24 March 2014

Ancient Bones - A Tabloid Story

Today is the right day to post something silly and fun, written in June, 2000.

Ancient Bones – A Tabloid Story

PROBE OF ‘FEDERAL DITCH’ MAY REVEAL ANCIENT BONES

In what could be the discovery of a new race of beings – perhaps from another planet – insiders’ close to the unearthly uncovering of bones behind a Berkshire Road house say that answers are hard to find at this early stage of the excavation.

Neighborhood resident Jerry Kaye reported that about five month ago he began hearing strange song-like noises rising from deep within a brick-and-mortar drain at one end of the ‘federal’ ditch, constructed during the civil war under the pretense of hiding troops from the Yanks.  “It was like those five tones from Close Encounters of the Third Kind, -- da, de, da, dahh, da,” he exclaimed.  Thinking that perhaps it was his vivid imagination – “from the gin” – he at first discounted the eerie emanations.  Kaye is described by other residents as ‘colorful,’ and can often be seen walking his miniature pick-a-poo with a cigarette dangling in one hand, tumbler balanced in the other.  “That dog must walk itself,” spat resident June Bugg in her thick Southern accent.

The singing ditch took on new importance, however, as others with surrounding property also began noting strange and bizarre occurrences.  George Gouviea became a believer that something was amiss when, around the cocktail hour on a lazy Summer afternoon, he decided to water his drought-stricken hydrangeas.  “I was pulling the hose down to the back yard, and then heard ‘da, de, da, dahh, da’.”  He had heard of Kaye’s earlier brush with the bizarre, but thought that it too was his vivid imagination – “from the scotch.”

But it all became credible when during a neighborhood-wide spree of illegal watering (in the extreme drought conditions, outdoor watering had been banned), the ditch flooded, washing away years of discarded neighborhood trash (much of it was lesbian erotica, say sources close to the activity – but that’s another amazing story!).  Under the remaining rubble, strange bone-like fragments appeared jutting through a thousand-year-old bed of rock.  Unwilling to touch the sketchy skeletal remains, Kaye and Gouviea contacted the local Agriculture Department field office, in an effort to get soil samples taken.  “High acidity might prove that we’re dealing with the abnormal here,” the pair insisted.  Before that wacko week of weird discovery ended, amateur archeologists from several local state schools had cordoned off the area, picking and probing for what might lie beneath, hoping to be the first to unearth the unearthly.

“There is a chance that the abnormally high acid levels are the result of using Miracid throughout the area, causing undue accumulations in this low-lying ditch,” cautioned one well-placed observer.  Similarly, the discovery of a partially-damaged child’s toy -- The Farmer Says -- leads some to speculate that that is the source of the five-tone melody heard by Gouviea and Kaye.   

“We’re all really so very, very excited about this, even if it just amounts to a hill of beans,” June Bugg reflected.