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Short Story I Wrote about octopus love (new story)

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    Short Story I Wrote about octopus love (new story)

    It's easier to read if you go to my site - An Aquatic Love Tale

    ******************************************************************

    Looking back, a human/octopus relationship could never work. I can’t breathe underwater, my ink tolerance is pedestrian at best and who can compete with all of those appendages?

    Nevertheless, my aquatic rendezvous with Oggy the octopus changed my life forever.

    The night seemed to be coming to a close as I bid adieu to my seahorse friend, Krista. We shared many tales, long and short, over mugs of grog at a local pirate bar until she was forced to return to her pregnant seahorse husband (the male seahorse has the babies, which is gross).

    As I began my solitary trek back to my human domicile, I was assaulted by what appeared to be a living pile of spaghetti. This was no plate of sentient pasta, however, this was an octopus with lust in its tentacles and sex on its beak.

    “Graggle, graggle!” my eight-legged assailant screamed. It’s harpy-like cry echoed throughout the empty streets of Pirateland.

    “Excuse me, spaghetti creature, but I am human, straight, and slightly intoxicated, so I’ll be on my way,” I replied with haste.

    Oggy, however, refused to permit my passage and wrapped his surprisingly spry tendrils around my reluctant body. What took place next was an oily blur that would take years of therapy and a snorkeling vacation in the Bahamas to recall.

    Immediately following my sexually confusing Oggy encounter, I sought the consul of Murtha, a homeless killer whale who beaches herself behind the dumpster at SevenEleven.

    “Murtha, what should I do? While traumatic at the time, I now find myself playing with suction cups in fond remembrance of Oggy. Should I call him tonight or wait a couple of days? And when did you get a creepy hook hand?” I asked with befuddlement.

    “Eeeeoooh, eeeeoooh,” Murtha replied as she blew Marlboro smoke from her weathered blowhole.

    “Thanks, Murtha. You always know how to cheer me up. Now, please stop chewing on my pant leg,” I replied. Sadly, I never saw Murtha again. Blowhole cancer.

    Later that evening, staring at my cell phone and anticipating its inevitable vibration with equal parts trepidation and tartar sauce, I decided to make the call.

    “Hi, um, is this Oggy?” I inquired sheepishly.

    “Graggle, graggle!” his suddenly familiar voice yelped.

    “I had a great time last night and I was wondering if you aren’t busy eating shellfish, would you want to meet up for grog at the pirate bar? Do octupuses drink grog? Oh my god, I didn’t offend you, did I?”

    “GRAGGLE, GRAGGLE!!!!” Oggy yelled as he slammed down the phone with one of his powerful, yet tender tentacles.

    Which tentacle? I’ll never know. One thing I do know is it embraced my land-dwelling body for the first and last time.

    And that was that.

    Months later, I returned to the scene in an attempt to reenact the events of that fateful night. With a mop in one hand and leaky ballpoint pen in the other, I did my best to recreate the feelings of unexpected cephalopod love but only managed to humiliate myself in front of a school bus of horrified children.

    Perhaps three o’clock in the afternoon on a crowded street was a poor place to simulate sexy octopus actions typically reserved for coral reefs.

    But regardless of my lack of gills or affinity for coral, I often fantasize about what an oceanic relationship would be like. Sometimes, I manage to convince myself Oggy was my slimy soul mate that slipped away and other times I think he was merely a hallucinogenic manifestation of my inner craving for spaghetti dinner.

    Nevertheless, I’ll always remember my night submerged in a salt water affair - partly because I crave attention from forbidden places but mostly because I can’t get the ink stains out of my puffy pirate shirt.

    The End.
    Last edited by highwind; 05-14-2009, 07:28 PM.

    #2
    Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

    Poor Oggy...I bet he forgave you... I wonder what he's doing now? Make a sequel!!! I demand it!
    Currently playing-
    Seiken Densetsu 3, Brain Lord, Terranigma (all SNES)

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

      This is one of the greatest things I've ever read.

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

        I was thoroughly entertained.

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

          I laughed.
          "Mindless killing doesn't do a lot for me anymore." - Sampson

          Comment


            #6
            Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

            This is the real deal.

            Comment


              #7
              Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

              Reading it gave me blowhole cancer.

              It feels divine.

              ~Updates weekly on Sundays~

              Comment


                #8
                Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

                yay! thanks guys - glad you liked it.

                YOU WERE MY TARGET AUDIENCE

                Comment


                  #9
                  Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

                  Now I'm offended!

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

                    you don't want to be a sexy weirdo?

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

                      Originally posted by highwind View Post
                      you don't want to be a sexy weirdo?
                      I have just one thing to say to that...
                      .
                      .
                      .
                      .
                      .
                      .
                      .
                      GRAGGLE GRAGGLE!!!
                      Currently playing-
                      Seiken Densetsu 3, Brain Lord, Terranigma (all SNES)

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

                        Here's a new story for you. Read it on my website because there's a picture and it's easier.

                        Dressed To Barf - An Over The Hill Obsession


                        **********************
                        Dressed To Barf
                        By Julius Bloop

                        All I need is my Grandma’s flower dress and some food to barf.

                        Twenty-five years of torment came to a screeching halt the day grandma died and willed me a single item – not a dime, not an acre, but a pretty yellow sundress. Light, flowing and patterned in flowers, this feminine garment laid snugly over my masculine body from the moment I tried it on at the morgue.

                        Each flower pedal perfectly printed as though Monet himself returned from the grave to paint daisies upon a cotton/nylon blended canvas.

                        The open bottom allowing a level of freedom my nether regions had never known - like a baby bird escaping its prison nest on the wings of flight.

                        Despite this apparent apparel awakening, my transformation was not complete until the mortician accidentally dropped granny.

                        Her geriatric body clumped hard against the cracked tile floor as the effects of rigor mortis had stiffened her old lady lumps. Then, as some type of ocular swan song, her glass eye popped out of socket and rolled ominously towards my feet.

                        It was at this moment that the musky air of the morgue combined with the spin-cycle rumbling of Taco Bell in my belly to produce a waterfall of vomit that covered the front of my new sundress like a bizarro baby bib.

                        The puke path crusted over and my granny’s glass eye waded in a 7-layer burrito puddle. My life path was set.

                        The plot was simple. I’d hide in the bushes of a retirement home and wait for an old lady to go for a walk. The moment I got a whiff of moth balls or a glimpse of walker, I barf on my dress and giggle like a fat kid with a cupcake.

                        Unfortunately, the local police were unsupportive of my golden aged upchuck ambitions and banned me from all of the best spots - bingo night, the church rectory and of course - meetings for Daughters of the American Revolution.

                        So I took a job with a motorized wheelchair company but to my dismay, the clientele consisted mostly of old dudes. I couldn’t muster up bile to fill my mouth let alone unleash a healthy hurl. Thus, my lovely flower sundress remained unstained.

                        Until, I met Gertie.

                        Four foot nine with a crooked spine - cataracts and heart attacks. A tuft of blue hair lay atop her soft scalp like cotton candy on a cantaloupe. A few stray strands of facial hair hung from her chin like Shaggy with the breath of Scooby Doo. A steady diet of gin and cat food left her figure bloated and uneven – with breasts hanging like two condoms filled with cheese wiz. Her varicose veins were a road map to an upset stomach.

                        It was love at first spew and my dress had the partially digested food trail to prove it. Our relationship blossomed once she mistook me for her grandson and I mistook her pockmarks for vomit targets. I remember our fateful first encounter outside the courthouse as I patiently waited for jury duty volunteers…

                        “Would you like a Werther’s Original, Ralphie?” Gertie offered like a maternal apparition.

                        “Hrrrrrruuuuuggggghhhhhhhh,” I yelped as I filled my dress and the nearest potted plant with a thick substance that can only be described as gummy bear salsa.

                        Our atypical love affair lasted weeks. She regurgitated boring stories about her spoon collection and I tossed cookies on her afghans. Some days I would forget to eat and end up dry heaving during intense crochet sessions but Gertie didn’t mind. She just chugged along, feeding me hard candy and knitting a yarn sick bag.

                        Then, I received a phone call that changed everything.

                        “Hello, this is Gertie’s caregiver,” the shaky voice on the other line muttered.

                        “Oh my God – she’s dead isn’t she?” I gripped my sundress as the words slipped out of my mouth like a sloppy joe river at a Barry Manilow concert.

                        “No, she’s fine – unlike you…you sick creep! Stay away from Gertie or I’ll call the cops!” the woman demanded shakily. I could hear the tired, wavering sound in her voice and she sounded old - very old.

                        I reached into my gut and prepared for an epic heave. But it never came. The floodgates were closed, the retch river - dammed. There would be no more senior spit up moments without Gertie. Her caregiver played judge, jury and executioner that day with eternal nausea and a starch-fresh sundress as my life sentence.

                        The following week consisted of listless wandering with an empty heart and a full belly. Sure, I frolicked through a field or two, holding my dress open like Julie Andrews in the Sound of Music but it couldn’t compare to the ecstasy of old lady barfing.

                        Finally, the dress was ruined. Repeated baths of stomach acid upon its delicate fibers left my beloved garment in total disrepair.

                        No more flower sundress. No more puking. It was time to man up.

                        So I traded the dress in for a pair of my grandpa’s old knickers and flipped on the boob tube to relax. Suddenly, a nature program about Otters filled my mind with wonderment and my pants with pee.

                        With soaking wet knickers and my life back on track, I was headed for the Zoo. I was going to find an otter and I was going to wet my knickers. Everything finally made sense.

                        All I need are my Grandpa’s knickers and some water to pee.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love

                          Some of the imagery was delightfully disgusting.
                          "Mindless killing doesn't do a lot for me anymore." - Sampson

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love (new story)

                            Thanks!

                            Anyone else read it?

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Re: Short Story I Wrote about octopus love (new story)

                              Gummy Bear Salsa almost sounds like an interesting thing to eat.

                              Comment

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