Eiseley’s The Invisible Pyramid, Henry David Thoreau’s Walden, Collected Essays by H.L. Mencken, selected essays by James Thurber, Life as I Find It: A Treasury of Mark Twain, Charles Lamb’s Essays of Elia, and parts of John Ruskin’s The Stones of Venice. I also thoroughly loved and used as a teacher All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten by Robert Fulghum. So, I do not claim without reason that I do know something about how to write an essay. (Although you are welcome to disagree based on numerous bits of evidence in this goofy blog,)
At this point I am obligated to define for you what I believe an essay should be and what its potential uses are. An essay, simply put, is a pile of a fool’s best thinking put down on paper in prose rather than being distilled down into lines of poetry or embroidered and expanded with lies to make it into fiction. At its best it can open reader’s mental eyes and change societies, if not the entire world. At its worst it can incite violence, stir hatreds, and generally muck everything up. My essays land somewhere between, in the realm of mildly-amusing purple paisley prose that can really waste your time.
An essay, because it is based on truthful observations, can rip away the costumes and masks that authors put on to write fiction and make that educated fool of an author metaphorically naked in front of the reader. After blogging like this since 2013, I admit to having no real secrets left that I have not at least mentioned in my blog somewhere. I am less naked when being a sometime-nudist than I am in the sentences and paragraphs of these essays.
Now that I have thoroughly convinced you that you made a big mistake by reading this far through my essay compilation, I will reveal the fact that I have put this essay somewhere closer to the end of the book rather than near the beginning. Like all essayists, I am a fool (hopefully in the Shakespearean wise-fool sense), but I am not stupid. So I won’t laugh at you for falling for my tricks, but I can’t promise not to be at least a little bit amused. But time is short. So, on to the next essay!
Leave a comment
Filed under commentary, humor, insight, new projects, Paffooney, writing, writing teacher