Tag Archives: bonnie

Tyranny of the Muse – the name you know is the name once again! Plus, an excerpt!

The BROKEN BULBS comic is now titled TYRANNY OF THE MUSE! Regular readers will recognize that as not only the name of this blog, but the title of the BROKEN BULBS follow-up from a while back. Well, that sucker didn’t take, but so much of what was written for it will be rolled into the comics. So that’s good, right?

Here’s a brief excerpt from the second issue of TYRANNY OF THE MUSE.

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Frank sadly grins and squeezes his eyes closed. A tear rolls to the floor.

FRANK
Do you think that there’s something better?

BONNIE
Where?

FRANK
Anywhere.

Bonnie cocks her head and analyzes his face for a beat.

BONNIE
Probably not.

Frank rolls onto his side again and hugs her knee like a pillow.

FRANK
That’s what I thought.

BONNIE
But at least you got a nice place to put your head, right?

Frank smiles.

FRANK
Yeah. I guess so, Bonnie.

##

Stay tuned for more.

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New BROKEN BULBS Reader Art!

Who baby, Bonnie!

The wonderfully talented, San Francisco-based artist Geri Montano has submitted this intriguingly erotic and gloriously detailed piece of BROKEN BULBS reader art titled “Frank Baby-Boy, Are You Ready For Me To Put It In?”

Geri says, “I painted this illustration using ink, watercolor, acrylic and collage. The only collage components are books which inspire you and some of your notes.”

Geri Montano previously submitted an equally sexy and beautiful Bonnie piece here!

To find out more about Geri check out her website http://www.missionartistsunited.org/artists/redmirage and follow her Twitter at http://twitter.com/#!/gerimontano

Pop your peepers at more awesome BROKEN BULBS reader art here and find out how you can submit your own!

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The Place with the Trees

She stopped the car in front of a place that had lots of trees and it seemed calm and nauseating and had nice windows and I didn’t like it. “Out,” she said and opened her door and got out and opened mine and yanked me by my shirt and I fell onto my knees. “Where are we?” I asked and she kept pulling and dragged me on my stomach and grinded me bloody and ruined my knees and ripped my pants. “Shut it,” she said and tossed me into the big wooden door and my nose was bleeding and she rapidly knocked and looked to me, “This is where the clean happens, the change, the good, the no more seeds, the better.” And I looked back to my muse, who inspired me and loaded the seeds into my brain and hooked me on things and made me love her and love life and love words and I grimaced as the door opened and realized that everything was going away now and there would be no more somethings and back to nothings and words were dead and sadness was real again as the seeds were ending. And I looked at the man in the coat and he looked back and I asked him, “Is this rehab?”

And he smiled.

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This was published in print along with a bunch of great short-shorts HERE.

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Mind Games

A brand new, short-short, 6 sentence Frank and Bonnie story has been published in this book.

6S, Mind Games

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While Bonnie waited for Frank to come out of the closet…

 

While Bonnie waited for Frank to come out of the closet…

By Geri Montano

Geri Says:

I work on paper using mostly graphite pencil, colored pencil, acrylic ink and some elements of collage. In the piece inspired by “Broken Bulbs” I added of course some charcoal for the charcoal drawing of the evergreen tree. The only collage elements here are the pillow, torn wallpaper, strewn boxers and skirt; the rest I drew or painted.

Really fantastic! I’m crazy about this piece.

Check out more of Geri’s stuff here:

www.missionartistsunited.org/artists/redmirage

Have a look at other submissions:

bonnieisgood.com/art

Want to submit some Broken Bulbs-inspired art?

bonnieisgood.com/submit

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Crumbs and Coffee Stains

Bonnie’s been away for hours.

She’s been somewhere. I’ve been nowhere. I’ve heard noises. I’ve heard things. I’ve heard whispers. I’ve heard nothing. I’ve heard something.

She’s forced me. She’s forced me to write. She’s forced me to think. She’s forced me to drink coffee. My hands. My arms. My chest. It’s been too much. Too strong. She’s trying to kill me.

I’m literally chained to the desk.

The desk is too small. My back hurts. My lower back hurts. My lower back is killing me. But she wants me to work. She wants me to try. So I try. I type. I type. I type hard.

THUNK. THUNK. THUNK. This is the sound the keys make. This is the sound my fingers make. My fingers are being creative. But I’m not. I’m not there when they’re there. I’m not here when they’re here. I’m only here when she’s here. But she’s not here. She’s not here and I need her here. I need her here now.

She’s denying me again. I haven’t felt it inside me for weeks. Weeks feel like months, feel like years, feel like decades, feel like centuries. She says, “You’ll be clean as the kitchen floor , baby-boy.” But the kitchen floor isn’t clean at all. Nothing’s clean. Everything is covered in filth. Everything is covered in crumbs and coffee stains.

I’m crumbs and coffee stains and I’m covering everything.

I feel like something is coming. I feel like something is building. I have to go to the bathroom but I can’t. I can’t drag the desk. I can’t be free until Bonnie frees me. I’m in pain. I’m alone. I’m scared.

Days are ticking by and I lose track of time. The ticks. The tocks. The nothing. The nothing. I can’t tell the difference between Mondays and Sundays and Tuesdays and Fridays. I can’t tell the difference between twelve and eight and nine and ten. When happiness comes, sadness clobbers it and I just want to feel her hands. And her hands make it feel okay. And her hands make it feel real. And her hands make my smile hurt. And her hands make my heart work. And I don’t know where I am but I’m here when she’s here. I’m there when she’s there.

If I could leave the desk I’d find her. But she’s locked me down. She says that this is where I belong. She says this is where I stay until she says I can go. “When you’re free, you’ll be free, Franky-boy.” That’s what she says. That’s what she says when I question her. That’s what she says to make me feel better.

So I type.

I don’t think. I don’t try. I don’t mull. I type. As each word appears on the screen it vanishes from my mind. But these are not my words. They’re passing through the conduit. Bonnie is in control. I’m the vessel through which she speaks. She may not always intend for this to be the case, but it is. I’m the vessel. And this vessel is sinking.

But I type. I type and I wait.

The letters are spilling like blood from a severed cliche. They smear as I try to clean them. They stain the screen as I try to wipe them. Letters turn to words turn to sentences turn to something. Something that’s telling me that something is building. Something is building in me. Something is building around me. Something that’s gonna crush me. I need her here as my shelter. I need her here as my shield. But she’s not with me. She’s left me. She’s left me alone. She’s left me alone and I’m alone. I feel alone. I feel scared. I feel trapped. “When you’re free, you’ll be free, Franky-boy.” She says it over and over and over again. She says it to me and it comforts me but I don’t listen. I don’t listen to what she says. I don’t listen to anything except the pounding of my head. The pulsing of my wound. The craving that tears at my insides screaming, “I NEED A NEW ONE!”

“No more new ones.” That’s what she says. “Clean as the kitchen floor.” That’s what she says.

Crumbs and coffee stains. That’s what I say.

And I hear the front door.

My heart can’t take the pounding as I listen to her approach. It nearly explodes as she enters the room. And it damn-near stops as she slips a black hood over my head.

“Bonnie, what are you—”

“Shut the fuck up!” she yells.

I hear the jingling keys and unlocking locks as the chains are removed and the cuffs are secured around my wrists. She grabs me by the armpit and yanks me from the chair. “Come on!” she says impatiently.

She drags me down the hall, through the kitchen, out the front door, across the grass and tosses me into the backseat of an awaiting car. The exhaust stink and rattling, clunky engine tells me it’s my death box. She slams the door, hops in the driver seat and off we go.

“Where are you taking me?” I ask.

“Nowhere,” she says.

“Why?”

“Cuz that’s where you need to go.”

“I think I’m getting a little confused.“

She bangs the car around a 90 degree turn, screeching the tires. I can feel the backend fishtail as I slide and bash my head into the door.

“Jesus Christ, Bonnie!” I yelp, as she whips the little crapper 180 and floors it in the opposite direction.

“I said, shut up!” she yells, “Keep quiet till we get there!”

“Get where?”

I hear her grunt and cut the wheel as we pop another 180.

“I said shut up!” she shouts as she pounds her foot onto the gas. The spinning tires reek of burning rubber as we take off at speeds far exceeding anything my death box has ever experienced.

And I decide to keep my mouth shut.

We finally arrive at our mysterious destination after what felt like a spin on the tilt-a-whirl from hell. The engine cuts, Bonnie jumps out, the door opens and she grabs me by the scruff of my neck and pulls me onto the ground.

“On your feet!” she commands.

I’m barely standing before she’s pushing me forward. She steps in front of me and grabs me by my shirt.

“Watch your step!” she says and tugs me up a flight of stairs. I nearly fall to my face but Bonnie keeps my balance as she pulls me up and holds me still.

“Wait,” she says. I hear her dig through a bag and remove something. I hear a strange sound, like the tissssssssss of an aerosol can and feel the front of the hood soak with liquid. Suddenly, I’m overwhelmed by the smell of lavender.

“What are you doing, Bonnie?” I ask between coughs.

I hear a giggle as she grabs a handful of shirt and pulls me through a door. We enter a room and Bonnie forces me down. I feel sharp pain as my knees slam into what feels like linoleum. Bonnie plops in front of me and I hear her light her Zippo. I feel a growing warmth through the hood. And after another giggle, Bonnie gets to her feet and walks away. And the warmth goes with her.

And I wait.

As the silence grows, I wait.

As the loneliness builds, I wait.

As the neurosis and paranoia fill the room, I wait.

I wait until the hood is pulled away…

And I’m in my own kitchen.

“What the fuck?” I mutter.

I hear Bonnie snicker behind me. “You were blind, my boy, and I made you see.”

I quickly turn to see Bonnie holding a lopsided birthday cake with 26 lit candles stuck in top. I slowly look to her face and notice a bit of chocolate icing on her cheek. She smiles a smile that feels like a shovel to my face and says, “Happy birthday, baby-boy. How’s 26 feel?”

I’m silent as I realize that I’ve forgotten my own birthday once again.

“It’s okay, Franky-boy,” she says, “I can remember for both of us.”

And she rests the cake on the floor. She rests it on top of the crumbs and coffee stains and takes my face in her hands.

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New reader art from the very awesome Jamaica Dyer!

Bonnie!

Check out her wonderful comic, “Weird Fishes.” She’s currently posting pages from her new one, “Dee’s Siren Song” here. It’s absolutely fantastic!

Follow @jamdye on Twitter.

See more reader art and submit your own HERE.

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The Uninspired Muse

Characters:

Bonnie – Muse

Wally – Inspicorp lackey

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He has such a stupid look on his face, with that bulbous nose and ugly tooth.

“What do you mean you quit?”

“I quit, Wally. I’m done. It’s over.”

“Yeah right!”

“Seriously. I want out.”

Wally stares, takes a breath and stands from his chair. He walks around his desk and sits in front of me like a creepily-comforting, kid touching, guidance counselor.

“Bonnie. Sweetie. Pumpkin-face. I don’t buy it for a second.”

I cross my arms and shake my head. “Buy it, man. I’m outta here. Enough’s enough.”

He sits up straight and lets the serious out. “Why?”

“Cuz what am I even doing here?”

“You’re serving the world, darlin’. You’re changing things. You’re inspiring minds.”

“I’m frying boys’ brains. I’m an aerobics instructor. I pump ‘em up so they can run in place. It’s nonsense. I’m a pusher.”

“But that’s the gig.”

“Blah blah blah.”

“And you’re so good at it.”

“Just cuz I’m good at something, it doesn’t mean I gotta do it.”

He smiles, “You’re mystical, baby.”

“Quit it.”

“You’re magical.”

“Don’t care.”

“You got a way about you and you know it.”

“I don’t know nothing.”

“You got those jokers wrapped around you like a feather boa. You’re a master.”

“Save it. I’m bored. I’m sad. I’m choking, ya know? It’s too much repetition. Again and again and again and again. Bonnie Bonnie Bonnie, inspire me, inspire me, inspire me. FUCK! I’m feeling pretty uninspired myself.”

Wally laughs and moves his hand through the air like he’s tracing the words on a marquee, “The Uninspired Muse. I can see it now.”

“Cram it, Wally.”

He laughs.

“I’m serious, man!”

“What about Frank Fisher? You done wonders with that mope.”

“I don’t wanna talk about Frank.”

“Got a script out of him. I’d call it a success.”

“Almost.”

“Kid’s goin’ places. I can feel it.”

I watch the smug curve in his mouth and smell the sneezy air of the dumpy, dampy, danky, dark dungeon office that Inspicorp keeps for the drops offs and pick ups of all the seeds and shit. Basement of Billy Bloodbath’s Bangdown Booby Bar. Crapfest, puke-inducing, scuzz-ville of a joint.

“Feel this,” I say and remove the shiny little silver pin in the shape of a lyre from my lapel and hand it to him. “I’m turnin’ in my strings, cap’n.”

“Serious?”

“And there’s nothing you can do about it.”

He holds it in his palm and ponders like a pup. “No two weeks?”

I light a smoke and exhale. “Ha! You want two weeks?” and I flip both middle fingers. “Here are my two weeks!”

He chuckles. “You’re really burnin’ some bridges here ain’t ya, kiddo?”

I quickly stand and point the cigarette in his sloppy, Shar Pei, slush-face. “You bet your ass I am and you be sure to tell that broad in the corner office to leave me be. I am no longer an employee of Inspicorp. I am no longer a muse. I am no longer a manipulative drug dealer.”

“They’re not drugs!”

Bullshit. I am no longer working here. As far as anyone is concerned…I, am nothing.”

He laughs. “Bonnie…you are not—”

“Shut the fuck up!”

He laughs again.

“Don’t call me. Don’t say my name. Don’t even think of me. As soon as I walk out that door, I am forgotten.”

“That caboose of yours sure ain’t gonna be easy to forget.”

Grrr.

I sock him in the mouth. He clutches his face as blood squirts and drips between his fingers like a sputtering showerhead.

“You stupid bitch!” he gurgles into the handful of red.

I reach into my bag and pull out the small, black, leather, zip-up case and toss it on the desk. “Take your stupid applicator and your stupid seeds and forget me!” I shout heading for the door.

“We ain’t forgetting shit, sister!”

I pause in the doorway, resting my hand on the molding and turn back. “Then I’ll burn Inspicorp to the ground.”

He pulls his hand away from his mouth and reveals his newly cracked, ugly front tooth and blood goatee. Improvement, I think. “You’re full of shit, girlie! You’ll be back.”

I take a long, final, badass drag from my cigarette and flick the butt into the dark corner. “I’m serious, Wally. Tell her to forget me. It’s in everybody’s best interest.”

“Bonnie, you walk out that door; your ass is TOAST!”

“Toast?” I giggle and shrug and turn away and walk through the doorway. “Stop drop and roll, Wally-boy.”

He turns to the corner and sees a stack of supply boxes have caught into a quickly growing fire. Bulbereno, the cartoon lightbulb logo’s happy little face burning like Bonanza.

“Bonnie, you nasty bi—”

I slam the door and climb the stairs that lead to the street. I pause on the sidewalk, pull out my pack, yank a fresh cig and light it. I look around, take a drag and tensely exhale.

“Here we go.”

And I walk away as smoke crawls up the stairs and sirens scream in the far away.

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I Think I Broke You

Characters:

Frank Fisher – Junkie

Bonnie – Muse

#

“Too much is too much, Frank.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Too much is too much and you got too much.”

“What?”

“I think I broke you.”

“You broke me?”

“I can’t believe I’m saying this, but you’re fucking yourself up man.”

“No I’m not. I’m fine. I just need…something. I just need something else.”

“Frank…”

“I’m okay. I know it. I’m just…in between.”

“Frank, you don’t know anything. You don’t get anything.”

“Yes I do.”

“All you know is what I tell you.”

“That’s not true.”

“Oh, fuck you! It is too!”

“Fuck YOU, Bonnie!”

Bonnie’s eyes widen, and she SMASHES her heel into my nose. I hear a thump, a crack, a slight squeak and I’m swimming in a pool of the red stuff on a lovely starry night.

As the world fades-in she straddles my chest, pins my arms with her knees and digs through her bag.

I hock some snotty blood from my mouth, “What’s the fucking deal, Bonnie?”

“You’re such an asshole!” she says with her face in the bag.

“What’s the fucking deal?” I repeat.

Her face stays buried as she mutters, “Unappreciative fuck. That’s what you are, an unappreciative fucking fuck. You don’t care. You don’t give a shit. You don’t care, you don’t care, you don’t care. Look what I do. Look what I do! And what do I get? What do I fucking get?”

“What?” I ask.

“NOTHING!” she screams in my face.

And I’m officially scared. “Okay okay, I’m sorry Bonnie.”

“Yeah?”

“Yeah.”

“Yeah, me too!” she says and yanks the bandages from my head, presses them to my nose, pulls something from her bag and slams it into my wound. It’s not the applicator. It’s something else. It feels different. It feels warm. It feels metallic. It feels strange.

“Look!” she shouts and opens a compact mirror. I see it. A light bulb. A light bulb is jammed into my head and it’s burning bright.

Holy…

“That ain’t fuckin’ right, Frank.”

“What the fuck is going on?”

“Your brain is pumping so much energy that this thing is about to fucking POP!”

“Holy shit.”

“You’re juicing, Frank.”

“I’m juicing?”

“Your head is a ball of crazy shit. I don’t know how much more it can take. I’m serious. If the bulb bursts you’re a fucking meat ball.”

“Bonnie, what did I do?”

“I told you.”

“You didn’t tell me this?”

She slides off my chest and I walk to the bathroom. I stare at the burning bulb jutting from my skull. She’s right. This is all kinds of wrong. I flip the lights off and the room is just as bright. My head is a power plant.

I step out of the bathroom, “Bonnie, what are we gonna—”

She hits me like a linebacker, snatches the bulb from my head and slams the applicator into its place. As she presses the button and releases the seed I stare at the shattered pieces of bulb on the floor.

The seed enters, dissolves and the flow begins.

“I fucking hate you, Frank.”

I catch my breath. “I know, Bonnie.”

“We gotta come to some kind of agreement.”

“Okay.”

“You stick with this new thing for a while. You see it through to the end. You hold onto it real tight…and I’ll keep you in a better way.”

“Why?”

“It’s something. You may not think it, or feel it, but it is.”

“Okay.”

“You slip, you try to switch, you lose it and I’ll let your fucking head burn.”

“Okay.”

“Got me?”

“Yes.”

“Promise me.”

“I promise.”

“Mean it.”

“I do.”

Face to face, she furrows her brow. She looks into my brain. She downloads. She reads the data. She doesn’t blink.

“Fine,” she says, and lays her head on my chest. The smell of her hair and the weight of her body tells me that she’ll keep me safe. My muscles relax and my breathing slows as I gently place my hands on her back. The blood from my nose gradually drips down my face and into my ear. It softly reminds me of everything she’s given me. It quietly says, You are Bonnie’s boy. Forever and ever, you will always be.

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