Another of the daft impositions placed by
governments on citizenry is the bad driver's licence photo. Anyone hoping for
vehicular mobility is mandated to take a single picture that serves as their
legal introduction for, at least, the following year. The photographed is
legally required to rest into bitch face and is allowed to choose from one
option, which is not how choice or options works. Death, taxes, bad driver's
licence photos - all supposedly inevitable, but that has never stopped people
from trying.
Perhaps one may find, on the pop-up community
market circuit, the arts and craft stall of Abby. Feign
interest in the weavings, the sculptures and other utterly useless art until
one is alone at Abby's stall and ask her to make you a fake I.D.. This is what Todd, bowl-cut
academic fresh off completing his PhD in cryptozoology, does, Abby leans back
her chair to better appraise this prospective customer.
The usual patrons for Abby's illegal side hustle
are middle-aged women. Two decades ago, at a craft-sale school fundraiser,
fellow Mums inspired her foray into fake I.D.s by complimenting her small art
works and then sharing joints behind the change rooms. A consumer base of
parents necessitates certain moral restrictions - specifically, that all of
Abby's fake I.D.s give completely true information but have a more flattering
photograph. (Although, in cases of more complicated I.D.s such as airport
access cards, she can outsource digital mischief to Jessica to have
flattering photograph inserted into government databases.)* It is mere vanity,
but Todd has a more complicated vanity in mind:
'I want my driver's licence photo to change
appearance in lieu of my own.'
Ummmm: 'You mean like The Picture of Dorian
Gray?'
'Bingo.'
'But.' Contingencies run behind Abby's eyes.
'Sooner or later you are going to pull it out, see it, then die.'
'I believe you are confusing the novel with the
film adaptation of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. Or my dick.'
April crosses arms: 'Why?'
'Because you said "pull it out".'
'No, why do you want this magical I.D.?'
'I have a skin condition that flares up in
summer.'
Also, last visit to the barber revealed, reflection
in reflection, the beginnings of a bald spot.
Abby has raised three daughters and the middle
one was a particular shit, so Abby has developed a nuanced bullshit detector.
In this case, the bullshit detector detects no bull. Well. Shit.
Abby considers: a magical side hustle to her
illegal side hustle to her artsy side hustle to her job, plus feeding the third
child who has just started uni. Imbuing Todd's drivers licence with the
requested properties would require proper witchcraft.
Abby would have to get the old gang back together - school friends with whom
she extracurriculared in channelling esoteric feminine energies by dancing in
forestries under the full moon and shouting 'cunt' a lot. They got pretty good
at it.
Bringing the old gang back together is not as
socially difficult as it sounds. Dear Felicity did so two years ago in order to
hex whoever her husband was fucking, making for an interesting Christmas where
all four of her brothers painfully vomited upon entering her premises. However,
middle-aged witchcraft has expenses:
·
The booze must
be stronger and better quality, all relevant witches having outgrown West Coast
Coolers.
·
Then there are
the hangover cures,
because adult women have shit to do.
·
A mattress on
the floor no longer cuts it, everyone will want their own room, which means
glamping.
Which brings Abby to the taxed brass: 'How are
you going to pay for this?'
Matter of fact: 'Quetzalcoatl feathers.'
'I dooon't really need Quetzalcoatl feathers.'
'No, but someone will, and they have gone up in
value after Amy's,
um, episode.'
Meaning Amy's hunting trip where she did a lot of
peyote in the hopes of contacting (and killing) her spirit animal. No luck
there, but she did mistake the I.S.S. for a flying saucer and fired about four
dozen arrows, fletched with gravity-defying Quetzalcoatl feathers, at the satellite.
Only two hit, the rest drifting into space. This scarcity has tilted the usual
supply and demand.
Todd has an ample supply of Quetzalcoatl feathers
because he wingmans for them, the serpent dragons using human networks much
like how people use hook-up apps. Whilst human sex leaves sweat and other
fluids, Quetzalcoatl fornication leaves their feathers and other body fluids,
quite often blood. Todd has been saving feathers in the hopes of purchasing a
bouquet of blue roses to gift to Elise, another
wingman, as a beautiful statement of their impossible love. Todd changed
purchasing preferences when he realised that he could just ask Elise:
'You wanna' just fuck already?'
So now Abby feels, in a swell rising from her
tum-tums, the epiphany of opportunity. The Quetzalcoatl feathers will be
exchanged for The Driver's Licence of Todd. Feathers will then be traded for
Ghost Tobacco, cigarettes which give form to spirits yet to pass onto the other
side. Abby's youngest is studying psychology at uni and so this ghost tobacco
will pay for her informal tutoring by Sinead, who is
hot-shot counsellor, ghost and also a smoker.
*As an aside, does anyone else think that these
Chinese/North Korean/ Russian hackers operate like privateers i.e. they don't
work for the government, per se, but the government gives them free reign to
digitally loot and pillage foreign assets?
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