Read Red Meat Cures Cancer Online

Authors: Starbuck O'Dwyer

Tags: #Fiction

Red Meat Cures Cancer (9 page)

BOOK: Red Meat Cures Cancer
5.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

10

Soft Batch Burgers

TAILBURGER HEADQUARTERS

Jelloteous Junderstack’s heart condition flared up during a game in Sacramento, and suddenly a major piece of Tailburger’s impending Torture campaign was in jeopardy. No good news had ever come from the 2:00 A.M. airing of ESPN’s
Sportscenter,
and this was no exception. I walked into headquarters, hat in hand. The Link didn’t take bad news well.

“Belgians in body bags don’t sell burgers, Thorne.”

“I know that, Frank. I’m talking with Junderstack’s doctor this afternoon to see how serious it is.”

“I hated this Torture campaign from the start. I have half a mind to pull the plug right now.”

“Frank, you can’t do that. We’ve already invested a ton of time and money. Look, we’ll work up a supplemental campaign to buy some time and scout a replacement player. If something happens to Jelloteous, we’ll just reshoot the ads and the video, and push the Torture launch back a month.”

“Did you put a death clause in that clod’s contract? I don’t want to pay one red cent to some freakish Eurostiff. If he’s in a casket, he’s seen his last dime.”

“I’ll have to check the wording, Frank. If I recall, Satan Manchow sought some concessions in that area.”

Translation: he took me to the cleaners.

“Well, what’s this supplemental campaign you’re talking about?”

“We’re working on it right now.”

“What’s this ‘we’re’ bullshit? What are
you
doing?”

I had done nothing at this point.

“I’m helping to fine-tune the campaign. It’s not exactly fully developed.”

“Aw shit, Thorne! Do we have something or not?”

“Yes. Yes we do.”

“Good. Let me hear it.”

I was afraid he was going to say that, but giving the Link what he wanted wasn’t hard.

“Okay. Picture a group of high school girls.”

“Got it. Are they in bikinis?”

“Exactly. Very scantily clad. In fact, nothing but thongs.”

“Good. Skin sells burgers. Just make sure there aren’t any fat ones. Use that agency that specializes in anorexics.”

“Right. So anyway we’ve got these young girls in bikinis riding in a convoy of Jeeps. A red one. A blue one and a yellow one. All on their way to the beach.”

“I can see it. Keep going.”

“They pull onto the beach and they’re all eating Tailburgers, and our new jingle is playing in the background.”

“Sing it for me.”

“Trust me, it’s good.”

“Sing it for me.”

“Do you think that’s necessary?”

“Sing the goddamn song or I’ll kick your ass from here to Hattiesburg.”

“Okay. It’s got a real heavy bass bottom to it. Sort of a Sam and Dave knockoff. Screaming organs, the whole deal. ‘Gotta get some tail. Gotta get some tail. Gotta get some Tailburgers.’ ”

“Good. Go on.”

“So the song’s building when suddenly an armada of surfer stud boys, thirty or forty of them, come surfing in from the ocean.”

“Are they built?”

“They’re monsters. Real steroid abusers, straight from our heavy users profile. And when they see these girls with the Tailburgers, they come riding in on the waves to get some tail.”

“I love it! It’s perfect! Why do we even need Junderboob? Cut him loose.”

“But, Frank, he’s a central part of the Torture campaign. Plus, we do have a contract with him.”

“What about the morals clause? You know he’s been bangin’ half the Laker girls. That ought to be enough to get us out.”

“Satan insisted we remove the morals clause.”

“That bastard.”

The Link could have ended the Torture campaign right then and there, but he didn’t. He knew it was my baby, that I would succeed or fail along with it, and that I had more to lose than he did. If my pet project didn’t propel Tailburger’s market share up to a full 5 percent of the fast-food industry, I was gone. And at some level, the Link didn’t want to see that.

“I need to run one more thing by you.”

“Uh-oh. What now?” I wondered as the Link shut the door to his office.

“Thorne, I know I’ve got you under a lot of pressure to improve sales.”

“Nothing I can’t handle,” I said, wanting to project confidence.

“I’m sure. But I’d never leave you out there twisting in the wind.”

“That sentiment is appreciated, Frank.”

Was this going to be a genuinely kind gesture on the part of the Link? Devoid of self-interest? Unprecedented. Maybe the man had a heart after all.

“So anyway, I’ve come up with a new way to light the sales mortar. Guaranteed. Just in case this whole Torture thing doesn’t go so well.”

“What is it?” I replied optimistically, hoping to hear something come out of his mouth that, for once, made sense.

“Do you know who Ralph Nader is?”

“Sure. From the Green party. The guy who ran for president.”

“No. Not that guy. I’m talking about the consumer rights advocate.”

“It’s the same guy.”

“No, it’s not.”

“I’m certain it is.”

“It is?”

“Yes.”

“Well, whatever. (Pause) Do you remember his book
Unsafe at
Any Speed
? The one about the Corvair?”

The Link didn’t give me a chance to respond.

“Actually, let me ask you another question. Do you like chocolate chip cookies?”

Where the Link was going with all of this was beyond me.

“Sure. Who doesn’t?”

“And how do you like those cookies? Real gooey in the middle? Am I right?”

“I plead guilty.”

“Do you know what makes ’em soft?”

“They’re undercooked.”

“Exactly. Which is just what I want to do with our burgers. From now on, they’re going to be crunchy on the outside and one big mushball in the middle. We’ve got to get back to what makes a Tailburger so good.”

“Frank, we’re not talking about chocolate chip cookies here. We’re talking about raw meat. The risk is different.”

“No, it’s not. Salmonella poisoning from the eggs in the cookie dough is every bit as big a danger as the E. coli bacteria. Maybe bigger.”

Logical progressions were not the Link’s thing, but he was on a roll.

“What about federal law? It says we have to cook every patty until the temperature inside hits a hundred and fifty-nine degrees Fahrenheit.”

“That’s where our friend Mr. Nader comes in. Do you know what he did? He found the smoking gun on the Corvair. There was this internal GM memorandum that said the cost of installing a three-dollar-and-fifty-cent part over the manufacturing lifetime of the automobile would be more expensive than paying for the deaths and subsequent lawsuits that resulted from the failure to install it. It was a business decision. Don’t you understand? It’s the same thing for us. Undercooking our burgers is a business decision. The increase in sales will more than cover any liability costs.”

“Are you crazy? That was one of the biggest mistakes in the history of GM!” I protested, flabbergasted by my boss’s stupidity. “It cost them millions in bad publicity alone.”

“Yes, but here’s the difference. We’re not going to get caught. We’ve never lost a kid to E. coli, and we’re never going to a lose a kid to E. coli. You know why . . . ?”

I slowly shook my head.

“. . . I’ll tell you why. Because the whole thing is a public scare campaign. I don’t even believe E. coli exists.”

Any previous notion I was dealing with a human being evaporated as the Link continued to talk.

“Don’t you get it? Even in a worst-case scenario, the cost of a lawsuit or settlement will be less than the increase in sales. It’s a business decision. Plain and simple. Pure economics.”

“Why don’t we get irradiated beef to protect ourselves? The USDA approved it last year.”

“I know that, but have you ever tasted irradiated beef?”

“Yes. And I couldn’t tell the difference.”

“Well, I could. My hamburger tasted like a microwaved burrito. Plus I don’t like the whole idea of running our meat under those gamma rays or whatever the hell they are. Some kid in Omaha will go radioactive on us and start glowing like the local power plant. Then we’ll really have problems.”

“Irradiation doesn’t make the meat radioactive.”

“I just don’t think the process has been tested enough.”

“They’ve been testing it for years. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention fully endorses it.”

“What do those fools know? You ever see the movie
Outbreak
? They couldn’t control one monkey.”

By the blank look on my face, the Link knew I wasn’t on board with his idea.

“Now don’t get squirrelly on me, Thorne. I’m trying to help you, but you need to help yourself by taking this news to the front.”

Taking news to the front meant telling our managers and franchise owners to change standard operating procedure. Morally objectionable? Yes. Difficult to do? No. Not since the Link instituted his annual “Chain of Command” retreats. Held at a back-woods compound in Idaho next to what the Link referred to as Reverend Moon’s Rolls-Royce dealership, these sessions qualified as low-grade brainwashing for all personnel and assured the Link that his orders would be followed.

“No more kowtowing to special interests anymore, Thorne. We’re going to take some calculated risks and help save your job. Can’t you see that?”

“Sure, I can see it, Frank.”

All I could see was us, and in particular, me, ordering others to break the law. Of course, it wasn’t worth raising the ethical implications with the Link because I knew it would be a nonstarter. The man felt no guilt when it came to business. “When you’ve got the will of the maker on your side,” he once told me, “you throw out the rule book.” This wasn’t a direct quote from Honest Abe but, according to the Link, a modern interpretation. Religion was now used if expedient, and invoking the Lord’s name had become an all-purpose salve for the wounds inflicted by our company’s moral transgressions. Across the top of our corporate stationery it read,
GOD IS A TAILBURGER FANATIC.
I wasn’t sure who had surveyed him, but what the hell; it certainly had panache.

I went home, poured myself an Ultra Slim-Fast and put on Van Morrison’s
Back on Top,
the perfect panacea for my sorry condition, since every song was about a man in transition or at a cross-roads or . . . well, whatever they were about, they were pretty damn introspective, which is just what I needed. Deep into the pathos of the fifth track was the last time I expected Annette McNabnay to call me.

“This is Sky.”

“Sky, it’s Annette.”

“Annette?”

“Annette McNabnay, from the board.”

“Annette, of course. How are you?”

Ordinarily Mayor Annette McNabnay, my fellow Tailburger director, would have referred to herself by her full name. And her tone of voice would have been cordial but businesslike, and very calm. For some unknown reason, she was nervous.

“Sky, I was wondering if you’d like to tour City Hall sometime?”

“Oh, Annette, that’s awful nice of you to ask, but I did that way back in elementary school. I assume it hasn’t changed too much.”

“Well, probably not, but perhaps I could show you some things you’ve never seen before.”

There was nothing overly coquettish or come-hither in her voice.

“I doubt it. We walked all over that place. I remember it like yesterday. My teacher, Mrs. Richardson, was . . .”

“Sky, I’m trying to ask you out in a subtle and clever way, but I’m failing miserably.”

“Oh,” I said. Now I felt like an idiot. I wasn’t sure how to respond.

The thought of going on a date with Mayor McNabnay had significant appeal. For starters, I’d never gone out with a mayor. Walking around with her, I’d be the cobeneficiary of all the adulation she received, as well as lots of free stuff like frozen yogurts and lapel pins, two things you could never have enough of.

If this had been the old Sky, I would have accepted Annette’s invitation immediately. Why not? I was a man. She was a mayor. You can’t fight biology. But I couldn’t say yes. I was smitten with Muffet. And for me, that was enough.

“Annette, I’m very flattered, but I’m sort of getting involved with someone right now, and I don’t think it would be fair to her.”

I was amazed by the words running off my tongue, but it had been years since I’d been physically attracted to someone the way I was with Muffet Meaney.

“I see. Well, that’s all right. I understand. I thought it might be fun. Maybe another time.”

“Yeah, sure. I mean, I’m sure it would be fun. I just . . . well . . . you understand.”

“I do. I’ll see you at the next meeting.”

“Right. I’ll see you then. I’m sorry, Annette.”

“Good-bye, Sky.”

I pressed the End button on my Motorola and momentarily questioned my refusal. Annette was a beautiful, accomplished woman who apparently saw something in me, and here I’d turned her away. Was I acting too hastily? I didn’t know what, if anything, would happen with Muffet. In the back of my mind, I thought she might be the woman who would help me finally get over Jess, my beloved, but decidedly deceased, ex-wife, but I didn’t know that for certain. Still, the thought of her made my knees weak, and that had to be a good sign. I’d grown tired of chasing a ghost. And so it was settled. No Annette.

11

East Meets West

With my unpredictable work schedule, King quickly became frustrated about my Qigong training and felt the need to speed my progress along by alternative means. When I got home from work the next day, I found a kitchen full of carob-flavored soy milk, tempeh hot dogs, tofu cereal and other unidentifiable soybean products.

“What the hell is all this crap?”

“This crap is part of the road to wellness,” King informed me.

I opened the freezer and saw what appeared to be hamburger patties.

“Well, at least you had the good sense to get burgers.”

“Those are soy burgers.”

“I should’ve known. (Pause) How do they taste? And break it to me gently.”

“Awful at first, but you’ll grow to tolerate it.”

“I won’t grow to love it?”

“No. (Pause) Look what else I’ve got for you.”

King moved toward the counter and pulled a small, plastic-wrapped box from a brown grocery bag.

“What’s that?”

“It’s Nicorette, that nicotine gum you see on TV. It’ll help you quit smoking.”

“What if I don’t want to quit smoking?”

“Think about Sophia. Don’t you want to dance at your own daughter’s wedding?”

“I’d love to dance at her wedding. I just don’t want to pay for it. Cigarettes may get me out of that obligation.”

“All right, funny guy, just try it. If it doesn’t work, we’ll get you the patch. C’mon, it’s minty and good,” King teased while waving the box.

“Okay, I’ll try it. But only because I heard the patch can kill you.”

“True, if administered improperly. It’s very, very rare. Kills mostly blind people who forget they’ve got a few stuck on already.”

“I’ll stick to the gum, thank you. What happened to Qigong? I thought that was going to cure me of everything.”

“It will. But it takes a while to kick in.”

“How long?”

“Well, at the rate you’re going, it’ll be two years before you feel your chi and five years before you believe it. In the meantime, we’ve got to get you some good old-fashioned pharmaceuticals.”

“I don’t need any damn medication. I’m fine. Can’t we speed up my chee?”

“No. Not with your schedule. Your chi gets flabby if you don’t work on it.”

“Then it’ll look like the rest of my body, all right? Give me a break.”

“Sky, I’ve made a list of the dangerous health conditions we have to attack, but you’ve got to be willing to make changes. Are you willing?”

“No, I’m not willing. I know I’m not in Olympic shape, but fortunately I don’t have a decathlon next week. Why should I make any changes?”

“Your hair’s thinning pretty rapidly, isn’t it?”

“Kind of. So what?”

“Then you need Follicor. It’s a pill that suppresses your testosterone level and lets you keep the hair you’ve got.”

“What about the side effects?”

“You may experience nausea, dry mouth, dizziness, hallucinations, the usual stuff. Oh, also, a small number of men experience erectile dysfunction. Pecker problems basically.”

“So I’ll have my hair, but no hard-on? What good does that do me? No thanks.”

“The percentage of men who become impotent is like two. I’m sure you won’t be part of that group. Plus, Follicor is also supposed to shrink your prostate.”

“I don’t have a prostate problem.”

“Oh, no? How many times are you up at night to whiz? Four is my guess.”

“Only three,” I replied, resentful that he’d been even close to correct about something so personal.

“As I suspected, you’ve got a prostate problem. That gland’s gettin’ bigger and bigger, day by day. Pretty soon it’ll be the size of a grapefruit.”

“Go to hell!”

“You seem a bit moody to me as well.”

“Do I? It’s probably my grapefruit-sized prostate pressing on my bladder.”

“The doctor can prescribe Xanax or maybe Prozac. That’ll even you out. Maybe Zoloft.”

“I don’t need to be evened out. I like being odd.”

“See. It may be worse than I thought.”

“Are you done?”

“No. We’ve got to do something about that weight problem of yours. I’m thinking fen-phen tablets.”

“Weren’t those banned for causing aortic valve ruptures?”

“Yes, but I know a guy who can still get them. Sometimes you’ve got to go the illegal route to get results. I learned that from El Jefe.”

“Oh, great. And I suppose El Jefe was a real health nut.”

“Not really. His diet consisted entirely of boar’s feet and cocaine, but boy did he love to jog.”

“Great. Very inspiring. Look, let’s just do the chee koong training and forget about all these pills.”

“Okay, but all this anger is very bad for your chi. It violates one of twenty-four rules of practice: never meditate when you have lost your temper or are too excited.”

“Let’s just get started.”

“Not until you calm down.”

“I’m calm. Let’s go.”

“No, you’re not. Your mind is scattered. If you meditate now, it’ll do more harm than good.”

“I swear I’m calm.”

“All right. We’re still in the sitting stage. Slowly drop to the floor . . . oops wait a minute. Do you have to go to the bathroom?”

“No, why?”

“Because that’s another one of the twenty-four rules.”

“Going to the bathroom?”

“No. Practicing with a full bladder. Holding it in disturbs your concentration.”

“My bladder is on E, all right?”

King handed me the Taiji ruler as we prepared to start.

“Good. Now we’re going to start with some deep breaths. I want you to clear your mind of everything. Breathe in . . . and out . . . in . . . and out. Good. Focus on the middle of the ruler.”

“What’s this doing for me, again?”

“I told you before. You’re inducing a state of meditation that will stimulate your blood and chi. You’re tapping into the life force that flows around your body.”

“You mean like urine?”

“No. I do not mean like urine. Now breathe in . . . and out . . . in . . . and out. You have to restore harmony and balance to your mind and body. Believe me, they’re both out of whack.”

“What will this help more? My yin or my yang?”

“It will help both equally. Now you have to concentrate in order to warm your Dan Tian.”

“My Dan Tian?”

“Yes. The seat of your chi. Two inches below your navel, deep within your pelvis. Imagine a flow of energy, information, light and sound that enters through your head, passes down through your nose, out to your open palms and back into your Dan Tian.”

“What is this thing? The bullet that killed Kennedy?”

“No more questions!”

King’s patience was at the breaking point when the telephone rang and interrupted our session. Desperate to get out of his boring as all hell breathing exercises, I answered it before he could object. Good thing I did. On the other end of the line was Sophia, calling from Cornell.

“Hi, Daddy.”

Sophia didn’t call me Daddy when she wanted something. She called me Daddy when she wanted something expensive.

“Hey, babe, how’s my little girl?” I asked cautiously, given her track record.

“Not so good.”

There it went—the perfectly cast line with the big shiny hook.

“I don’t like to hear that. What’s the matter?”

“Well, I want to go to business school.”

Finally, something I would be happy to pay for (if I had the money).

“That’s terrific. I’m so proud of you.”

The perfect game I was pitching got spoiled the moment Sophia announced that she wanted a boob job. My well-adjusted second-born child wasn’t quite so crude, referring instead to a breast augmentation procedure. According to my daughter, her Delta Gamma sorority sisters had discovered a direct correlation between the size of their respective hooters and their grade point averages. With slots to business school growing more difficult to obtain, a sizable set could mean the difference between Wharton and Wayne State, or so the theory went. I tried to appeal to the latent feminist in Sophia by reminding her that this type of plastic surgery served only to reinforce the objectification of women in our society as sex objects, and that she should seriously consider taking a bold step against such exploitation. When that didn’t work, I told her to get three estimates.

Fittingly, as I sat reeling from the blow of my daughter’s request, the biggest boob of them all called.

“Sky, it’s Trip Baden.”

“Trip, what do you want?”

“I think you know why I’m calling. You’re coming up on twenty years with Tailburger. And if you’re going to take early retirement, I want my cut.”

“I’m not taking retirement this year. And even if I was, you’re not entitled to anything.”

“Are you going to disrespect Jess by ignoring her wishes?”

“Her wishes? She didn’t even have a will.”

“She didn’t need one. Her love for me said it all.”

“Oh, spare me. She didn’t love you. She loved me. She was just confused for a few years.”

“You’re the one who’s confused.”

“You know what? I’m going to work at least five more years, maybe ten, and you don’t get a dime until my career ends. So get ready to wait for a long, long time.”

Trip knew that the longer I worked, the bigger the benefit he’d receive, but he needed the money now. Still, the financial difference between twenty and twenty-five years vested was considerable, and the difference between twenty and thirty was enormous.

“My lawyer will force you into an advance settlement, Sky. You’re only kidding yourself if you think you can avoid me forever.”

“Tell your pimp, excuse me, I mean lawyer, that I can do anything I damn well please!”

Trip said his shark would be circling me soon and to expect a phone call. The thought of losing half of what I’d worked for over the years made me queasy. With Sophia’s tuition and Ethan’s ongoing needs, not to mention the current cost of elective surgery, I was feeling a sharp financial pinch. My salary was pretty stagnant by now, and the stock options I’d collected over the years weren’t worth much, if anything, since Tailburger stock had lagged for what seemed like forever. I didn’t bother to tell Trip that my twenty-year retirement fund was itself in jeopardy. You don’t put lighter fluid on a bonfire.

BOOK: Red Meat Cures Cancer
5.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Ironic Sacrifice by Brooklyn Ann
The Way We Bared Our Souls by Willa Strayhorn
Captured Moon-6 by Loribelle Hunt
Larkspur by Christian, Claudia Hall
Ironheart by Allan Boroughs
Vellum by Hal Duncan