Epilogus (e-pi-lo’-gus): Providing an inference of what is likely to follow.
Santa was coming to town. He knows if I’ve been bad or good. “Good” was the medium of exchange for good, high-end gifts. I had expectations. They were low.
You’ve probably figured it out: I was going to get the same shit for Christmas as I did every year. I had the crap piled in my bedroom closet. I had 9 pairs of socks, all of them with weird Nordic snowflake patterns. I had two calculators with giant buttons. One of the calculators was modeled after Tweety Bird, the cartoon character. The perfect gift for Son of Nerd—the Prince of Nerdville, home of the nerds pounding on their calculators and twisting their Rubic’s Cubes all day long, picking their noses, and polishing their mood rings.
The worst were the books with stupid titles like Republic, Tom Sawyer, and Clockwork Orange—the stupidest title of all. I immediately threw the books in my closet along with the other crap. I couldn’t picture myself sitting in a chair staring at a book. What a waste of time when I could be playing with tarballs I made in the gutter on hot days, or digging for treasure down by the Passaic River where my Uncle Buzz told me pirates buried their treasure on the way back from New York.
What I really wanted was a pellet gun and a “Saucy Susan Doll.” My reason for wanting a pellet gun almost goes without saying! I wanted to shoot things! The neighborhood squirrels loomed large on my hit list. I had a plan for baiting them with peanuts outside my bedroom window. After squirrels, it was streetlights. It was like shooting out stars—I could kill the Big Dipper! Ha ha!
I had discovered Saucy Susan in my big brother’s dresser. I wouldd look through his stuff every month or so—looking for things I could incriminate him with. Since pot had been legalized, there wasn’t anything much I could look for. I would just leave it to chance. It was by chance that Saucy Susan appeared. I pulled too hard on a drawer and it came out of the dresser. Behind where it had been pushed in there was a rolled up flesh-colored vinyl object. When I pulled it out, it unrolled. It was a deflated naked woman. I found her nozzle and blew her up. I was stunned by what I saw.
I rolled her back up and put her back in her hiding place. I asked my brother about her. Initially he was mad because I’d been ransacking his room again. Then, he opened up and told me all about his relationship with Saucy Susan. It was lurid and weird—just what I wanted at that point in my life.
So, I told Willow Tree Mall Santa I wanted a pellet gun and a Saucy Susan doll for Christmas. After I was done talking to Santa, he called my parents over and they had a talk. Two days later, I met Dr. Rancho for the first time. She is my therapist.
Through it all, I didn’t rat out my big brother. He’s the weird one.
Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu.
Daily Trope is available in an early edition on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.