The Stupidest Angel

Free The Stupidest Angel by Christopher Moore Page A

Book: The Stupidest Angel by Christopher Moore Read Free Book Online
Authors: Christopher Moore
higher power," she declared, snatching her broken broadsword from the coffee table and waving it in defiance at the Sony Wega TV that mocked her darkly from the corner. "In Nig-oth's name shall I sally forth, and woe unto any mutant or sand pirate that crosses my path, for his life shall be sacrificed and his bloody balls shall decorate the totem tree of my lodge."
    "And the wicked shall cower before the grandeur of your dirt-striped and well-shaped thighs," said the Narrator, with robust enthusiasm.
    "Goes without saying," Molly said. "Okay, step three. 'Turn your life over to God as you understand Him.' "
    "Nigoth requires a sacrifice," cried the Narrator. "A limb! Cut it from your body and impale it still twitching upon the worm god's fiery purple horn."
    Molly shook her head to rattle the Narrator around a little. "Dude," she said. Molly seldom "duded" anyone. Theo had picked up the word on his patrol of Pine Cove's skateboard park and now used it generally to express incredulity at the audacity of someone's statement or behavior—the correct inflection on the word would convey Doood, please, you've got to be joking or hallucinating, or both, to even suggest such a thing. (Lately Theo had been doing some testing on "Yo, dat's wack, yo." But Molly had forbade its use outside of the house, for, as she pointed out, there is little more off-putting than the sound of hip-hop vernacular coming out of the mouth of a white, fortysomething, goony bird of a man. "Albatross of a man, yo," Theo had corrected.)
    Thusly duded, the Narrator bid devotion down. "A finger, then! The severed finger of a Warrior Babe—"
    "Not a chance," Molly said.
    "A lock of hair! Nigoth requires—"
    "I was thinking I'd light a candle to symbolize that I'm turning myself over to my higher power." And to illustrate her sincerity, she took a disposable lighter off the coffee table and lit one of the scented candles she kept on a tray at the table's center.
    "A snotty Kleenex, then!" tried the Narrator.
    But Molly had moved on to step four in the book. " 'Make a searching and fearless moral inventory of yourself.' I have no idea what that means."
    "Well, I'll be fucked in the ear by a blind spider monkey if I get it," said the Narrator.
    Molly decided not even to acknowledge the Narrator on that one. After all, if the steps worked like she hoped they would, the Narrator was not going to be around for much longer. She dug into the little blue book in search of clarification.
    Upon further reading, it appeared that you were supposed to make a list of all the things wrong with your character.
    "Put down that you're fucking nuts," said the Narrator.
    "Got it," Molly said. Then she noticed that the book recommended making a list of resentments. She wasn't exactly sure what she was supposed to do with them, but in fifteen minutes she had filled three pages with all variety of resentments, including both parents, the IRS, algebra, premature ejaculators, good housekeepers, French automobiles, Italian luggage, lawyers, CD packaging, IQ tests, and the fucktard who wrote the "Caution, pastry may be hot when heated" warning on the Pop-Tarts box.
    She paused for a breather and was reading ahead to step five when headlights swept across the yard and raked the front of the cabin. Theo was home.
    " 'Step five,' " Molly read. " 'Confess to our higher power and another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.'"
    As Theo came through the door, Molly, her broken broadsword in hand, spun from the cinnamon candle of Nigoth the Worm God and said, "I confess! I did not file taxes for the years ninety-five through two thousand, I have eaten the radioactive flesh of mutants, and I resent the hell out of you for not having to squat when you pee!"
    "Hi, honey," Theo said.
    "Shut up, grommet," said the Warrior Babe.
    "So I guess I'm not going to get my Volvo washed?"
    "Quiet! I'm confessing over here, ingrate."
    "That's the spirit!" said the Narrator.

Chapter 7
    MORNING IS

Similar Books

One Hot SEAL

Anne Marsh

Bonjour Tristesse

Françoise Sagan

Thunder God

Paul Watkins

Objection Overruled

J.K. O'Hanlon

Lingerie Wars (The Invertary books)

janet elizabeth henderson

Halversham

RS Anthony

Stormbound with a Tycoon

Shawna Delacorte