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Campfire Regrets

por Bill Tiepelman

Campfire Regrets

Marshwin T. Mallow had always been warned about the fire. "Keep your fluff three feet from the flame," his mother used to say. “Any closer and you’ll be a crème brûlée with abandonment issues.” But Marshwin, ever the thrill-seeker, was born to tempt fate — or at least tempt thermodynamics. And on one fateful, smoky, stick-snapping evening in Sizzlewood Forest, he made the worst decision of his gelatinous little life: he sat too damn close to the campfire. To be fair, the fire had *looked* romantic — all flickery and seductive like a Tinder date that promised s’mores but delivered STDs. The kind of fire that whispered, “Come hither, baby. Let me kiss your sugary dome.” Marshwin, puffy with pride and three shots of pine needle gin deep, took the bait. He dragged his stubby bottom across the dirt, wedging himself cozily between a mossy log and a pile of broken dreams (read: crunchy acorns and one suspiciously melted gummy bear). “Just gonna toast the buns a bit,” he mumbled to himself, adjusting his polka-dotted neckerchief — the one he wore for occasions when he wanted to look hot. Literal hot. Not fashion hot. Although if you asked him after two more gin shots, he’d tell you it was both. Five seconds in and the sweat was real. Not from panic — from the marshmallow equivalent of an armpit. His edges began to bulge. A thin veil of smoke rose from his scalp like a bad idea. His eyes widened, and a tiny, pained fart escaped from what could generously be called a "marshhole." “Aw hell,” he whispered, feeling his top begin to caramelize. “I’ve made a terrible mistake.” From across the firepit, his best friend Graham — a honey-wheat cracker with a crippling fear of heat — waved frantically. “GET OUTTA THERE, YOU STICKY IDIOT!” But Marshwin was already stuck. His gooey thighs had bonded with the bark beneath him. His lower fluff had begun to blister in places that weren’t covered in the marshmallow anatomy manual. And worst of all, his once-proud sheen was now a patchy, blistered wreck, like a melted bar of soap trying to cosplay as a glazed donut. In the woods behind him, a chorus of toasted nuts and charred licorice whispered legends of others who had dared flirt with combustion. “He’s the chosen goo,” one hissed. “The one they’ll call ‘The Half-Baked.’” As the campfire cracked louder — and Marshwin’s pride cracked louder still — something inside him snapped. Was it the sugar bonds? His sense of dignity? Or simply the feeling returning to his left mallow cheek? He didn’t know. But he was about to find out. And it involved a very awkward escape plan, a twig that looked suspiciously like a grappling hook, and the kind of groan that only comes from burning your metaphorical balls on literal firewood. Marshwin's internal monologue had long since turned into a full-blown mental meltdown, not unlike the slow-roasting calamity bubbling under his epidermis. As his upper puff smoldered like a busted ceiling tile at a vape convention, he began muttering a half-drunk survival mantra under his breath: “Stay calm. Don’t panic. You’re not stuck. You’re simply... aggressively adhered to bark with third-degree fluff trauma.” His left arm — let’s call it what it was, a stubby goo-nub with the flexibility of a licorice whip — wobbled toward the twig he’d spotted earlier. It looked kind of like a grappling hook if you squinted, spun three times, and were suffering heatstroke. Still, it was something. And Marshwin wasn’t about to die crispy. Not tonight. Not like this. Not with his marshhole exposed to the open air like a disgraced fondue fountain. He lunged. Or rather, he *attempted* to lunge. What actually happened was a pitiful shimmy, like a sentient marshmallow trying to twerk its way out of trauma. The singed bark clung to his undercarriage with the loyalty of a bad ex — refusing to let go and full of splinters. “GRAHAAAAAAAM!” he bellowed, his voice cracking like a stale wafer. “I need backup!” From behind a rock, Graham peeked out, trembling like a cracker at a vegan cheese convention. “Dude, I don’t *have* arms. I’m two flat planks held together by crippling anxiety and cinnamon dust!” “Then THROW SOMETHING! Chuck me a mushroom! A sock! YOUR DIGNITY!” Marshwin screamed. Instead, Graham hurled a pinecone. It struck Marshwin squarely in the face, bouncing off with a loud thwok and smearing sap across his toasted cheek like war paint. “NAILED IT!” Graham shouted, clearly unqualified for first aid or friendship. Meanwhile, things were escalating. A small squirrel had appeared, sniffing around the clearing like it had just stumbled upon the world’s most confused dessert. It stared at Marshwin, tilting its head. “Don’t even THINK about it, nut nugget,” Marshwin hissed. “I may be roasted, but I bite back.” Somewhere in the background, a disheveled raccoon with a headband and a hotdog skewer muttered, “You got any chocolate? We could complete the trifecta...” “BACK OFF, BANDIT CAT!” Marshwin shrieked, flailing wildly now. In a burst of desperation and molten shame, he yanked himself upward — bark and bits of moss ripping from beneath his scorched ass like a marshmallow molting into adulthood. The twig grapple caught a branch. For one glorious second, he was airborne. Gliding through the forest like a marshmallowy Tarzan of the Trees, screaming, “I REGRET EVERYTHING AND NOTHING!” He soared. He glistened. He briefly passed out from sugar loss and existential horror. And then — *WHAM.* He faceplanted into a muddy creek with all the grace of a microwaved jellyfish. Sputtering, smoking, and newly soaked, Marshwin crawled to the bank, trailing charred fluff and pondweed from his dignity-parts. Behind him, the forest was quiet. The fire crackled on in the distance, smug as hell. Graham finally caught up, panting and breathless. “You made it. Holy crap. You smell like burnt hope and sticky trauma.” “I’m a changed puff,” Marshwin wheezed, steam rising from every orifice. “No more fire. No more neckerchief flair. No more butt-scorching bravado.” He rolled onto his back, looking at the stars. “From now on... I live a cool life. Like, refrigerator-chilled... popsicle-monk... no-spark lifestyle. I'm going full Zen Snack.” “You’ll last a week,” Graham said flatly. “Probably less,” Marshwin sighed. “But damn if I didn’t look hot while nearly dying.” Next: A mysterious traveler offers Marshwin a new purpose... and maybe a pair of pants. The next morning arrived like a hangover in a nun’s confessional — silent, judgy, and full of regrets. Marshwin T. Mallow lay motionless on a flat rock, steam gently hissing from his pores. His once-pristine fluff now resembled a half-sucked pillow mint that had been dropped in gravel and dunked in regret. Every inch of him ached. Even the bits that didn’t technically exist on the marshmallow anatomy chart. Like his sense of pride. And whatever was left of his marsh-nuts. “I feel like a microwaved napkin,” he muttered. “You smell like a failed crème brûlée that cheated on its diet,” Graham chimed in, chewing thoughtfully on a stick he’d mistaken for an oat bar. “Honestly, I’m proud of you. You finally outran both the fire and your own overconfidence. That’s growth. Or combustion. Hard to tell with you.” Marshwin tried to flip him off but could only manage a floppy wiggle of his semi-melted hand nub. “Shut up and go find me a loofah. I’ve got bark in crevices I didn’t know I had.” That’s when the shadow appeared — long, ominous, and shaped like an overfed marshmallow in a trench coat. From the trees stepped a figure none of them had ever seen, though they instantly felt like he’d been lurking in the back of their cookbook all along. He was tall. Puffy. Lightly dusted in cocoa powder like he was born of a barista’s fever dream. He wore a crooked toffee monocle and walked with a graham cracker cane. His name was whispered only once, but that was enough: “S’morris,” Graham whispered. “The Charred One. The legendary snack who survived triple-roast s’moregery and a camping trip with teenagers...” “Shut your crumbs,” S’morris growled, voice smooth like marshmallow jazz. “I heard there was a little puff who got singed but didn’t melt. A sweetling who thought he could tango with fire and not end up a puddle on a cracker. That you, Toastboy?” Marshwin sat up slowly, the scorched bark fused to his backside cracking like cheap ceramics. “What’s it to you, Sugarpimp?” S’morris smiled. “I like your attitude. Arrogant. Roasted. Gooey in all the wrong places. You’ve got what it takes. Ever heard of the Toasted Order?” “Is that some kind of cult?” Marshwin asked. “Because I already drank enough pine gin last night to hallucinate a squirrel with a knife.” “No,” S’morris said. “It’s a support group. For the singed. The caramelized. The ones who’ve flown too close to the flame, got their asses burnt, and came out... seasoned.” Marshwin blinked. “You want me to join a gang of emotionally scarred snack foods?” “We meet Thursdays,” S’morris added. “We swap stories. Trade SPF tricks. Learn how to walk again without leaving streaks. Sometimes we fight raccoons. Mostly for sport.” Marshwin looked down at his crispy hands. Then at Graham. Then at the firepit in the distance, where smoke still danced like the ghost of his roasted past. “Fine,” he said, “But only if you’ve got pants. I’m tired of moss rash.” S’morris pulled a pair of custom-tailored s’more-shorts from inside his coat — woven from licorice strands, lined with powdered sugar, and tastefully embroidered with the words “Too Sweet to Die.” “Welcome to the Order, Toastboy.” Over the next several weeks, Marshwin trained with the Order of the Toasted. He mastered the ancient ways of the Sear-Slip. He learned to extinguish himself in three seconds or less. He even achieved Marshmallow Inner Peace (M.I.P.), which involved deep breathing and controlled melting. They traveled the woods. Preached fire safety to reckless teens. Set squirrel traps made of peanut butter and sarcasm. And every night, around a controlled, regulated firepit with a perimeter of gravel and safety signage, Marshwin would share his story — of ego, combustion, escape... and sticky redemption. One day, he returned to that same log where it all began. The bark still bore his butt-mark — a fossil of fluff and shame. Marshwin smiled, placed a graham cracker flower at the site, and whispered, “Thanks for the trauma. You taught me how to live cool.” Then he farted softly and walked into the sunset, his sugar-pants rustling in the breeze.     Bring the Roast Home 🔥 Marshwin’s tragicomic tale of toasty survival is now immortalized in art — perfect for those who like their décor equal parts whimsical and well-done. Framed Prints bring the full, singed glory of Marshwin’s meltdown to your walls, while the sleek Metal Prints add an extra layer of fireproof flair. Prefer your humor on natural textures? The Wood Prints give rustic charm to this campfire catastrophe. Challenge yourself (or your friends) to piece together every glorious bit of Marshwin’s gooey trauma with a delightfully ridiculous Jigsaw Puzzle, or carry his legacy with you into the wild with our versatile Tote Bag — ideal for snacks, regret, and emergency marshmallow repellant. Because nothing says “I’ve got great taste” like celebrating the life of a mildly traumatized, partially caramelized marshmallow legend.

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The Last Gherkin

por Bill Tiepelman

The Last Gherkin

The Jarred Truth Gus was a gherkin, but not just any gherkin. He was the last one in the veggie drawer with dreams. Real, fermented, ambitious dreams. He wanted more than life as a garnish next to a burger. He wanted to be seen. To be respected. Maybe even—dare he whisper it—dipped in ranch and worshiped by stoners at midnight. But fate had other plans. Cold, briny plans. He awoke one morning to the wet snap of a rubber glove and the shrill sound of “time to clean the fridge,” which every vegetable knew meant one thing: The Purge. Carrots vanished. Celery sticks were chopped without mercy. And then… the jar. It sat there. Ominous. Full of his sliced brothers and sisters, faces frozen in pickled horror. Floaters, they were called in the drawer. Veterans of the Vinegar War. Some had been dill, others bread-and-butter. All were casualties of the same cruel process: sliced, soaked, and sealed away. “No no no… not the jar,” Gus whimpered, his tiny gherkin knees knocking together. “I’ve got plans! I’ve got dreams! I’ve got at least two weeks of shelf life left!” He darted behind a jar of expired pesto, but it was no use. The Fridge God’s hand descended, rummaging. “Where the hell did I put that last pickle?” came the voice, cavernous and cruel. Gus knew he was being hunted like a snackable fugitive. He made a break for it, slipping off the produce shelf, rolling with terrifying grace past the almond milk and over a forgotten blueberry. It was majestic. It was suicidal. Unfortunately, he forgot the laws of fridge physics—mainly that the bottom drawer had no traction. He skidded, tumbled, and landed right in front of the cursed thing. The Jar. Its lid twinkled like a stainless-steel executioner’s axe. Inside, the pickles swirled, glassy-eyed and expressionless. One of them mouthed something at him. It looked like “run,” but it could’ve also been “rum.” Either way, it was a bad sign. “You don’t have to do this!” Gus screamed as the hand closed in. “Take the mustard! It’s expired! TAKE THE MUSTARD, YOU MONSTER!” But it was too late. The hand gripped him like a cruel god plucking a mortal soul from a salad bar. Dill or Be Dilled Gus’s scream echoed through the cold cathedral of the refrigerator. The other condiments looked away—ketchup wept softly, while the mayo just muttered, “Not again.” This wasn’t their war. They’d seen too many perish. Too many dreams pickled. He was placed on the cutting board like an offering to the kitchen gods, the giant looming over him wielding a knife that could fillet a zucchini into trauma. Gus tried diplomacy. “Listen, big guy. Maybe we talk this out, huh? You look like someone who enjoys a well-aged cheese. I could introduce you to Brie. She's cultured. Flexible. Way more your type.” The blade paused. For a second, Gus thought he saw hesitation in the human’s eyes. But no. It was just a reflection of the ceiling fan. Reality sharpened like the knife’s edge. Then came the horror. Not slicing. No—worse. He was picked up, inspected… and tossed into the jar. Whole. Untouched. Alive. Gus hit the brine like a cannonball of fear, bobbing helplessly among the saucer-eyed slices of his kin. “Why am I still whole?! This is some Silence of the Cucumbers level crap!” One of the floaters drifted over. His name was Carl. Carl had been a cucumber in a past life, before the Big Slice. Now he floated, all zen and pickled. “You get used to it,” Carl murmured. “Eventually your soul ferments. Just let the brine in.” “Let the brine in?! I DON’T WANT TO BE SOUP-INFUSED! I HAD A CRUSH ON A CHERRY TOMATO!” Gus bellowed, slamming his little fists into the glass. Outside, life went on. The fridge door opened periodically—light flooding in like a judgmental god. A bottle of kombucha exploded somewhere on the top shelf. A tofu block quietly expired. No one cared. Weeks passed. Or maybe hours. Time meant nothing in the pickle jar. Gus began to lose his grip. He wrote manifestos in mustard on the inside of the glass. He developed a briny accent. He started talking to a baby corn cob named Victor, who may or may not have been real. And then, one day… The jar opened. “Finally,” Gus whispered. “Rescue. Freedom. A chance to tell my story. Maybe even a Netflix deal.” But instead, the hand reached past him. Took a slice. Closed the lid again. Gus floated there, suspended in the sour silence of rejection. That’s when it hit him. He was too whole. Too intact. Too… special. They’d never eat him. He was cursed to witness it all—forever floating, forever fermenting, forever screaming on the inside while maintaining his outward crunch. And so he remains. The last gherkin. Guardian of the Jar. Screaming into the void of dill-infused eternity. Look deep enough into the brine… and the brine looks back.     Epilogue: The Cult of the Crunch Some say Gus still floats there, whispering secrets to the baby corn. Others claim he finally merged with the brine and ascended into a higher state of snack consciousness. A few believe he escaped during a blackout and now runs an underground support group for traumatized vegetables behind the crisper drawer. The jar sits on the shelf, slightly fogged, oddly glowing. People open the fridge, stare at it, and feel a chill. They can't explain why. They just know that something is… watching. Judging. Probably pickled. And late at night, if you press your ear to the lid, you might just hear a faint whisper carried on the vinegar vapors: “Don’t get sliced. Get out while you’re fresh.” But by then… it’s already too late.     Take Gus Home (Before the Brine Claims Him) If you've laughed, cringed, or had a mild existential crisis reading the tale of The Last Gherkin, why not invite Gus into your home? Gus is now available in a variety of forms for your twisted decor needs: Framed Print – Perfect for your kitchen, breakroom, or pickle panic room. Acrylic Print – For those who like their horror crisp and their humor transparent. Metal Print – Industrial-strength absurdity for your gallery wall or mad scientist lab. Tote Bag – Carry the trauma with you, in style. Don't just read about Gus. Live with him. Haunt your own fridge.

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