Title: Westbound, Leave the Motor Running 'Cause I'm on the Run (The Insomniac, Pop-Culture Junkie Remix) Author: Rebecca Fandom: Askewniverse; Post-Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back Pairing: Banky/Hooper Rating: R for the usual suspects, plus one (Hooper and the inevitable ethnic commentary). Summary: Remix of Katie's "Westbound.." Hooper finds himself in the big, scary suburbs on Banky's booty call. He meets some interesting characters on the way over. Parody at it's most underslept. Disclaimer: The story belongs to Katie. The characters belong to Warner Brothers, Cartoon Network, Dark Horse, Joss Whedon, and, of course, the Almighty Kev. The title belongs to the song by the group Lucky Boys Confusion. Warning: First remix. Be gentle. Please, and if it's awful, I blame the consistent supply of hair dye seeping through my scalp and into my brain. Umm..I would try to justify putting slightly militant phrases in the mouth of a seven-year-old girl. But why bother? I left what little morals and excuses I had behind a dumpster at Motel 6. Also gratuitous meta-fic and a little Carmen Llewellyn Lee to boot. Notes: Yes ma'am, those are my real hair and clothes. And car. And dead pan expression. **************************************************************************** 6:00pm Hooper was just about to settle down with his bowl of popcorn and the "What's Happenin'!!" DVDs he got from eBAY, when his pager emitted the shrillest noise known to man. After searching the entire flat for the device, it showed up in his left pocket. He flipped of the cover, letting the message "24242422314," which decoded meant, "XXXBWM," Banky's clever enigma for "Booty call. Bring White Minx." Ever since he'd stumbled in on Kim - Alyssa's by far most adorable cast- off still crashed at Hooper's place on occasion - bleaching her pubic hair in the bathroom, the Johnny Cum Lately had become fascinated with chemically lightening his own undercoat. "I always thought dykes *shaved* their pubes?" the colorist pontificated as Kim's equally light head bobbed at crotch level, one slim plastic- gloved hand demonstrating how to apply the dye. "No, *fags* are supposed to shave their pubes," Hooper corrected from the bathroom doorway, "you know, the ones who at least *pretend* to care about their partner's discomfort." Hooper had ducked as a bunched up wash towel came barreling towards his head. "The word is 'bisexual,' Hoop. And why don't you go 'buy' me some dinner?" Right. Just like he was supposed to leave the comfort of his own couch in his own home and schlep all the way to Jersey for some complimentary no-strings sex..oh, *and* he had to pick up his Not!boyfriend's beauty products on the way. Hooper was more than halfway back to his extra-buttered and Rerun when the pager beeped a second time. "1154221319." "ANDTLS." "..And Trojan Liquid Silk." Lube, capitalist- style. The comic auteur sighed - though not quite as heavily, and grabbed his keys. **************************************************************************** 9:15pm Hooper seldom ventured into New Jersey, and when he had to, he thought it best to spend the least time there as possible. The only three radio stations on the FM dial played Sinatra, Springsteen, or Bon Jovi on a continuous loop. Elder residents of Asbury Park and along the shore line were still fascinated by the "Jaws" phenomenon and consistently phoned in to the one talk radio station to spin stories of sighting the "Great White." (Where were the intolerant pill-popping gay bashers when you needed to maintain your sanity?) Luckily, there was a convenience store right off the expressway that carried the essentials for his rather..*ahem* involved evening. With any luck, he'd be in and out of the Garden State by tomorrow morning. If he could find the exit, that is. He somehow managed to miss it almost everytime, particularly traveling at night. Blame it on the constant lane construction. Hooper was pretty proud of his new ride. It was a snow white Cougar V6 with a moon roof. It wasn't exactly the Fagmobile, but, even used, it was expensive and that made Hoop feel good. He had a hard time explaining the Bettie Page bumper sticker to his salon of nature's bachelors, but what the hell? It had a get-up-and-go like you wouldn't believe. He cruised down the road, trying to remember where he turned. He put the brakes on as traffic suddenly slowed then came to a full stop .. in the middle of the exit lane. Great. Hooper sweated it out in the Cougar's cabin until he came close enough to see what was going on. Two fire engines and an ambulance glittered in the distance surrounded by a fortress of orange and green road flares while two lanes of long suffering automobiles sweated in the heat just off the exit ramp. Settling back into his driver's chair, Hooper put a CD into the changer, thinking the sounds of Long Beach and Compton would protect him from the big, bad white man and the monotony of covering just under two miles in just under two hours. **************************************************************************** 10:34pm Halfway through the second revolution of the CD, Hoop put it in park and hopped out - fed up and eager to see what was keeping him from his "noble quest" of sex and self-improvement. He tucked his nine-millimeter in his jacket's inner pocket. Banky couldn't understand why Hooper kept it, especially after his "to thyne self be true" speech, but the gun held some sentimental value. Plus, tiny black queers need some protection in Bumfuck, New Jersey - road rage being only one of several incidents of criminal behavior. Hooper approached the scene, weaving in between the various cars, many of which were already in park. "Hey! What do you do with a gay black man in a strip club?!" Startled, Hooper turned on his heal and double-backed to the large CAT steamroller from which the voice had eminated. "You put a twenty in his g-string," the briefs-sporting comic writer reached up to high five the driver in the open cabin, "what's happening, Trinke?" "Not much, man. Hey, can you believe this traffic? It's making me homesick for New York. Hooper had first met Ollie Trinke ten years before in New York. Trinke's PR group was representing Warrant, fresh off the success of "Cherry Pie" and blissfully unaware of spandex metal's imminent demise. The band had contacted Blitz Krieg, the comic publisher Hooper had interned at and written serials for before moving on to publish _White Hating Coon_, in the interest of producing their own comic book ala KISS and Rob Zombie. Blitz Krieg sent Hooper to represent the company at a meeting with their publicist, one Ollie Trinke. The deal had been finished before word one (the group had arranged for the meeting to take place at their favorite strip club, proceeded to get loaded, and try to kick Trinke and Hoop's asses for making fun of the strippers), but Trinke and Hooper had been friends ever since. An employee of Highland County ever since the infamous "fresh prince" incident had gotten him booted from the firm, Hooper still caught sight of his old pal tooling down the main drive in "The Batmobile," much like he was now - only not so cheerful. Gertrude, Ollie's seven- year-old daughter, was belted into the passenger side still dressed in her school uniform, a Looney Tunes blanket wrapped around her shoulders. "We've been waiting here for five hours. You'd think they'd give a county employee some leeway." "Yeah, I'm going to check this shit out. They better have a damn good reason for making me late for my-" mindful of the fact that there was a first grader a few feet away, Hoop replaced 'booty call' with, "..appointment." "*Appointment?*" the sly look was unmistakable and suggested the little one's daddy wasn't usually so filtered. Hoop gave up. "Fuck off. See you round the expressway, Trinke." "Right, good to see you man. Say goodbye, Gertie." "Daffy was a black man!" the precocious seven year old raised her hand in a precociously empowered fist. Quelling his delight at her daddy's obvious horror, Hoop slipped into his Hooper X militant drag, answering her fist with one of his own. "Right on, sister." With a finaly smirk, he turned on his heel and continued toward the front of the line of cars. Hooper wasn't actually as concerned with the hold up as he appeared to be. Okay, he wanted to get where he was going as quickly as he could. The boy from NYC wanted in and out of the suburban wasteland with as haste as could be managed. Still he approached the scene with an itemized list of the pre-concessions: a massive accident, an injured party, perhaps a police pursuit. All of which were summarily dashed as he came face to face with the action that was blocking the exit. No accident. No injured persons in sight. Not so much as a speck of FUZZ. Only a suit and tied white man who, protected by the barricade of yellow police tape and orange traffic cones, reminded Hooper of the pug from the Men in Black movies. "Excuse me, but what the fuck is going on here?" All pre-concessions were off. And the pencil-necked white boy seemed to know it as he approached Hooper with a diplomatic, slightly-placating expression in place. "Sir, if you could just go back to your car, I promise everything is under control." "It's okay, Myers," Hooper and Pencil-Neck glanced up at the gruff tone. The former felt his normally jaded eye-brows eclipse the back of his head. The gravelly-voiced guy stood at least two feet above Hooper with flesh tones that, even in the dark, resembled that of a fire engine. His furry dark muttonchops connected to a fall of dark hair pulled back to a snug samurai ponytail. He was dressed in a long brown coat with black leather utility belt and..was that a *tail* he saw behind him? Hooper didn't necessarily notice that the man(?)'s right hand appeared to carved out of stone. He *did* notice the squalling bond that his right hand was holding off the ground by her bleached ringlets. The caterwauling vixen was clad in a red satin slip dress and black Prada stilettos as she continually struggled uselessly in the big man's grasp. A true sight to behold, almost more so than the dude that held her captive. Fay Wray twisiting in the wind and foaming at the mouth. Enough to make the most loyal straight man so much as *glance* at the other team. "Found her in a storm drain. Tried to push me into the portal right along with her. One step to the left would have found me in the seventh layer of Hades. As it happened, I just wound up in an oil slick. I think." Pencil Neck squirmed at his partner's unfiltered invective while Hooper, the object of concern, simply squinted at the big man's words. A hell portal? In *New Jersey*? Weren't those things supposed to be more strategically located? "Guess you can't go home again, eh Glorificus?" The blond hissed, spitting in the big man's face. "I would have gotten away with it too, if it hadn't been for you meddling hell-beasts!" Before he could overhear any more infinitely entertaining information, Hooper's view was blocked once more by Pencil Neck. "Sir, the exit will be open shortly. Please return to your vehicle." With pleasure, Hooper thought, turning to make his way back towards his car. He hastened one last glance at Big Red, shaking his head. "They never could get the tail right." ********************************************************************************* 10:45pm Hooper was lost like a Mormon on the UPN. He was pretty sure when the road turned to gravel and the buildings turned to corn. Hooper shuddered. He wanted to ask for help at one of the farmhouses, maybe use their phone, but the homes appeared to say, "We lynch Niggers here." Hoop took a rain check on being tarred and feathered, and decided to drive until he hit ocean. Whichever one it may be. The music that was his refuge was now starting to make him paranoid. He flipped off the stereo, and checked the rear view mirror for any vengeful civil war veterans. Hooper was driving on the old country road where every campfire tale took place. It was the kind of road that city kids were secretly afraid of. In New York, they are cocky and independent; but put an urbanite in the farm domain and he will shit his pants. People fear what they do not know; thus the urban legend. In rural and suburban areas, folks speak of gang initiations with broken taillights, and giant sewer rats that eat babies. In the metropolises, people discuss all-American babysitter escapades, and misadventures at Makeout Point. As logic dictates, Hooper was terrified of wide-open spaces. Finally locating what looked like a suburban cul-de-sac, he made a sharp right and turned into the neighborhood that was, by the looks of it, not the jewel of the Jersey backwoods. A series of breadbox, clapboard split- levels lined both sides of the street. Siding was missing on some of the houses. Others were covered with graffiti. One house had a front door that was so malformed and misshaped, it reminded Hooper of the front door to Pee-Wee's playhouse. Taking that as a hint, he pulled up to the house next door. The powder blue two-story (aside from being powder blue)looked fairly normal. Not anxious to leave the confines of the Cougar's cabin, Hooper was relieved to find that the owner of the house seemed to be outside. Balding, fat, and clad in a dirty wifebeater, gray sweatpants and teal thong flip flops, he looked more like a refugee hiding out from the Springer cam than a Klansman. "Excuse me?" Hooper probably should have suspected something was amiss when the guy didn't so much as "walk" up to the car as he "waddled." Or had he jumped? Either way, Hoop hadn't seen the dude put one flip flop in front of the other. The matter was soon forgotten as the sleazy suburbanite, upon seeing the driver of the slick automobile, opened his mouth to speak. "Hey man! How you doin'? Hey, I loved Sly and the Family Stone. I saw them play at Madison Square Garden years ago, freakin' awesome!" Taking a deep breath and counting to ten, Hooper continued. "Can you tell me how to get to Quick Stop?" "Uh, you mind being a bit more specific, home boy? There's only about freakin' fifty of 'em around here." "DO *NOT* TALK TO THIS MAN! THIS MAN IS AN UNDERCOVER OPERATIVE FOR THE C.I.A.!" Glancing at the booming voice that had followed the slammed misshaped door from the next house, Hooper wondered for the first time if perhaps the long hours on the road had affected his perception. Because what was obviously a tall, obnoxious white man (who proceeded to "jump/waddle" out to the car) bore a striking resemblance to a large fast-food drink container with a pink straw sticking out of his head. White Boy was soon followed by was what, Hooper was certain, pre-highway hypnosis, was in actuality a person who suffered from dwarfism but, in his current frame of mind, resembled a three feet high wad of uncooked beef. With a voice that reminded him of the alien from "Lilo and Stitch." Who didn't waddle OR jump, but *rolled* out to join the party by the car. "really? shoot carl, you never told us that. we been neighbors how long now?" MeatDwarf was soon followed by what, pre-highway hypnosis, pre-urban panic, was obviously a very pissed off black man with prominent eye-brows and matching beard but, again at *this* *particular* *MOMENT* resembled a large floating box of french fries with a stern expression. Oh, hell no. The long hours on the road had *definetly* affected his perception. Pinching the bridge of his nose. Hooper closed his eyes and began to count backwards from a hundred. "Shake, what the hell are you talking about?" 87..86..85..84..that had been the black man's *year*, Hooper thought absently. "Purple Rain" *and* Vanessa's Miss America crown. "HE IS AN UNDERCOVER OPERATIVE INVESTIGATING..THE..THE RECENT UPRISING OF ANTI-GOVERNMENT ACTIVITY IN SUBURBAN STORM DRAINS. I READ IT IN THE NEW YORK TIMES." 39..38..37..why did that number sound familiar? "This is a menu from Denny's, Shake!" A-B-C-D-E-F-G..did H come next? "Hey man! I was down there looking for Lisa! She freakin' accidentally flushed her freakin' diaphragm, fry man! Do you know how much one of those freakin' things cost?! What the hell are you people tryin' to do to me?!?!" "hey. if carl's a hitman for the dmv, maybe he can take care of those parking tickets for you, master shake." "*What* parking tickets? We don't even have a car!" "well not no more. not since shake crashed into that dance club. naked dancing, too. that one lady sure was sore at you for crashing into the mud pit." "WELL I DON'T UNDERSTAND *WHY*. SHE WON FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS FOR CRYING OUT LOUD!" In a vacuum filled with outraged cries, the final cry came from the lost man who had just rediscovered the alphabet. "Oh, that does it. That fucking *DOES IT!*" With those words a broad clash of lightning filled the sky.. ************************************************************************** 10:57pm Hooper and the Cougar were on the side of the road under an overpass. Breathing in the damp night air, he held a 1'x 2' picket sign over his shoulder reading "AUTHOR UNFAIR TO MISAPPROPRIATED CHARACTERS" in broad red letters. He was contemplating pleading his case in a more populated area when a bright red Vespa pulled up beside him. Some hair-dos, Hooper thought as the driver removed her helmet and set it on the bitch seat, should really be a crime. Silver tips brushed the girl's shoulders while the crown had been dyed a deep blood red. The intermittent strands hung in deep black waves, a plastic cylinder (a thermometer?) tucked behind her left ear. Two half- slips - one white, one off-white - had been stitched together below the elastic to form her skirt while her lavender tank top assured Hooper that "Faeries Are Real" (shit, *he* could have told her that.) Below her skirt was a pair of thin black fishnets and impeccably polished army boots. A British Union Jack shoulder bag, slung over one bony shoulder, bounced violently against her hip as she casually swaggered up to Hooper. "Hmmm. Someone's been splashing out at Goodwill." "If this is about the car, I only said you could borrow it. I expect it back before I have to go to school." "Like you ever even make it to class." It might have been a breeze, but Hooper thought he saw a slight ripple across the author's varying expressions of Dead-Pan as she slipped off her bag and set it on the ground next to her. "Okay, I'll bite. What's your problem?" "*My* problem? My problem is that my gay ass is being held hostage in this ludicrous story by a pop-head, half-stoned college student! Meatwad, Becca? *Meatwad?!*" Rebecca sighed and ran a green-nailed hand through her hair. "Hellboy I could live with. That's comics. You're speaking my language there. Do you think my ass is up late enough to watch Adult Swim?" "I'll bypass the obvious sexual joke and say no?" Rebecca slipped her nicotine inhaler from behind her ear and began absently chewing on it. "You're not an insomniac. That's a good thing." "I'm pissed off is what I am! And on strike," he pointed to the sign, "in case you failed to notice." "Come on, man. The deadline was yesterday. Do you have any idea how much Charles is going to kill my ass?" "Well, maybe you should have stayed at home and came up with something creative instead of going to see the stupid Harry Potter movie for the seventh time in a row!" The author brought the inhaler down from her lips, her expression running through a myriad of thoughtful blank poses before finally settling on Triumphant!blank. "Dude, you *know* you dig the Rickman." "Do not," Hooper replied flatly, bringing the sign down to rest against his shoulder. "You know you *so* dig the Rickman." "Well..maybe in that office building with Bruce Willis. And the western with the NRA guy. *And* that Greek tragedy meets reperatory theater piece he did with Hugh Grant and Skeet Ulrich's wife." "That's one of my favorites." she smiled blankly, which seemed to get Hooper's dander up a second time. "Well, if you love him so much, why didn't you trap *him* in your acid trip of a story?!" "There's only one scene left and then the story's over, you can bang Banky 'till Tuesday for all I care." "One more scene?" The Rickmaniac held up one ringed finger. "No more talking food products?" "None." "No more safe rubber-stamped one-note Ben Affleck characters?" "Nary a one to be found." "Well it's about damn time!" he thrust the sign into her copiously unstartled hands and headed back to the Cougar, "and you better not be shitting me!" He was already in drive and going 50 in a 30 zone before she could manage a soft-spoken reply: "You'll bring the car back before August. Right?" ******************************************************************************** 11:27pm Hooper decided that Rebecca needed to get out more. And get more sleep. And that maybe he should've asked her for directions before leaving her on the side of the road with her little toy motorbike. He found a black person he could ask directions and was off once more. He turned on Truxel, and cozied into Quick Stop, making a mental note to drop by Mobile on his way to Bank's apartment. The Cougar was fly, but it went through gas like it was going out of style. With a relieaved sight, Hoop popped inside, taking in the refreshing luminance of fluorescent lighting, the gracious hum of the freezer, the near empty Hostess display (Clerk-with-Hat had moved on from beef jerky). The familiarity was a welcome infusion on the grandest scale as he located the right aisle and darted across it in search of his quarry. Scanning the contents of the aisle, he overheard the two of the clerks that ran the store sparring back and forth. "Do you know what's going on?" "Maybe it's another drill." "What was that?" "That's nothing. Say, have you seen the latest XP-38 model? Tack-EEE." Hooper stopped dead in his tracks as he turned the corner to approach the counter. Instead of Clerk With Beard or Clerk With Hat or even Creepy Clerk with Neo-Nazi Haircut, he found himself face to face with a pair of (presumed) guys clad in full head-to-toe white body armor and matching helmets. They looked, he thought, like a pair of bleached lobsters. "Will that be all for you today?" Clerk At Register's voice came out in a tinny rasp, as though his helmet contained a built in voice box. Hooper nodded silently as the clerk's gloved hands punched in the items on the register. "That'll be ten-seventeen." ****************************************************************************** 11:49pm Hooper pressed the button marked "EDWARDS, B." in blue Sharpie. "It's me," he drolled into the intercom. The door kicked back and Hoop entered. Hoop lumbered up to the second floor, dragging his heels. He knocked half-heartedly on Banky's door. It swung open, Banky standing in the frame. "Where've you been?" he asked, returning inside. Hooper followed, dropping his jacket on the couch. "Believe me. You don't want to know." ******************************************************************************* A/N: The New Jersey residents are as follows: Jersey Girl Hellboy Aqua Teen Hunger Force Trooper Clerks