“Where are my pantyhose, Mary?” I hollered across the house to the fiery redhead who’d be my wife, if I’d the balls to marry her. I continued flinging things in a fevered search, waiting for a reply. She never answers when I holler, and doesn’t come when called, but she knows a trick or two, and on Friday nights, if I’m lucky, she makes me howl at the moon.
                              
                              A life of crime ain’t always easy, but we get by.
                              
                              “Where’s my pistol? I can’t rob anyone without a pistol. Am I supposed to point my dick at them?”
                              
                              “No, that’s too small.” she said.
                              
                              “Oh, you’re funny. I know I left it right here.”
                              
                              “If it was up your ass, you’d know where it was.”
                              
                              “I already checked there, lovey-doll.”
                              
                              “Oh? Then you probably found your brains too.”
                              
                              I didn’t bother to respond. There’s no way to win, and besides, it was Friday evening. I didn’t want to take any chances. She might get mad, and not do that thing she does so well; I was feeling frisky, and the full moon was due.
                              
                              “Here!” she said, handing me a set of her lacy panties fresh off the clothesline. They were still damp. “Put these over your head.”
                              
                              “I still need a pistol.”
                              
                              She handed me a toy gun left behind by a kid we’d kidnapped for ransom a while back. The little pecker had drawn dick and ball pictures all over the walls I’d just painted. He kicked, and bit, and spit, and called me names. Finally, I took him back for free. I didn’t even stop the car to let him out. I just pushed him and watched him bounce into his driveway in the cracked rear view.
                              
                              “That’ll do.” I said, agreeably, “Thank you, honeybee.”
                              
                              I sped off into the evening, headed for the liquor store. In the lot, I put the panties over my head, backwards. Peering through the lace-flower ass, the world became silky silhouettes.
                              
                              The Oriental clerk laughed when I walked through the door, toy gun pointed, and stumbling, nearly blind with lacy panties on my head. Then he karate chopped me. I never saw it coming.
                              
                              When I came to, Mary was bailing me out of jail. She looked angry. The moon had already fallen, and Friday night was gone. I howled anyway, and she slugged me, hard.
                                      
                                          
                                   
                                              YOU ARE READING
That isn't funny, at all
HumorThis collection contains assorted humorous prose, and perhaps some humorous poems if I'm in the mood, bearing in mind that this collection may not be funny, at all.
 
                                               
                                                  