SamScribble
Yeah, still just a guru
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2009
- Posts
- 38,862
I wrote a short story about a gangster taking the body of a rival to be dumped in a lake on the edge of town. As the gangster drives out to the lake in his classic Humber Super Snipe, he has a young boy with him in the car and he feeds the boy titbits of advice for a good life. Set clear goals. Work hard. Don’t steal. Pay your debts. (The action takes place on the Ides of March.)
At the lake, an ‘associate’ is waiting to row the body out and dump it in the deep water. When the body has been ‘left to sleep with the fishes’, the gangster gives the ‘associate’ a couple of fivers and tells him to buy himself some flowers. On the drive back to town, the gangster gives the boy more good life-advice.
As the author, do I get credit for the good life-advice? Or am I guilty of encouraging people to get rid of their rivals by feeding them to the fishes? Just wondering.
At the lake, an ‘associate’ is waiting to row the body out and dump it in the deep water. When the body has been ‘left to sleep with the fishes’, the gangster gives the ‘associate’ a couple of fivers and tells him to buy himself some flowers. On the drive back to town, the gangster gives the boy more good life-advice.
As the author, do I get credit for the good life-advice? Or am I guilty of encouraging people to get rid of their rivals by feeding them to the fishes? Just wondering.