A Future We'd Like To See 1.29 - The Christmas Episode By Twoflower (Copyright 1993) DISCLAIMER : This is quite clearly the most tasteless, gory, violent, repulsive thing I have ever written. It has everything a teenage slasher film has except the sex scenes, and that's just because I couldn't find a good place to put them in. It's really not suitable for children, or even adults for that matter... but if you've got a sick sense of humor and have watched the network holiday specials a few too many times, maybe it's time for you to read something like this. Thou hast been warned. * The ancient 8-track player crackled to life, as its play button was nudged by a nearby chunk of a store-window dummy. The archaic playback machine sputtered and whirred as the ground shook. "I'm, dreeeeaaming," it sang, "Of a white, christma--" It was silenced by gunfire. Chrissy ducked behind the counter as a line of stray machine gun fire ripped up the holiday glove displays. Screaming and covering her head, she crawled as far back into the checkout area as she could, avoiding the broken glass. "THIS YOUR FIRST YEAR?" the other clerk yelled at her from the other side of the tiny crawlspace under the cash register. "YES!" Chrissy yelled. "SO?" "DON'T PANIC," he shouted back, in a rather calm way. "IT'S LIKE THIS EVERY YEAR. HERE, LEMME MAKE IT A BIT QUIETER..." There was a scream of pain as another crazed shopper was plugged mercilessly with hot lead. Three shoppers immediately pounced on the corpse, looting it of gifts. The clerk shrugged and opened up a secret hatch under the counter, tapping a red button. An impenetrable force field popped up around the counter and behind-counter area, as Chrissy could see by the various bullets and blood stains sticking to thin air. The clerk frowned, and tapped another button, silencing out all the noise. "Much better," he said. "That should hold through the night. So this is your first pre-christmas sale?" "Err... yeah," Chrissy said. "Well, looks like you've come out of it better than most of us," the clerk shrugged. Chrissy looked down at herself. Her nice department store uniform was ripped and stained, her blouse missing a button and torn by weed whacker from the hardware department. Her normally every-hair-in-its-place look was now suitable for setting on fire and calling out to shepherds. Of course, the clerk was worse. Most of his tie had been shredded, along with his shirt. One shoe was missing and his pants had a few gashes, along with some makeshift bandages. Despite this, he was still grinning. "Come on, it's safe to stand up," he said, getting to his feet. "They can't get at us now. We're lucky we managed to get back here in time." "Why... what..." Chrissy stammered, looking at the violence and looting going on around her. "It's always this way around the holidays," the clerk shrugged as another arm hit the shield, followed a second later by the other one. "You know, last minute gift purchases, shortages of stock, rare items, the usual. Heck, I remember when they brought back Cabbage Patch Kids. We were wading around ankle-deep in fluid the next day." "How could people be so... so... CRUEL to each other?" Chrissy said, horrified at the insane shopper slugfest going on outside their shelter. "It's a sale," the clerk replied. "Oh," she commented, trying to look away from the carnage. "Say, umm, what's your name?" "How long HAVE you worked here?" "Oh, about three weeks." "Fair enough. I've been on vacation that long. Name's Jobe. What's yours?" "Chrissy," the girl replied, shaking hands with the boy. A bit of unknown stain was exchanged in the process. "Didn't they give you any training?" Jobe asked. "You know, the usual? Customer support, buyer satisfaction, small arms, wilderness survival?" "Well... no." "Humph. Cost cutting," Jobe humphed. "In my day, they'd have you out in the woods with nothing but a knife and a compass a good fifty days before today. The lucky ones that came back were usually hardened enough to handy the Holiday Shopping Nightmare. It's times like these that really try a man's soul... so how about some yogurt?" "Excuse me?" "Well, it looks like most of the battle is moving down to the audio/video department. We could always go to the Frozen Yogurt And/Or Croissant Shoppe on the lower level and wait it out. Unless they burned it down like they did last year." "Is it safe?" "Sure," Jobe lied. "Here, I've got a few bullet proof vests and some kevlar under the counter. Just a stroll in the park. I doubt anybody's planning on legitimately purchasing anything, so there's no need for us to hang around." "Surely SOMEONE has called the police!" Chrissy exclaimed. "I mean, this, this is MADNESS!" "Oh, the police are here," the clerk said. "See? There's Officer Wiggins beating up that working mother to get the Manly Morphing Energy Cowboys Action Playset. Boy, it's the last one left. I wonder if he brought his nightstick to defend it." * Jobe casually walked around the gunfights and beatings with a whistle and a smile, as he and his frazzled companion waltzed on in their sturdy armor. Chrissy counted at least six different local POW laws being broken just walking down the east wing of the mall. "WHERE'S THAT DIRECTORY?" Jobe shouted. "IS THE YOGURT SHOPPE ON THE FIRST OR SECOND FLOOR? I KEEP FORGETTING." "WHAT?" "DUCK!!!" Jobe shouted, jumping to the ground. Pausing only momentarily, Chrissy followed, as a surface to air missile slammed into left door of Herbert's Sporting Goods Store. There were a few screams of agony, the sound of a few thousand basketballs overheating and exploding, and the faint smell of burning flesh. "THE JANITORIAL DEPARTMENT'S GONNA LOVE THIS," Jobe laughed. "HMM. IS THAT A BLOCKADE UP AHEAD?" "LOOKS LIKE PILED UP OFFICE FURNITURE TO ME," Chrissy replied (loudly). "EEK!" "WHAT?" "SOMEONE'S TRYING TO STICK A KNIFE IN MY BACK!" "HA. THE ARMOR'LL PREVENT THAT. JUST IGNORE HIM, HE'LL GO AWAY WHEN HE GETS BORED. HMM. WE'LL HAVE TO TAKE THE ELEVATOR." There was a dull WHUMPH, and the elevator exploded into flames, littering bags of musical Battlestar Metallica ornaments over the fountain. Shoppers charged like lemmings on crack, clawing over each other to grab them. "WELL, LOOKS LIKE THE ELEVATOR'S OUT OF ORDER," Jobe sighed (loudly). "THIS IS NO FUN. WHADDYA SAY WE JUST GO HOME?" "WHAT?" "I SAID, LET'S JUST GO HOME!" "SOUNDS FINE HERE!" Chrissy said, as the man trying to stab her got bored and left. "ALRIGHT. YOU STAY HERE, I JUST GOTTA GET A BABY BURPEE DOLL FOR MY DAUGHTER. BE RIGHT BACK," he said, pulling out a large bowie knife and holding it between his teeth. He flashed a thumbs up and dived into the fray, swimming through the sea of shoppers towards the Toys Be We store. Chrissy wiped away some vomit from a nearby bench and had a seat, examining the lovely holiday displays instead of the beatings in front of her. Only about three of them weren't on fire, however. A Kiddie Hovertank from the top floor soared over the handrail, spinning out of control and exploding violently against the wall ten feet away. The blast threw Chrissy off of her seat and into the fountain, where she gurgled a bit before finding something hard and lumpy in her hand someone had dropped in the fountain. Pulling herself to the surface, she examined it. "GIFT CERTIFICATES?" she wondered aloud. The entire wing fell silent, as a few thousand pairs of eyes turned on her. Not on her, specifically, but on the plastic gift tokens valid through next year. ShopperVision(tm) only cared about these; Chrissy herself registered as just an obstacle in the way to the tokens. Several dozen shoppers pounced on her, displacing a great deal of water. All Chrissy could remember was the sight of twenty eyes, wide in insanity, gazing down in capitalistic greed as various blades, blunt objects, and bullets were slammed into her. * Her vision recovered before her brain did, which is fortunate, because the sights around her weren't pretty. At first she thought she had gone deaf, but this wasn't the case. There simply wasn't any sounds to be heard. All around her lay the corpses of the dead, with their bloody bags (now empty, as no gift is laid to waste) clutched in iron grips of death. Sunlight was streaming in from the overhead windows, and the muzak could faintly be heard playing a strangled version of 'Jingle Bells'. Church bells from across town could be heard ringing in blissful harmony. It was Christmas morning! "Rise and shine, kiddo!" Jobe said, moving into her frame of vision. "Boy, that took awhile. One Baby Burpee left in stock. Had to chase this guy halfway around town, but I finally got it," he grinned, showing her the somewhat battered doll. It burped. "Gurgle," she gurgled. "Don't try to move," Jobe said, applying more bandages to her. "You're lucky all the healthkits weren't purchased. You're really quite a mess. Had to pump the water out of your lungs, stop the excess bleeding, and all that... took two kits or so to patch you up when I found you here a few hours ago. Don't worry, the store's medical plan will pay for resettings, transfusions, plastic surgery, etc. No need for alarm. Just keep breathing. Say, you know what the funny bit is?" Chrissy nodded, head splashing against the red pool she lay in. "You're in better shape than I was after my first christmas here." * o/~ Should all aquantance be forgot, Somethingorother, aud long sang... o/~ Seasons greetings from us here in the future we'd like to see, and remember, there's only twenty more chopping days until christmas! And if you're the kind of person who took this story serious in any way whatsoever, you really need to get out more often! o/~ Should all aquantance be forgot, Somethingorother, aud long sang. o/~