Read Mr. Monk in Outer Space Online

Authors: Lee Goldberg

Mr. Monk in Outer Space (11 page)

BOOK: Mr. Monk in Outer Space
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“I can’t believe that a show with inside-out characters was a success.”
 
 
Okay, he had me there.
 
 
“Actually, it wasn’t,” I said. “
Beyond Earth
was canceled after only two seasons. But it came back ten years later as a cartoon, with the original actors doing the voices.”
 
 
“Did anyone watch that?”
 
 
I shook my head.
 
 
“So why are they bringing the show back now?”
 
 
“Maybe because there are so many people who are still passionate about it, thirty years after it was canceled.There aren’t a lot of TV shows that inspire that kind of devotion.”
 
 
“You say that like it’s a positive thing,” Monk said.
 
 
We walked into the convention hall, where I saw that Stipe’s murder wasn’t stopping the fans from shopping. The place was mobbed and the dealers seemed to be doing a brisk business in
Beyond Earth
merchandise.
 
 
Perhaps the fans were working through their grief by buying mementos from the show. I know that my mother often deals with stress by shopping. When I eloped with Mitch, she immediately ran out and spent three grand on clothes.
 
 
I stopped at the table of a dealer who was selling
Beyond Earth
lunch boxes, board games, and action figures, most of which appeared to be in their original packaging.
 
 
There were even unopened packs of
Beyond Earth
bubblegum, the ones with trading cards featuring pictures of the cast and scenes from the show. The price tag showed the packs were $350 each. I figured the decimal had to be in the wrong place.
 
 
I reached out to examine the price tag more closely when the woman behind the table lightly slapped my hand and gave me a stern look.
 
 
She was my age and twice as wide, wearing a Confederation uniform that was too tight to hold her girth.
 
 
“Don’t touch. These are antiques,” she said. “They can only be handled with gloves. Moisture from your fingertips could harm the packaging.”
 
 
“I’m sorry,” I said. “I didn’t know.”
 
 
“Didn’t you get the ’FAQs for Newbies’ at the registration desk?”
 
 
“No, I’m afraid not.”
 
 
“It’s required reading,” she said. “It also has recommendations for newbies on how to begin building a collection.
Beyond Earth
plates are a fun and inexpensive way to start.”
 
 
“Why couldn’t I start with
Beyond Earth
toys?” I gestured to some plastic spaceships that were still in their original wrapping.
 
 
“That’s like starting your art collection with a Picasso. You really have to be an expert to appreciate their value and understand how to care for them,” she said. “These are very rare, museum-quality pieces.”
 
 
I couldn’t imagine what museum would be interested in them.
 
 
“They are? What makes them so rare?”
 
 
“The only way you could get one of these was by purchasing a Burgerville kid’s meal in February 1978. These have been kept in pristine condition in a dust-free, temperature-controlled room ever since.”
 
 
“I used to treat my toys the same way,” Monk said.
 
 
He was on the far side of the table, looking at some
Beyond Earth
cereal boxes.
 
 
“It was more fun than a barrel of monkeys,” he said. “If there aren’t actually any monkeys in the barrel, and never were any monkeys in the barrel, because monkeys make a mess and they are very unsanitary. In fact, it’s the most fun of all when the barrel is untouched and the monkeys are on another continent.”
 
 
I gave him a look. “So you’re saying that keeping your toys hermetically sealed was as much fun as an empty barrel.”
 
 
“Those were good times.”
 
 
I turned back to the
Beyond Earth
kid’s meal toys.
 
 
“It’s a shame they were never opened,” I said to the woman. “I think it’s cruel to give a toy to a child but not let them play with it.”
 
 
“I didn’t want to,” she said. “I never played with any of my
Beyond Earth
toys.”
 
 
“Why not?”
 
 
“I didn’t want to break them,” she said.
 
 
“But toys are meant to be played with and broken,” I said.
 
 
“That’s just crazy talk,” Monk said to me.
 
 
“It’s fun, Mr. Monk. It’s part of growing up. It’s called childhood.”
 
 
The dealer held up one of the toys in her gloved hand. “You wouldn’t say that if this was a Ming vase.”
 
 
“But it’s not,” I said.
 
 
“It is to me,” she said.
 
 
That was when she was distracted by a movement at the other end of the table. And then she let out an anguished wail, an expression of pain and fury that seemed to claw its way out from the depths of her soul. In fact, it sounded just like the cries people made when they were being devoured by the Sharplings.
 
 
She was staring in horror at Monk, who was standing in front of a trash can at the far end of the table.
 
 
“What have you done?” she yelled at him.
 
 
“I just cleaned up a few things,” Monk said. Then he motioned to me. “Wipe. Wipe.”
 
 
I gave him two.
 
 
The woman’s wail drew dozens of people, who gathered around the garbage can to see what the fuss was about. I joined them and we all peered inside.
 
 
On top of a bunch of hot dogs, melted ice cream, and other sticky garbage were four unopened cartons of
Beyond Earth
breakfast cereal. The front of each box showed a smiling Captain Stryker about to joyfully eat a spoonful of glittering, sugar-coated cereal shaped like stars. Mr. Snork stood at his side, enthusiastically snorting up cereal with his trunk.
 
 
At least that’s what the boxes looked like before they were tossed in the trash on top of catsup, chocolate, whipped cream, and soft drinks.
 
 
The saleswoman’s lip trembled with rage, her eyes filled with tears.
 
 
“Those were authentic boxes of
Beyond Earth
cereal,” she said. “They survived three earthquakes, a flood, two marriages, three moves, and six cats. They have never been opened.”
 
 
“It’s a good thing they weren’t,” Monk said. “That cereal expired thirty years ago.”
 
 
“Do you know how much those boxes were worth? I could have gotten a thousand dollars for the set.” Her whole body shook with fury. “Now they’re ruined. No one will ever buy them.”
 
 

You
were selling them?” Monk was dismayed. “You should be ashamed of yourself. What if someone had eaten that cereal? It would have killed them faster than rat poison.”
 
 
“You want to know what kills fast? I’ll show you.” She grabbed a curved knife off her table. “An Umgluckian ceremonial dagger!”
 
 
She leapt up on the table and threw herself at Monk, but I grabbed her by the ankle in midflight and sent her toppling into the trash can instead.
 
 
“Time to go,” I said, leading Monk away.
 
 
Monk looked back at her. “You’ll thank me later.”
 
 
9
 
 
Mr. Monk and the Galactic Uprising
 
 
"I think she did it,” Monk said as I hustled him into the crowd and across the convention floor as fast as I could. “I think she killed Stipe.”
 
 
“Just because she grabbed a knife and tried to kill you?”
 
 
I could still hear her wailing. Her cries seemed to echo through the entire place.
 
 
“She was trying to poison people with thirty-year-old cereal,” he said. “She almost had me fooled with that story about keeping her toys in pristine condition.”
 
 
“I’m not a world-famous detective, but I think she was heavier than the shooter we saw in the surveillance video.”
 
 
“But she definitely has violent tendencies,” Monk said. “She’s a danger to society.”
 
 
“Only if you trash the cereal boxes that she’s been saving for decades.”
 
 
“What kind of person saves a box of cereal for that long?”
 
 
“What kind of person feels uncontrollably compelled to throw it out?”
 
 
“A Good Samaritan,” Monk replied. “I was acting in the public interest. Those expired boxes of deadly cereal were within reach of children.”
 
 
“Do you see any children?”
 
 
“I see people acting like children,” Monk said. “That’s just as dangerous.”
 
 
I led Monk towards the back door, which, incidentally, was the one the killer had most likely used to escape into the convention center after shooting Stipe. It was the only way to leave the building without encountering that woman and her ceremonial dagger again.
 
 
We passed table after table selling Snork noses and Confederation uniforms, underscoring for me Stottlemeyer’s point that it would be close to impossible to trace the killer through the purchase of his costume.
 
 
We went down the aisle of autographing booths, where
Beyond Earth
celebrities signed autographs and took photos with conventioneers for a fee.
 
 
There was a woman, easily in her seventies, surrounded with photos of herself from an appearance as Yeoman Curtis, who was reduced to a cube of foam and crushed in episode 17. There were a dozen middle-aged men in Confederation uniforms lined up to pay $20 to have their picture taken with her.
 
 
In the next booth were a turnip-shaped man with a bad comb-over and a midget. They were signing autographs and answering questions for three conventioneers. I recognized the actors as Bill Wheatley and Ricardo Sanchez, who played teenage stowaway Bobby Muir and Glorp, the interstellar slug.
 
 
“Ricky and I stayed in touch after the show, and a couple of years ago we got together to perform in a dinner theater production of
The Odd Couple
,” Wheatley was saying. “But in our
Beyond Earth
personas, so to speak.”
 
 
“Being the slug,” Sanchez said, “obviously I played Oscar Madison.”
 
 
“All the dialogue was the same, because Neil Simon is a genius, and you don’t mess with perfection,” Wheatley said. “But we have a history, you know, and we tapped that in our performances. And I wore my Confederation uniform.”
 
 
“And I wore my makeup,” Sanchez said.
 
 
“It was a riff on popular culture, very self-referential and culturally hip.”
 
 
The midget sighed. “It could have gone to Broadway if only we’d found a producer with some vision and some guts.”
 
 
Monk and I moved on.
 
 
In the next booth was Willis Goldkin, the writer of the “Nagging Nanobots” episode, which I vaguely remembered. It was about these little robot mosquitoes that attacked the
Discovery
crew and took over their minds.
BOOK: Mr. Monk in Outer Space
6.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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