Lizzy Viscera and the Quest for the Perfect
By Spencer Koelle
I
Lizzy Viscera, necromancer, master of life and death, zipped up her Lisa Frank[1] backpack. This was a subtle way of reminding Professor Turnipseed that class had ended four minutes ago.
The Professor was impassive. Every second was another second too much. He ignored the raised hands, pointed glances at the clock, and shifting book bags.
Turnipseed wound up the last pompous tangent. He turned to the clock, feigned innocent surprise, and dismissed the class. He was lucky not to be trampled.
Lizzy Viscera burst into the dining hall as if all the Legions of Hell, the Celtic Wild Hunt, and the NRA[2] were after her. She waved to friends but did not tarry in her beeline for the deli counter. She had to make up those lost minutes.
The lectured tyranny of Professor Turnipseed lay behind her, and the arduous death-march[3] of Intro Statistics loomed ahead. Lunch hour was her “me time”.
Lizzy drew notice. She wasn’t inherently extraordinary. She was blond-haired but brown-eyed. She was filled out in all the right places and the wrong places as well. [4]
Maybe it was her personal style that attracted attention. Maybe it was the rainbow streaks in her pigtails[5], created by hours of dyeing and drying. Maybe it was the varied neon rainbow of her clothes and accessories.
It might have also been the human skull that bounced along after her. It had a lolling whitish-blue tongue of ectoplasm, the same material that glowed in its eye sockets. The orange collar on its trail of ghostly vapors proclaimed its name to be Yorick[6].
The woman at the deli counter did not pay much attention to Lizzy or anything else. Her sagging face told the world that she was just killing time[7] until time killed her. “What will you be having today?”
Lizzy leaned up against the counter.
“I’d like a regular-size sub sandwich on a toasted sesame roll with mayonnaise, honey mustard, extra-thin salami, iceberg lettuce, provolone cheese, Cooper sharp cheddar, and a little bit of vinegar.”
The grim-faced woman glared as if she’d been asked to hand over her left kidney. Lizzy went to grab the soft drink, side salad, and onion rings that came with a Grab-N-Go Sandwich Combo. She sipped her orange soda and fingered her rainbow bracelet, waiting for her order to come up.
Lizzy Viscera always ordered the same exact sandwich. She looked to breakfast and dinner for variety. She picked sodas and sides on a whim. The sandwich was the perfect center of her day. It made lunch right.
“217[8]! Number 217!”
Lizzy looked at her ticket and bounded up to the counter and snatched the sandwich. She hovered uncomfortably for a few moments. Her hands balanced the awkward load of soda, fries, and entrée as she scanned the crowded tables until she spotted somebody she recognized.
Lizzy bit into the sandwich and nearly choked. Instead of spiced, tangy, salami and zesty-sweet honey mustard, her palate met with greasy, bland turkey and burning, bitter
The blond college student strode back to the deli counter and repeated her order. Her words were articulated with a friendly smile and strained patience. The grim-faced woman showed neither remorse nor recognition. This time Lizzy waited with more impatience and less enthusiasm.
She opened the sandwich the moment it was ready and eyed its contents with dark suspicion. There was salami and honey mustard in it. Unfortunately, there wasn’t anything else. No cheese, mayo, or tomato: just meat, mustard, and a damp wheat bun.
Lizzy repeated her requests, but each result was further from her wishes. When the sodden mass of apathy in a hairnet[9] handed her a fish taco, she gave up on the deli counter.
Chapter Discussion Questions:
1. How does the author represent his opinion of firearm legislation? Explain
2. Does your professor ignore students when the class is running late? Why or why not?
3. What statement does this story make about conventional beauty expectations and their effect on women with supernatural powers?
[1] A brand of school supplies decorated with brightly colored scenes of unicorns, rainbows, kittens, etc.
[2] National Rifle Association
[3] A term for forced marches with high mortality rates
[4] Thin but large-breasted women with blond hair and blue eyes were the cultural conception of ideal beauty. The “right places” refers her fat chest, the “wrong places” refers to an equal distribution of fat on the other portions of her body.
[5] Hairstyle of the era associated with innocence and youth
[6] Yorick is the name of a deceased character in the then-famous play “Hamlet”, the skull of which is regarded by the lead character
[7] Waisting time
[8] Possibly an obscure reference to Stephen King’s “The Shining”, wherein room 217 of the hotel was haunted, to foreshadow the coming string of back luck.
[9] Covering worn by workers in the food industry to prevent hair from falling into meals