T- w w_ v w w qw qw w W U 2B - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 21, 2004 Random professes ove for Special K The Michigan Dail nofactzonelshort fiction HONEYSUCKLE B~ J'ORAN By Doug Wernert Daily TV/New Media Editor The Michigan Daily: Hi, is Lauren there? Random: Yes. TMD: Hey, what's up? I'm calling from The Michigan Daily and you've been selected to do this week's Ran- dom Student Interview. R: Sweet! TMD: Yeah, do you got a few min- utes? R: Sure. TMD: All right, first off: How was your fall break? R: It was fabulous. TMD: What did you do? R: Just hung out with my family and went shopping and ate a lot of food. TMD: Did you make any of the food that you ate? R: Yes, I did. TMD: Did you bake a pie? R: No, I made a cake actually. Choc- olate chip. TMD: Ooohh. R: It was very good. TMD: Did you go on any haunted hayrides or haunted houses or stuff like that? R: No, I didn't. TMD: Some of them are pretty scary. I don't go on them because I'm afraid of ...tractors. R: Hahaha, you're afraid of trac- tors? TMD: Yeah, little fear. First ques- tion: Who's scarier: Mini-Me or the Oompa-Loompas? R: The Oompa-Loompas. TMD: Because of that song? R: Yeah, I think it's maybe the orange face and the green hair ... I don't know ... I've always been a little bit scared of them. TMD: Yeah, they should show that instead of "Halloween" or "Friday the 13." Just show the Oompa-Loompas and I wouldn't sleep at night. R: Hahaha. TMD: Next question. Who's the bet- ter captain: Captain Crunch or Captain Morgan? R: Um ... Captain Morgan. I really don't like Captain Crunch. TMD: What's your favorite kind of cereal. R: I'm a big fan of Special K. TMD: Special K?!? That's like the blandest cereal you can buy! R: Haha, I like it! It's good. TMD: So why not Total? R: I don't think I've ever tried Total. TMD: You should try. It's got all those vitamins and nutrients and stuff. R: Maybe the next time I do some grocery shopping, I'll pick up some Total. TMD: And then you'll think of me? R: Yep. TMD: Aww, you're too kind. Have. you ever seen that show "Pimp My Ride" on MTV? R: I have. TMD: Now if Xzibit knocked on your door, would you freak out and be like "OH MY GOD!" and then hug him and knock him down and stuff? R: No, I don't think I would jump on Xzibit and hug him. I would be happy, but I wouldn't freak out. TMD: Are you scared of Xzibit? R: Maybe a little. I'm afraid of a lot of things. TMD: Do you have a car that's bad enough to be on "Pimp My Ride?" R: I have a '94 Geo, so I think yes, I do. TMD: Do you think they'd be able to pimp that out? R: They could try. I'd like to see that. TMD: Do you think there would be room for a Jacuzzi in the back? R: Maybe if they expanded it a little bit, maybe. TMD: Just a little bit. Are you excit- ed for Halloween? R: I'm very excited. TMD: Do you have a costume picked out yet? R: Nope, I haven't decided yet. TMD: Last year, I wasn't going to dress up, but I ended up dressing up as a woman. R: Really? TMD: Yeah, it was uh ... quite excit- ing to see. R: I'm glad it worked out for you. TMD: Oh yeah, it was great. So no ideas yet? R: Um, no not yet. TMD: You're not going to go with the generic Scream costume, are you? R: Oh no no no. TMD: What about Jessica Simp- son? R: Hmmm ... I don't know if I could pull that off. TMD: What about Ashley Simpson? That could be easier. R: Maybe. TMD: Do you do pranks on people for Halloween?. R: No, not usually. TMD: Has anyone ever pranked you? R: Not for Halloween. For April Fool's Day, a couple of my friends told everyone they hooked up and freaked us out and we thought they were going out. It was all a big joke. TMD: Wow, that sounds pretty scary. R: Yeah. TMD: Do you still go around and collect candy from people? R: No, not anymore. TMD: Didn't you used to hate those people who gave away pennies instead of candy? R: I never got pennies. I used to get apples and health food and stuff. TMD: I got pennies every year. It was real depressing to come home and find out I got 17 cents. R: So not worth the time. TMD: Exactly. What's the better name for an alcoholic drink: A Suck Me Beautiful or a Screaming Orgasm? R: I'd go with the Screaming Orgasm. TMD: Yeah, that would be great. Has anyone ever said to you "I'll give you a Screaming Orgasm?" R: Haha, I don't think anyone has ever said that to me. TMD: Has anyone ever said to you: "Suck Me Beautiful?" R: Haha, no. TMD: Haha, you should try that sometime. What do you think will come back in style first: the coonskin cap or the toga? R: I hope neither. TMD: Why not the toga? R: Well, you could work that for Halloween. That would be acceptable. Definitely not the coonskin cap. TMD: But Daniel Boone wore one. Or was that Davy Crockett? R: I really don't know. I don't think anyone should strive to look like either of them. TMD: Not a fan of the "Explorers' of the Wilderness," are you? Who was a better old guy mentor: Mr. Feeny or Mr. Miyagi? R: Mr. Feeny. TMD: Not Mr. Miyagi? He could teach you all those karate moves and get his house redone at the same time. R: I just love "Boy Meets World." TMD: So do I. Did you think Cory and Topanga were a better couple than Zack and Kelly? R: Yes, they were cuter. Maybe a little bit more realistic. TMD: And Topanga never cheated on Cory like Kelly did! R: Exactly! TMD: That was horrible. When they broke up on Halloween, I almost cried. R: I'm sorry. TMD: I got over it, though. They got back together. R: Of course they did. TMD: Who's a cooler guy named Toby: Tobey Maguire or Toby Keith? R: Tobey Maguire. TMD: Yeah, gotta go with Spider- man. What's a better ode to an animal: "Who Let The Dogs Out" or "What's New, Pussycat?" R: I can't say I like either of those songs. TMD: Have you ever heard "What's New, Pussycat?" R: I'm sure I have heard it at some point. TMD: It goes like this: (singing) What's new, pussycat? Whoa whoa whoaaaaaa. R: Haha, thank you. Yeah, I guess "Who Let The Dogs Out" is a little bit more fun. TMD: Just because my singing was that bad? R: Yes, that's exactly it. TMD: Ouch. R: I'm just kidding, you know that. TMD: Yeah, I hope so. Maybe now you'll never get your ride pimped. R: Haha, all because of that? TMD: Yeah, me and Xzibit are boys. Which pet would you rather have: Lassie or Curious George? R: Curious George. TMD: Yeah, unless you were stuck in a well, Lassie couldn't really do a lot for you. And Curious George ... I mean ... R: A smart little monkey. TMD: And he had The Man in the Yellow Hat. Do you think The Man in the Yellow Hat never got any women because he wore the yellow hat? R: Haha, it's quite possible. TMD: Do you think he should have wore something else? R: Maybe like a normal baseball hat. TMD: Yeah, like a backwards hat. He could wear it sideways. R: Yeah, The Man in the Yellow Hat would go all ghetto. TMD: Do you own an itsy bitsy teeny weeny yellow polka dot bikini. R: I do not. Yellow is not really my color. TMD: What about polka dot? R: Maybe. TMD: What about the Itsy Bitsy Teeny Weeny part? R: I do own a bikini. TMD: Is it a two-piece or a one- piece? R: Two. TMD: Oh, because they don't make one piece, do they? Right! Well, thanks for doing this and look for it in Weekend on Thursday. R: Thank you. MAGAZINE woke to a crisp spring wind streaming through my window that carried with it the smell of honeysuckle and dew-covered grass. The songs of mourning doves and blackbirds mixed about me with the aroma of my father's Saturday pancakes. For nine months, I had anticipated the last day of school with an impatience I was hardly able to bear. The spring had warmed the air since March, and every day that passed was one less spent in school and one closer to climbing trees and swimming. Coiled like a set spring ready to burst, I laid therefor a long time in reverence of the first day of summer vacation. The summers were the same every year. In our neighborhood, there was an inseparable group of five of us that would spend it together fish- ing, playing baseball, and forming epic games of hide-and-go-seek. In the cold of winter, we had dreamt of these months and their adventures with such concentration that even when snow was piled two feet high outside, we would talk about the next July as if it were the present. We met early that morning on the stoop of my front porch. Our plan had already been discussed, devel- oped, and prepared for - we were to build a raft to drift us down a nearby river. We gathered out tools, lumber, and designs and headed out to an abandoned parking lot where the building site was located. As we pushed our full wagons down the sidewalk we were interrupted. Mr. McCormick had moved into a house a few down He was quiet and middle-aged, keeping mostly to his garden and back porch. Wearing the same faded denim overalls that scarcely stretched over his lengthy legs, he was always reposed in a laid-back position. Whether he sat or stood, his hands were set with one resting on the top of his large stomach, as if he were satisfied by a large meal, and the other lodged deep in his pocket. Sometimes the hand he kept in his pocket would come out slowly and comb his long, rigid beard with its fingers. I only saw him once every few days rooting up his soil for planting in the spring, but when I did, Ifelt awkward; he would stare down at me, waving slowly for a long time. "Good morning, boys!" he shout- ed after us. He stood waving as we pushed our carts past his garden. None of us said anything or made even a gesture in reply; we were all uncomfortable from his zeal- ous wave. We soon passed his yard though and, absorbed with our raft, quickly forgot about Mr. McCor- mick. Weeks after summer had begun, our project was near completion. We had finished everything except assembling a steering system, rud- der, and a false mast. The day that it was river-worthy was swiftly approaching, and our imaginations were spurred by the adventures it would certainly bring. Most afternoons grew too hot to endure, so we would quit the day's work and spend time examining and admir- ing our progress. On those days, we would return to my yard and play hide-and-go-seek wellX into the evening. Though we played regularly near his house and garden, we hadn't Once, while we were playing, I hid in a honeysuckle bush below one of his windows and thought I saw him peering down at me from it. Frightened, I looked away and crouched tighter than before. A moment later, I looked up to his window and saw no one - I thought I had only imagined him. One afternoon, the heat had relented to a tolerable level, so we labored later than we normally would have to finish the raft. By dusk, the mast was up, the rud- der was working, and our labor was completed. To celebrate the achievement of our raft, the five of us sprinted to my yard to play hide- and-go-seek. The sun was already beginning to set, and our curfews were approaching quickly. Regard- less, we played several rounds - our excitement for the raft was too much to swallow by going indoors and waiting for the next day. I ran to hide in the spot I had used days prior under Mr. McCormick's window. Crouching deep inside the honeysuckle bush, I was certain I couldn't be seen by anyone out- side. I hid quietly, patiently enjoy- ing the cool night and the sweet aroma of honeysuckle around me. Several minutes passed, and I rel- ished in my isolation. While wait- ing, I reached up and pulled down a cluster of blossoms to suck but only tasted a few flowers before I heard steps outside the bush. Drop- ping the blossoms, I pushed myself further back and remained there as calmly as I could. From under the bush's canopy I could make out someone walking close towards it, and I stiffened in fear of being caught. y~txtThe legs 4>neared the 4 .bush, and as they Z e came into my vision, I was shocked to see the faded overalls of Mr. McCormick hanging over his old work boots. Fear began to swell inside my throat when he stopped and began to crouch to his knees. moved swiftly away from him, an slamming into the outside wall his. house, I began to move upwar against it. His hands landed on th ground, his beard emerged fro under the bush, and the rest of h face appeared before me. Iscreame and abruptly a filthy handkerchi was shoved deep inside my mou until I gagged. I tried to escai from under the bush by clinging the brick wall but only ripped dow the excess mortar into my eyes. i hands were around my waist, grip ping it so forcefully, my legs we locked, and he slammed me again the brick again and again until quit trying to break free. Once I la motionless, he tore off my shorts at with one hand held my face dow on the clump of honeysuckle blo soms I had dropped. Their sugar l4 from mine early ast winter. -"-,"-NM: RN seen Mr. McCormick since our first encounter weeks ago. kMN Writers: Jennie Adler, Steve Cotner, Jordan Henry, Punit Mattoo, Evan McGarvey, Shubra Ohri, Doug Wernert Photo Editors: Elise Bergman, Tony Ding, Ryan Weiner Photographers: Forest Casey, Alexander Dziadosz, Shubra Ohri, Ali Olsen, Peter Schottenfels, David Tuman Cover Art: Elise Bergman Arts Editors: Jason Roberts, Managing Editor Adam Rottenberg, Alex Wolsky, Editors Editor inChief: Jordan Schradyi ' xIn.i ALI Book trip Subject to change and availability. Taxes and other applicable fees not included. Fares include roundtrip airfare from Detroit. Prices are based on quad occupancy. flccq 7n ..: 'N.% 9 i : c.tta x xF C Can( 7r fe9 '4 1218 S. University Ave. (734)998.0200 I S