Archive for April, 2026

Storytime: Dough Nuts.

Wednesday, April 29th, 2026

David Wurston Quarters – son of Gnorman Wurston Quarters, son of Baobab Wurston Quarters, heir to the ‘donut throne,’ multibillionaire, and master of ten thousand terrible little outlets – slouched in a chair that wasn’t as comfortable as it looked and listened to someone who’d paid real money for a real degree they had to do real work to really earn tried to explain how he could make more money.

“So you put a burger between the donuts, is that it?” he interrupted. Manners were a sign of respect. David had last said ‘please’ at age four, and the memory was not a fond one. “We don’t sell burgers. How the hell is this supposed to work? It’s stupid. You’re stupid.”
“The ‘burger,’” said the bedraggled dweeb standing at the far end of the table, lost and alone before a slideshow, “is comprised of the same sausage patties we sell inside breakfast wraps.” She took a deep breath, the way people who are repeating themselves must. “Putting it inside the donuts creates a unique variant on the so-called ‘Luther burger,’ and-”

“Wait, some guy called Luther already came up with this idea? God, I hate lawsuits. They’re boring. Make this bozo go away and ruin her career a little, I don’t care how.”
David sank further back into his chair and picked at his eyelid. He hated product pitch sessions as much as lawsuits, but there was no escaping this one. Holey Donuts was in big, big, big trouble: it was only making the same amount of money it had before, which was as good as losing all its money immediately. More gimmicks. More ads. More eyeballs. More to make more, that’s what made things safe. “Send in the next chump,” he mumbled to the large, unpleasant men in sunglasses he employed.

They sent in the next chump, who was slim and smiling and moved like a greased snake and walked right up to him – not the projector! To him! The hell! – and said, confident and unstressed: “donut holes.”
“Huh?” said David, who was still trying to figure out how this had happened. “We already do those.”
“Nah,” said the chump, flicking his fingers as if shedding water. “You sell little round lumps of dough. You need to sell the REAL donut holes. Sell the hole from a donut’s center. Its soul. Its essence. Fry them. Box them. Bag them. Bill them. ‘True Donut Holes.’ Never been imagined, never been done, never been dreamed. And only sold at Holey Donuts.” His smile slid a few degrees west. “’For A Limited Time.’”

David’s own mouth was open, he realized. Wide. Round. Holy.

“Damn,” he said. “Make it happen.”
“Absolutely.”

“Not you. Someone I can pay less. Thanks for your time see you later.”

The smile moved around a little farther. “I’ll leave my card at the door,” it said. And was gone.

***

David called the number on the back of the card at nine AM the next day.

“What can I do for you, mister David?”
“How do you sever the hole from the center of a donut?” he demanded.

“Why, that’s simple,” said the chump through the soft static of his smile. “Simply make a donut, pop out the center like usual, then immediately pop out everything else. Catch it off guard. Do it in a temperature around eh….one hundred fifty kelvin. That should keep it stable.”

“Good,” said David. And hung up.

He called back six hours later. “Hey, how do you fry these?”
“Something with a very high smoke point. Refined safflower, I’d say. Immediately after separation from the everything else.”
“Great.” Click.

Ten minutes after that: “how do you put them in a box?”
“Tongs, made from alloys resistant to thermal shock – tungsten, maybe. Ask your engineers. And it should be done blindfolded.”

“Bye.” Click.

At ten PM: “Hey. What did you call these?”
“True Donut Holes. Tagline – ‘Only Sold at Holey Donuts: For A Limited Time.’”

“Great. Hey. I’m not paying you.”
“Mister David,” smiled the phone, “I’m not in this for the money.”

David Wurston Quarters grimaced and dropped the phone. “Throw it in the trash,” he told a nearby large unpleasant man in sunglasses. “That stuff’s contagious.”

***

The factories had been built; the kitchens had been stocked, the math had been graphed, and – above all else – the ad copy was finally almost finished.

Now there sat before the chair of David Wurston Quarters a humble bag of lowest-possibly-bidder paper byproducts and resins, holding a logo-stamped box, holding six True Donut Holes. The first to be sampled in all the world. Cameras were pointed at the occasion, which made David irritated because they belonged to people he had to pay money to.

“You sure this’ll only take a minute?” he demanded of the nearest small unpleasant man in a suit. He looked like he could be a secretary or something.

“Just one bite for one photo for each of us,” he said. His smile was profound and warm and loving and David knew this guy had been working for him too long to give it. He should probably pin something on him later. “Fine,” he said. He tore open the bag, wrenched open the box, fumbled around inside until his fingers were in a shape that felt right, put it in his mouth, and shoved the box to the next suited man down the line.

He bit. Chewed. Swallowed.

“I can’t feel a damn thing,” he said. “Wow. People are going to pay us money for this. What a bunch of….”

“Sir?” asked the maybe-secretary. The nearest large unpleasant man in sunglasses unzipped the cardiac event bag.

“I remember the day I realized my mother would never love me for she could see both my father and herself in my face and she could never forgive either of them for what they had done,” said David. “I will never experience genuine love in my life and wouldn’t know what to do if it happened. It’s too late for me to change and too hard for me to bear not changing. I should’ve eaten one more time at the club down the road and it’s been out of business for thirty-seven years. I don’t like this chair and if I change it people’ll think I’m going crazy. I hate the pills I take but if I don’t take them I wake up at four AM to pee and I can’t fall back asleep without remembering my younger brother and what I did to him and so I take the pills and sleep through the night and I piss myself and I pretend it isn’t happening and when that doesn’t work I pretend I like it, I pretend I like to wake up stinking and chafed, and I hire people to change my laundry every day but I can still smell it as I go to bed and drift to sleep. I miss my dog.”

David reached up to his cheek and touched the wetness he felt there. “I regret all of it,” he said, with a little surprise.

Then he crumpled into a small vortex.

The large unpleasant men in sunglasses stood there, rendered smaller and more vulnerable absent their center of gravity. The one with the cardiac event bag looked at it, zipped it up again, then open, then up again.

“Who’s in charge now?” he asked.

The small man who wasn’t a secretary raised a slightly-shaking hand. “I remember my cat Mittens,” he mumbled.

In the ensuring series of events, the box went missing. It was probably empty by then.

***

Billiam Pat McKrubbler laid his head on the table on the thick lush piles of double-sided coloured graphs and groaned. “No, that’s dumb. You’re dumb! We already MADE an inside-out chicken burger. Go away! Doesn’t anyone have any new ideas?”

A slim, smiling hand was raised halfway down the table.

“Go ahead,” he grunted.

“Mister Billiam,” said the man through a smile that tweaked gently as he wore it, ”you ever thought of selling REAL Buffalo Wings?”

Storytime: April Bird Report: North-Oreweald Point.

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2026

Well, it’s the busiest time of the year again! March was a little disappointing, but historically that’s meant a big April so let’s all hope for the best on this liveblog!

American kestrel

Direct sighting of a couple in a tree down by the edge of Oreweald Park. Quiet and wary but well-fed. Good for them!

American robin

So many of them out and about I lost count just on the way down to the lakefront; the flooding’s been lousy for worms but good for them.

Black-capped chickadee

Only saw twelve but heard a lot more, especially in the thickets by cooling tower three. If these are returning nesters rather than naïve newcomers, we could be looking at a significant shift in the local toxicology! Still, best not count our chickadees before they’ve hatched!

Blue Jay

Found a loose feather on the old trail by the exclusion fence, caught on the barbed wire. Hope they’re doing okay – we need more corvids! Not sure why they’re still so standoffish, if they’re smart enough to be wary, they should be smart enough to read the papers. It’s safer than it’s been in years!

Canada goose

Sixteen nesting on the old breakwater down by the outflow. Poor things.

Common raven

Old Toby still perched above the head manager’s office, clean as clockwork. Asked him my name and he said ‘Doom.’ Never change, Old Toby!

Great RE:gret

Performed my annual check-in on our nesting pair and can report that they are still resetting every sixteen minutes forty-nine seconds seventy-eight milliseconds on the dot, pushing back any hypothesized ‘half-life’ for the site 53-D chronodegeneration another century. A warm round of applause for Jackie and Dion – spending fifty years fetching sticks for a nest that will never be completed is a powerful metaphor for parenthood!

Herring gall

Saw four down by the old park boat launch, but there are definitely more around somewhere, because the ooze patches on the concrete have six distinct shades! We could be looking at a case of fresh mitosis here, and the new galls are hiding somewhere out of sight until they decide on how many limbs they want.

Mallard

Three off the overgrown beach, enjoying all the high water from the late melt. More to come, hopefully – the duckling survival rate has really gone up since the gnarlpike went extinct three summers back (RIP Lousie McKenny, Dougie Jimson, Stewart Brinkles, and ‘Wedge’ O’Connor).

Megadee

‘Granny Greycap’ is back! After going MIA for almost a decade, the great lady of North-Oreweald has returned to her sentinel post atop the easternmost pylon – and lest anyone doubt her identity, she still bears control rod #59 clutched in the remains of her left talon! All hail the return of the Sceptre’d Queen – but please, disable your flashes when recording her (newcomers: look up the ‘daylight bombings of ’98’).

Militant nuthatch

As I peered cautiously over the ragged and rust-corroded lip of what had once been the central radar dome and beheld the gnarled and twisted form of that infamous spruce, my heart crawled up my throat by inches: the palisade had been breached, but from WITHIN – no squirrel’s work this. They had survived, and now they have made their opening play. The war will resume. Beware!

Mourning dove

Found three torn open in a little circle with their hearts missing – yikes! Pretty sure it’s not golden gorefinches (contents of the stomachs weren’t eaten, no sign of egg-shrapnel in chest cavities from the ejection of larval hatchlings) or bakerbirds (no evidence of ‘oven’ construction), but drawing a blank otherwise and gladly seeking input. Maybe a third case of dove psychomorphism?

Northern cardinal

No sign of the couple I saw in March up in the New Grove. The whole tree’s missing so it’s possible either the ground’s gotten unstable there or the quadrasloth is coming out of hibernation. Going to have to apply for permission to view the seismograph again to solve this one!

Prophetic loon

Heard a splash but no direct sighting. The scrawling on the beach looks like the Second Magus’s footwriting though – she’s a southpaw. If anyone wants to take a crack at decoding it, better you than me is all I’ll say! I don’t believe in that sort of thing (no offense).

Red-everything’d hawk

At least one has moved in judging by the state of the band stand’s rooftop and the pines on the hill. I know they’re not big fans of humans, but still, nobody put anything outside they don’t want dyed – no sense ‘painting the town red’!

Red-winged blackbird

Filling the trees by the old boardwalk and whistling their hearts out, bless them.

Sandputter

One’s already set up the green and the rough by the sandbox at the worker’s daycare, but only nine holes are planted so far, and just three (!) have actual fissile material in them. Quick construction and poor planning suggest a young male. You’ll get there buddy!

Tubist swan

No sighting but the filings in my teeth buzzed at just that right ultra-low frequency, you know? That and the sonically-liquified golden doodle I found are evidence enough for me! Best steer clear of the southern edge of the Point if you’re walking a dog or not in rigorous physical condition and wearing at least twenty+ kilos of extra flesh!

Venus flycatcher

Checked inside the old ‘hot labs’ and yep, ‘big snappy’ is still growing strong as ever! Their roots are well-nourished, their newest clutch of eggs (at least twelve!) is glossy, and the sap drooling out of their beaks to attract prey smells as sweet as maple syrup! They tried to bite my index finger off when I checked their reflexes, bless them.

Xenoraptor colossus aka ‘Barbara’s Dreadnought’

Almost fell into the nest while skirting around the exposed foundations of the central mess hall and by the curvature of the eggshell, violet edging of the featherings, and dismembered cow skeletons I am certain beyond a doubt it is BACK! No sign of the parents but it looks like there’s at least two hatchlings and they’re what you’ve really got to watf ghiuyuyuyuyuyuyuyuyuyuyuyuydsoaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

Storytime: The Maker of Fish.

Wednesday, April 15th, 2026

Four months and three days before his thirteenth birthday, Thimas was appointed the Maker of Fish for the long long Lanky River and all its tributaries and streams and rills.

He was of unprecedented age, questionable tutelage, and unknown enthusiasm, but there were none more qualified, principally because four months and four days before his thirteenth birthday the previous Maker of Fish had gotten drunk, stayed out late, and fallen headfirst into the Lanky, where a crawfish-catcher had found most of him the next morning.

So Thimas was woken up early by his aunt and uncle, dressed in ceremonial robes intended for someone who’d suffered at least two more growth spurts, handshaken by the mayor and the priestess and the hermit, and feasted on all the available forage of the season before he was taken to the dwelling of the Maker of Fish and – with many blessings, and much cheering, and great and generous hope – thrown inside.

The door clicked.

It was just a little after noon and he was all alone inside a house inhabited by the same old man for fifty years running, surrounded by half labeled jars and jugs and barrels of things to make fish with, half-shucked-free of ceremonial robes, and overfed on (by word of his guts) half-ripened roozberries. And it sounded like he’d just been locked inside.

First, Thimas permitted himself some small swearing. Second, he found an empty barrel and liberated a sleeve from his discarded robes. Third, he began inventory.

Jars of ink, for squid to fill their ink sacs with.

Iron files, for sharks to sharpen their teeth upon.

Dog tongues, for cods to speak cod latin with.

Wiring, for electric eels to run electric current through.

And more, and more, and more, and more, stacked in the crates on the shelves dangling from the ceiling in jars wrapped up in paper and stashed under the bed lashed together with twine and leaned against the walls and sealed in the big metal safe that said DO NOT EVER OPEN UNLESS YOU HAVE TO that the old Maker of Fish had pinched Thimas’s ear until it was throbbing red for asking about.

It took a lot to make fish.

Thimas rattled at the big metal safe’s handle for a bit. It was locked, and when he gave up the rattling continued.

“It’s locked,” he called out.
“Oh, sorry,” said the visitor in the insincere and hesitant voice of one who’d said those words too often and too lightly. “I’ll come back later.”
“No, I mean it’s locked on your side.”

“Oh sorry oh no oh dear,” click click, and in stooped Windy, six and a half foot of Windy, fisherman Windy, always first to the weirs and last to come home with a bag half full, with a bear’s face and a bear’s hair and the fishing ability of a limbless chicken.

He tried, Windy. He really did. But sometimes, the old Maker of Fish had muttered, trying meant trying something else.

“I’m very sorry, but I heard you are the Maker of Fish now, if that’s okay,” said Windy, shoulders visibly cringing inwards at the audacity of this statement.

“Yes,” said Thimas, who was hoping he’d tucked the (not quite empty anymore) barrel far enough into the corner that nothing would be said of it.

“Oh well, if it’s no trouble, I was wondering if it wouldn’t be too rude if I asked – no pressure – if it’d be alright if you could maybe consider possibly, if you feel like it, and not just for politeness’s sake, potentially… making some fish for me? I’m sorry it’s stupid I’ll go away sorry for bothering you never mind don’t worry about i-”

“What kind of fish?” asked Thimas, and caught by surprise mid-apology Windy said “trout” and became mortified.

“Trout,” said Thimas to himself. And he hunted through the creaking bookcase by the door where the handiest fish were kept close to hand, and in a truly huge tub that was unlabeled because its contents were so omnipresent and obvious he pulled out four handfuls

(the old Maker of Fish had used two, but his hands had been bigger)

of many-hued little painted clay-fired pellets, which he jammed into the pockets of his (slightly depleted) ceremonial robes and slung over his shoulder like a backpack because he already had perfectly good shorts on and thought it would be silly for the Lanky’s Maker of Fish to fall over and drown twice in two days.

Nobody paid any attention as Thimas walked down to the weirs. Everybody very definitely paid no attention. Nobody looked with their eyes one little bit.

Four handfuls, one after another at the edge of the pier. A deep breath before the first, a terrible urge to scratch your nose shoved away, and WHOOSH, high into the air, a spray, a swirl, an arc of glittering colours in the sun.

A rainbow plunged into the water, and it churned and lashed with the onset of many curious fins and Thimas could breath again, which he did. Wheezily.

“The trout are provisioned,” he said.

“Sorry,” said Windy, which was almost like thanks.

So Thimas went back to the dwelling of the Maker of Fish and found some chalk and a slate, which he used to make a diagram, which said:

TROUT I

with plenty of space for more.

***

Three months and nine days before Thimas’s thirteenth birthday, he sat up in bed and looked at the slate, which he had placed on the wall, and it read:

TROUT IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
SALMON IIIIIII

There was still plenty of space for more. Honestly, it seemed roomier ever time he looked at it. He wished he could stop looking at it.

The Lanky’s waters ran clear and wild. The fishermen’s baskets were heaped high. Everyone was pleased. Everyone said he was doing a wonderful job.

Rap rap rap, came the door.

“Come in,” said Thimas, who was starting to suspect why the old Maker of Fish had grown a beard large enough to hide his face and everything it could possibly indicate.

He was already up and walking to the trout tub before the door opened.

“Hello, Maker of Fish, it’s my wedding tomorrow and-”

“Trout,” agreed Thimas.

“What? No, I-”

“Salmon,” concluded Thimas.

“I’m sorry, but no, Maker of Fish” – and this was so outlandish that Thimas found himself paying attention to his visitor for the first time in days: it was Ottough, a friend of his oldest sister’s, spindly and embarrassed to be speaking to him in a very different way than he’d ever seen before – “it’s my wife. She has a very specific favorite, you see, and I VERY much want her to be happy, and-”

“What?” asked Thimas. No, that sounded too unenthusiastic. “What?!” No, that sounded too angry. “What? What? What? WHAT?”
“Shark, if it would be acceptable, Maker of Fish,” said Ottough.

Thimas hugged him. But only briefly. There were so many shelves to dig through.

“What kind of shark?” he asked. Hammerhead, mako, bonnethead, lemon, scoophead, blacktip reef, shovelbill, sleeper…

“Oh. Err. I didn’t ask? Maybe I could-”

“No,” said Thimas. No. No stopping to ask questions. No opening a chance to wait, and second-guess, and return to the trout tub. “We can do a bit of everything. Here, hold this bag open.”

And into the wide-mouth triple-stitched remains of ceremonial robes went iron files to sharpen teeth, and sandpaper to burnish and smoothen tough shagreen, and toothpaste to shine an eternally-regrowing maw, and all the essentials of every kind of shark from great white (white polish for their white bellies) to dwarf lanternshark (matches for their lanterns) to blue (books of sad poems). All of it went into the water, a thick slosh that less churned than seethed, and already as Thimas watched the ripples spread up and down stream he saw the fins begin to circle.

“There,” he said. “Good luck.”
And he went home and added line after line after line to his slate until his hand cramped from the tiny letters he was forced to use, and he was filled with great and endless joy until his brain turned off.

***

Thimas woke and the sun was already setting. He had slept the sleep of the deeply, profoundly peaceful, slumped drooling over his slate, and this stayed with him for five perfect, deep, slow breaths until he realized that not only had no one woken him yet, but the village was quiet outside his window. No songs. No laughter. No arguments. Even the chickens were keeping it to a bare chuckle.

Thimas got out of bed. Thimas put on a new shirt. And Thimas, for the first time in almost a month, left the dwelling of the Maker of Fish of his own accord.

Everyone was easy to find. They were down at the weir. Watching.

Once again, nobody was looking at Thimas. But they didn’t have to try that hard this time. The Lanky was a sea of fins, the water seethed with long, hungry bodies, muscled jaws, and a million-million teeth of a thousand kinds.

“It would seem,” said a very calm and polite and considered voice from somewhere in the crowd, “that we are somewhat overblessed with fish.” It might have been his aunt.

Thimas nodded. Not too quickly, he hoped.

“This will not be a problem,” said an even calmer and more polite and over-considered voice from within the crowd. “Because we are blessed to have the assistance of the Maker of Fish. If fish caused this, fish can fix this.”
“Yes,” said the first voice.

“Yes,” said the second voice right back. It could have been his uncle.

“Yes,” said someone else.

“Yes,” said everyone else, not all at once, not all the same way, not all as polite and calm and considered and one or two really close to being muttered.

So Thimas walked home until he was out of sight, then he ran home, and he hunted from top to bottom until he found the chest buried in the dolphin bin that was filled with black-and-white beachballs and blood, which he combined, lugged down to the weir, and poured into the Lanky.

Then he added a little more, just to be sure.

And a little extra, just in case. It was just ONE kind of fish he was using, after all, so they’d be very outnumbered. Best to give them plenty to work with.

The water roared and surged. The many dorsal fins that darted up and down the Lanky wobbled in a hundred hundred different salutes, flags of undersea nations.

The crowd watched. And when the water began to settle, they went home, in dribs and drabs.

Thimas didn’t. He waited, and watched, and waited, and worried, and waited, and worked his way bit by bit into the fretful and unpleasantly stretched dreams of the deeply, profoundly guilty.

***

He woke up in the dark before dawn to something wet and flapping slapping him in the face, which he yelled about, which got it in his mouth, which cut his tongue – sharp rough skin. Denticles.

Thimas spat out his mouthful of shark meat and rolled out of bed, which was the weir, and out from under his covers, which was the severed and disemboweled corpse of a four-meter great white shark, and landed on the floor, which was the face of a watching orca.

“Hleef,” he explained.

It grinned at him. It was probably a grin. The teeth were showing, and it seemed to be happy. Then there was a flip and a twist and a nudge and Thimas was upside down and backwards and on the weir’s edge again, nose to nose with the carcass he had been gifted.

The black eyes were unreadable. The angle of the slackened mouth was reproachful.

The river looked full, and at least half red, and the flags that marched within its borders were tall-ships now, great towering black fins that bobbed cheerily as their owners flipped their prey onto the backs, tore their fins off, pummeled their organs into jelly, chattered enthusiastically among themselves and played catch and keep-away with the bodies once they had eaten their fill.

Thimas threw up. This did not Make any Fish, but it DID attract a curious snapping turtle from beneath a rock, which was immediately whisked away and swallowed by a titanic black-and-white set of jaws.

This was not an improvement. There was still an overblessing of fish. He still had to fix this.

If fish had caused this, fish could fix this. Yes. Yes. Yes.

So Thimas went home, opened every container he could – which was all of them, save for the big metal safe – and when he found the one that was full of gigantic steak knives and a big bottle of whale oil he took it down to the weir – using the ceremonial robe-sack as a sling – and tipped in with its entirety.

The dorsal fins circled, curious.

Then there was a cacophony – almost like gunshots. CLICK CLICK CLICK and splash, splash, splash, the beating of flukes on the water. The river churned and reeled.

The waterline slid upwards. Little wavelets slid over Thimas’s toes.

Then it surged, and splashed, and an orca came free of the waves, clutched in a mouthful of serrated triangles at the far end of a twenty-meter lawn dart.

The water closed up.

Thimas was on the shore. He had no memory of getting there.

Farther downstream, there was another splash. And another.

And a crash, as a shark larger than most of the buildings in the village misaimed a lunge and landed in the middle of cousin Burct’s unoccupied chip stand. It squirmed back towards the water, slowed by the six terrified whales clinging to its flanks and removing pieces of meat bigger than Thimas with every bite. One of the last rowboats in the village that hadn’t become a plaything got between two of the combatants, briefly.

There was a grinding noise as an entire pod escaped over the top of the weir, taking half of it with them. The remainder scraped the pursuing megalodon’s belly clean of remoras.

Thimas went back to the dwelling of the Maker of Fish. He wasn’t looking at anything, but he was listening, and it was very hard to think with all that noise. Even after he shut and barred the door it was very hard to think with the memory of all that noise. Even after he shouted and threw the ceremonial robe-sack-sling to the ground and stamped as hard as he could it was hard to think through the memory of all that noise, until he stamped a little too hard and fell over with his foot in his hands and a squeal in his throat and a drab, pointy little metal key skittering loose over the floorboards, torn free at last from some hidden pocket.

Thimas looked at the key, which was much better than listening or thinking. Then he held the key.

Then he dragged out the big metal safe that said DO NOT EVER OPEN UNLESS YOU HAVE TO and put the key in and opened it.

There was a garbage bag in there, double-knotted and surprisingly light. On the basis of speed and desperation, Thimas did not open it.

Instead, he walked down to the shores where the weir had been – now thinly populated by early risers, who were hollering and encouraging others to come stand there and help holler over the ongoing mutual-massacre – and poured out a seemingly endless flood of…meat scraps? They reeked of the pub, of too-high prices and high-capsaicin hot sauce that was all heat and no flavour. They plunged into the water and the grease and the peppery spice cut through the smell of blood that Thimas hadn’t realized was drowning him nose-first until it was broken.

He held the garbage bag in his shaking hands, and something was jabbing his palm – splintery, not like the key. He unfurled it, uncreased it, took one million years to pull it loose.

A stripped-clean chicken wing.

The water broke without boiling, the banks overflowed, and into the sky they rose, one chasing another. The orca breached, fins spread wide, body corkscrewing frantically for height, and behind it the shark, tail beating side to side with enough force to generate power for all of main street, jaws just a little open, eyes twitching and ready to roll back at the first chance to strike, both of them up, and up, and up, and away into the sky, their little fluffy white wings beating with the fury of an ascending grouse from beneath the hunter’s foot.

Everyone stopped hollering at that.

They started again right quick though, when the second-through-five-hundredth followed.

“He never liked eating fish much,” said Thimas as his aunt and uncle picked him up, torn between every emotion at once, watching the flock whirl away over the treeline and into the sun. A straggling carp – survivor of endless warfare – fluttered by them, loop-de-looping for the sheer thrill of it as it headed inland. “Never said why. I thought it was ritual bullshit.”

***

There are fewer fish these days in the great Lanky. But the fishing villages don’t complain, and they take only what they need, and they wish for nothing more than what’s already there. Only what’s already there.

Focus on what’s in front of you, they say. Don’t get carried away with wishing for what could be. You hear the folk from the Runny? Overland? Six leagues away? They believe in flying fish these days.

Honestly.

Short Story: Mega Marvin Life Full Walkthrough.

Wednesday, April 8th, 2026

MEGA MARVIN LIFE FULL WALKTHROUGH

A guide by xxxSparrowAxexxx

COPYRIGHT 2003 DO NOT REUSE WITHOUT PERMISSION!

****TABLE OF CONTENTS****

  • Introduction

1.0 Hospital

2.0 Playground

3.0 Middle School

4.0 Retail

5.0 Night School

6.0 Mega Marvin

7.0 Management

8.0 The Snap

9.0 Drifting

10.0 Patience

11.0 Reckoning

  • INTRODUCTION

Mega Marvin Life is my favourite game in the series and has been unfairly overlooked for years.  In this guide I will show you how to beat it fairly and have a good time.

  1. HOSPITAL

After the introduction cutscene with God you have to escape the baby ward.  Easy to do: this is just the game introducing you to keycards and locked doors.  Take the janitor’s keycard and get through the halls to the elevator, bounce down the shaft, and find your way to the parking lot – just follow the signs.  There’s a time limit until your parents’ car leaves but it’ll basically never matter unless you get way too into exploring the level, and there’s nothing much to see.  The janitors are too slow to catch you and the nurses just ignore you.  Hop into your parent’s car and the level’s over.

1.1 SECRETS: there’s only one secret in this level, and it’s only useful if you’re trying to speedrun the game: if you crawl into the crib with the golden spoon on it push the other baby out of it and wait five minutes Marvin becomes Wealthy Marvin and you go to the credits.  Boring.

2.0 PLAYGROUND

This is the first proper level, and it’s a real open-ended sandbox. You have thirty minutes to do whatever you want, and it’s the tutorial to another big mechanic which is the Boredom meter. Do whatever you can to keep it up – throw pebbles at squirrels, build sand castles, bonk the other kids on the heads, whatever. Don’t overdo the last one though because every kid you take out makes the boss harder.

2.1 BOSS – AUNT MANDY: Aunt Mandy shows up at the end of the timer and again she’s basically a tutorial. Dodge the bottles she throws and use the Ignore function when she starts talking.  If you’ve ko’d at least three other kids she gets REALLY hard and basically never shuts up so watch out!  Kick the bottles back at her until she falls over and you win the level.

2.2 SECRETS: The bird in the skybox is an actual model, not just background art, and if you hit it with a pebble (I was aiming at a squirrel) it’ll poop on Marvin’s head and your controls are scrambled for the rest of the level because he won’t stop crying. 

3.0 MIDDLE SCHOOL

This is the last ‘tutorial’ level of the game, and it’s where the gloves come off. You need to keep your Boredom low AND not get the teachers to notice what you’re up to, AND collect enough points. If the teachers spot you, expect a tough chase – and all the desks and other kids make getting away difficult, AND they’re one-hit ko’s. 

3.1 BOSS: SCIENCE FAIR: Like the school itself this is a test of your multi-tasking. You need to keep the other kids from messing up your project AND show it off to the parents AND keep the judge distracted by messing up the other kid’s projects. All of these are easy – the other kids back off if you give ‘em one good thwack, the parents will nod and walk away if you pretty much do anything at all, and the other projects will fall apart if you give them one quick shove in the right place – but they’re all constantly right up in your face about it. You really can’t afford to sit still at all. 

3.2 SECRETS: You can beat the boss super fast if you let your project get knocked over and then just hold down the Scream command. You don’t get as many points, but it’s faster – especially if you knock your project over yourself. 

4.0 RETAIL

Probably the first really hard level. You can’t move at all, but the enemies just don’t stop coming at you. You need to perfectly avoid every single one of them, which is totally impossible but the good news is you don’t have to do it forever, just until your Bucks score gets high enough – it ticks up a little bit every minute.  Once you screw up and too many customers hit you, the boss fight starts.

4.1 BOSS: BOSS: You want to finish this as quick as possible because every time he hits you you lose Bucks.  If you grab his hair and yank it comes off and he can’t move for a minute, that helps a lot. 

4.2 SECRETS: If you attack the first customer he has a credit card in his wallet that maxxes out your Bucks but the boss gets a duplicate in a security guard outfit so the fight’s real hard.

5.0 NIGHT SCHOOL

This is like Middle School on steroids – your Bucks score is back from Retail and if it hits 0 before you finish the level you lose and your save file gets deleted, which sucks. 

5.1 BOSS: FRIDAY NIGHT: Dodge the cans, glasses, and bottles or lose your Bucks. REALLY avoid the whiskey, that’s a one-hit KO. 

5.2 SECRETS: If you hit the bartender the level ends without you losing any Bucks, but you start the next level at half health.

6.0 MEGA MARVIN

Here is where the game lost 50% of its playerbase and I think it’s weird because having the chance to customize your character from scratch is cool, even if it’s a little weird that it happens halfway through the game.  You can make Marvin look like anything so go as crazy as you want. Then you play through a sort of mashup highlight reel of levels from Mega Marvin, Mega Marvin 2: Marvin’s Domain, Mega Marvin Planet, and Mega Marvin Planet 2: Marvin’s Inferno.  The trick is you have to play through them backwards and upside down and the music is replaced with screaming which I think a lot of people were unable to appreciate.

6.1 SECRETS: If you try to name Marvin anything that isn’t Marvin your save file deletes itself.  I think a lot of people weren’t smart enough to know why that happened and really missed out on the rest of the game for no good reason. 

7.0 MANAGEMENT

Just like Night School was Middle School but harder, this is the Science Fair but way way tougher. Now you need to guard your Marvin projects from other managers, beat up your employees whenever they try to work on it, suck up to the CEO whenever he’s near, AND on top of that your relatives keep phoning you and draining your Bucks.  If you don’t answer the phone they show up in person and you have to dodge them while doing everything else, so unless you’re REALLY attached to your bucks don’t even bother.

7.1 BOSS: CFO: This one’s either really hard or really easy depending on how hard you think outside the boss.  If you try and counter his arguments you WILL eventually lose, if you try and beat him up he gets infinite Security and you lose. But you can move around while you talk and if you look in the bottom drawer of your desk you will find a gun. If you fire it at the boss you lose, but if you hold it while you make your arguments you win no matter which ones you pick. I like to pick the ones about Estonia because they’re interesting but if you’re in a hurry you can just yell “my COCK” over and over and it ends the fight really quickly. 

7.2 SECRETS: If you fire the gun at yourself instead the game goes to credits and tells you you won just like if you beat it normally. 

8.0 THE SNAP

This is sort of a breather level?  You don’t actually do anything – stuff happens around you.  None of the noises people make are words, they just sound like them. You can try and move, but it doesn’t change anything. Sometimes Marvin walks around the screen and yells at you.  It lasts anywhere between seven seconds and six hours; I checked like five times.

9.0 DRIFTING

This is a race: you have to make it to the far side of the bay with the money before the cops catch up to you.  It’s really hard until you figure out you can switch cars partway through by pointing your gun at them and screaming.

9.1 BOSS: META-MARVIN: This fight is hard the first time because you don’t expect him to jump out of the briefcase after you shoot him the first time. The whole fight’s like that: you need to have quick reflexes because it’s totally random where he’ll jump out of next and he’s super fast.  Under the car, out of the surf, up from behind a beached seal, beneath rocks, inside a discarded beer can, parachuting out of the sun…Marvin can be anywhere. If you run out of ammo you lose so you can’t just spray and pray either. Make every shot count.

9.2 SECRETS: If you make it to the checkpoint in the convertible you started in Meta-Marvin just spawns in the passenger’s seat every time and stares at you, covered in blood and holding a wedding ring up so you can see it.

10.0 PATIENCE

This is the last new mechanic in the game: your Sentence goes down a little bit every minute and goes back up if you hit any buttons. Just put the controller on the table and go to bed and you’re usually out of prison by the next morning.

10.1: BOSS: ??: Not sure if there is one, I never saw it just the clear screen.

11.0 RECKONING

So you have to get Marvin all the way from the top of the last will & testament to the bottom and it’s pretty hard if you try to take it one line at a time but pretty easy if you just blindly jump from paragraph to paragraph. You CAN jump on the ink smears, but the blood smears are INSTANT DEATH so don’t confuse them; some of the really dried rusty ones can be mistaken for each other.

11.1 BOSS: MEGA MARVIN LIFE: Jump over the logo when it appears at the end of the document and it’ll explode and then the credits start.

11.2 SECRETS: If you have more Bucks left at the end the last will & testament gets longer. If you finish the game with zero Bucks it just says ‘fuck you’ so if you want an easy level try and get rid of them in Management by letting your relatives phone you a lot or something.

Thank you for reading my guide I hope you enjoyed Mega Marvin Life as much as I do. It’s my favorite game and I hope I can make one as good as it someday.

Storytime: Routines.

Wednesday, April 1st, 2026

The old apple tree was dead.

It was older than Ann, older than her mother, older than her grandmother, and it had almost died more times that she could count – ice storms, droughts, infestations, a fat raccoon on a thin branch – and now it was dead, truly dead and gone, and she had no time to think about it because Beatrice’s birthday was coming up and Arthur’s mother was sick and she had so many times and places she had to feel the right feeling that spending her time thinking of a dead old apple tree was unthinkable and she felt a little sick just imagining it.

Besides, the lawn was overrun with cogblins. She’d already spent all morning oiling them out, spraying down the screaming hordes with the thin mist that coated their eggs and robbed the friction from their gears that let them walk and fight and breath, leaving paralyzed hordes silent in their thousand homes and thousand knee-high skyscrapers, hapless as the ants and the cats and the birds swooped in. 

Ann polished the oiler until it gleamed and watched longer than an adult should have. It was acceptable for a child to be fascinated by mass death; in an adult it was some sort of bigger, stronger cousin of gauche that was unmentionable by the polite.

Her phone rang.  It was her sister, Clarice.  It was the first time she’d called in six years, since the thing with grandpa’s fish.  Ann answered it too fast for hesitation, a reflex operating without practice or instruction.

“Hey.”
“Hello.”

The world sat between them, its gravity drawing their conversation into faltering orbit.

“How have you been?” asked Ann, which wasn’t ‘I’m sorry.’
“I’m doing okay,” said Clarice, which wasn’t ‘I forgive you.’

“How’s Patrick?”
“Third grade.”
“They grow up so fast.  How’s Stacy?”
“The Cellar People got her.”
“Oh,” said Ann.

“I need to voyage into the Land Behind The Furnace for four days and four nights with a human-wax candle. Do you have one?”
“I could manage the house for you,” Ann didn’t say.

“I could watch Patrick for you,” Ann didn’t say.

“I’m sorry,” Ann didn’t say.

“Yeah, it’s in Arthur’s old school stuff,” Ann said.  “I can dig it out in a couple minutes and bring it over.”
“Thanks.  Just drop it in the mailbox.  I’m out late tonight and Patrick has karate after school.”

Ann didn’t say a lot of things.  She said “that’s okay” and “goodbye.”

Then she got in the car, drove twenty minutes to her sister’s house, did the no-odds double-evens skip-the-red-stones dance up the walk that kept the Cellar People from noticing you, left the candle in the mailbox, and told herself that she was a good person and a good sister.

Traffic was miserable on the way back.  Bumper to bumper and shot through with anger.  A cyberhinoceros screamed in agony at his career, his marriage, and his lost childhood and turned left on a right turn signal, totalling a semi and its cargo of twelve fresh-minted million-dollar uniceratosaurus juveniles.  Ann saw the uncreased and flattened brow on the mechanized lifter’s readout as he sat against the rubble of the traffic light and waited to be arrested and sent to the debt-mountain, just as she saw the glassy eyes of the crushed theropods waiting for virginal jockies that would go mountless, just as she saw the frozen cheeks and unsmiling mouth of the traffic copstable operating on an off-the-shelf job-app plugged into his official hat, and they were all different pieces of the same expression and she couldn’t recognize it because she was in it.

She stopped at the ice-walled superiormarket on the way home to get her mind off it.  Bought a Death Conger from the fish counter for a song two whistles and a secret. Took it home still-cursing, still-fighting inside its box of regrets, just like grandmother used to when she was little, twenty years retired from the Electricitsea but still living on it every night, gnarled hands twisting cables in the air, hoarse voice shouting to wake the neighbourhood with the call to man the lines and tend the insulation. 

Ann and Clarice had been fond of the eels but feared their grandmother, and that had gone both ways.  She flinched when she saw them, not just from the perpetual tic that had been shocked into her left hemisphere from a Humboldt Volctopus.  They were too small, not slimy enough, not trying to kill her, and that all hurt in places she didn’t like to explain or consider. 

The kitchen was quiet when she got home.  Beatrice took her time coming back, meeting with her friends in the places teenagers met with their friends. Park benches, parking lots, convenience stores, toadthrone circles, vantablack webrings, and the Last Bleacher where Cindy MacDougal’s skeleton still did her final cheerleading routine every Wednesday evening and the bats refused to roost.  Some of them Ann knew too well, others she knew too little, and she worried that she was mixing them up.

The eel was straightforward. She loved that fish, loved the way it snapped at her and fiercely offered her wishes three, loved the way its curses bounced off her grandmother’s shining silvered cleaver, loved the secrets that it whispered loose in the steam as its skull defleshed in the pressure cooker, loved it as fiercely and uncomplicatedly as she’d loved anything, loved it so she didn’t have to hear the thump and clunk of Arthur coming home or smell the traces of the outside world on his skin and sweat and clothing, loved it so much that she missed the soft scuttle of the ventipede as it swung down from the kitchen ceiling and wrapped itself six times around her throat, fangs bared to strike.

Ann snapped, but inside, where it mattered. She swung the cleaver wildly with her right hand, but it was with her left that she killed it, acrylics tearing through armour and fat and into deeper, more private flesh, turning insides out and popping open soft organs like party balloons, grinding with the heel and stabbing with the nails and ripping and gnashing with the thumb until she wore the whole of the beast on her arm like a puppet from a children’s show.

It screamed at her. She hissed in its face and bit its head off, swallowed its adrenaline and cortisol and dopamine like candy and spat out the mandibles, then sat down in a corner of the kitchen and did nothing but rock gently, so gently, without tears or thoughts or blinking, just a spreading numbness from toe to finger to scalp.

Then she scrubbed the ventipede innards away with her bare hands, vomited into the sink to purge the criotoxins, washed her hands with the red, white and infrared soaps, then exited the secret passage from her lair and walked down the hall to the dining room where her husband sat, waiting.

“Sorry I’m late,” she said. “I wanted dinner to be special.”

“Let’s get divorced,” he told her.

Ann nodded.  Yes, that made sense. 

What a day.

What a typical goddamned day.