Johnny America

 


JOHNNY AMERICA

Is a little ’zine of fiction, humor, and other miscellany, published by the Moon Rabbit Drinking Club & Benevolence Society since 2003.

Photograph the Book of MisunderstandingsPhotograph of the Book of Misunderstandings

Our latest production is The Book of Misunderstandings, a steal at ten bucks from our online shop. It’s a tight collection of short stories by Robert Wexelblatt about the consequences of getting things wrong.

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Photograph of The Book of MisunderstandingsPhotograph of The Book of Misundersatndings

Johnny America has been bringing you fresh fiction and humor since 2003.

Our latest production is The Book of Misunderstandings. It’s a tight collection of short stories by Robert Wexelblatt about the consequences of getting things wrong.

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Re­sponse Time

by

Illustration of a smoke detector

This is dur­ing our last child­less va­ca­tion. Some might say, “So, your last va­ca­tion then?” I might re­ply “Ha,” or maybe “Fun­ny.” This is on our tenth and fi­nal night in Nicaragua. And this is at a mo­tel, close to the air­port, in Managua.

“What the fuck is go­ing on? What the fuck?” This is what I hear soon af­ter falling asleep. Soon af­ter that, I hear the beep that prompt­ed my husband’s in­ter­rog­a­tive burst. It is an in­ter­mit­tent beep, and if I thought about it, I would re­al­ize that it had been beep­ing for some time. I had been able to in­cor­po­rate it in­to my dreams, sig­nal­ing seam­less scene and sit­u­a­tion changes like a metronome. My hus­band failed to demon­strate any com­par­a­tive capability. 

The time be­tween beeps is al­most a minute. Our flight is in about eight hours. We have been mar­ried for just over a year. 

I sug­gest that my hus­band at­tempt to an­swer his own ques­tion con­cern­ing the fuck and what it is. The source of the beep is some­where out­side our win­dow over­look­ing the al­ley­way be­hind the mo­tel. That is where I rec­om­mend he be­gin his investigations.

In the spir­it of a part­ner and not a mi­cro­man­ag­er, I do not weigh in on his ap­proach to the in­ves­ti­ga­tion. I say noth­ing as he sham­bles out of bed. I of­fer no re­veal­ing ex­pres­sion as he opts to clam­ber out the win­dow in on­ly his last-day-of-va­ca­tion un­der­wear. I dis­play no re­ac­tion as he comes back through the win­dow mo­ments lat­er car­ry­ing a smoke de­tec­tor that con­tin­ues to beep. I hard­ly re­spond when he asks, “I don’t smell any smoke – do you?” I do not ask him to pro­vide an an­swer as to why a smoke de­tec­tor is in­stalled and ac­tive in an alleyway.

The beep­ing is much loud­er in the room. The de­tec­tor has a red blink­ing light cor­re­spond­ing to the beep that makes it some­how loud­er. It can­not be turned off. I do ask my hus­band what the next step of his plan in­cludes. His an­swer in­volves putting on shorts, grab­bing the room key­card, and tak­ing the smoke de­tec­tor to the mo­tel office.

I hear the beep three or so more times as he ex­its our room from the front door this time and makes his way to the of­fice a few doors down. For five or so min­utes every­thing is qui­et. Ten or so min­utes af­ter that I lat­er learned that he’d been ex­plain­ing the ex­is­tence of the smoke alarm in the al­ley, ra­tio­nal­iz­ing him­self hold­ing the alarm, and jus­ti­fy­ing his de­ci­sion to bring the alarm to the front desk. This had not oc­curred with­out frus­tra­tions, as my hus­band and the per­son man­ning the front desk spoke dis­sim­i­lar lan­guages and both were on­ly re­cent­ly fast asleep.

My husband’s re­turn does not in­clude the beep­ing noise but is near­ly as loud as his ear­li­er ex­it through the win­dow. There are the ap­proach­ing foot­steps of a man who is tired and want­i­ng to share it with the world. There is the re­peat­ing chirp-click-wig­gle-swear se­quence as he ma­nip­u­lates the key­card and door lock. There is the ex­pec­ta­tion but ab­sence of the beep, which leaves a buzzing kind of tone/vibe/atmosphere in its place. There is the small num­ber of words ex­changed be­tween us. But sleep comes and lasts for the re­main­ing four hours of the night.

We wake at some point dur­ing the process of wak­ing up, then tran­si­tion to the process of check­ing out. We drop the key­card at the of­fice, where the beep­ing con­tin­ues muf­fled from a desk draw­er. My hus­band ex­changes a look with the de­feat­ed front desk per­son. By the time we leave the of­fice, the ex­changed look has be­come a head nod. An un­der­stand­ing. Recog­ni­tion of a shared ex­pe­ri­ence be­tween two peo­ple, one of which is my hus­band and the oth­er of which is not me.

At the air­port, I go to the bath­room and stare in­to the mir­ror for more than a few min­utes. On the flight and con­nect­ing flights home, I re-watch down­loaded episodes of “The Of­fice” for more than a few hours. At home, I share a bed and last name with my child’s fa­ther for more than a few years. In all that time, I hear the beep or some­thing like it on more than one oc­ca­sion. For each, I lis­ten for the beep and the re­sponse to come un­til the re­sponse no longer does.

Filed under Fiction on March 13th, 2026

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Click­bait

by

Illustration of a cartoonish snake coming out of a toilet.

Our ten-year-old saw video clips about snakes in Guam com­ing up through toi­lets, and now he would rather soil his pants than en­ter the bathroom.

We point out that Guam is two thou­sand miles away. He just says, “Snakes are everywhere.”

Of course, we im­me­di­ate­ly in­stall very strict parental con­trols on the home net­work, but once he leaves the house, we can­not shield him from god knows what else is out there, so we make him an ap­point­ment at the Youth Coun­sel­ing Cen­ter, and in the mean­time we have pro­vid­ed adult di­a­pers (size Small), the cost to be de­duct­ed from his allowance.

Just to see what we’re up against, I lo­cate the videos on­line and watch them all: nasty-look­ing ser­pents lung­ing at the cam­era; grainy, sub­ti­tled news clips show­ing huge snakes coiled in­side toi­let bowls and sinks or slith­er­ing across the floor; in­co­her­ent hos­pi­tal in­ter­views with victims.

It’s ridicu­lous, ex­ag­ger­at­ed sen­sa­tion­al­ism, ma­li­cious­ly de­signed to spread fear, and I scoff.

Lat­er, I find my­self stand­ing out­side the bath­room, un­will­ing to open the door.

Filed under Fiction on February 13th, 2026

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S. N. wrote:

Not me try­ing to con­vince my daugh­ter that di­nosaurs WON’T ACTUALLY peer in­to the bath­room win­dow while she pot­ties, on­ly to be afraid my­self af­ter the thought has been plant­ed, de­spite a nag­ging sus­pi­cion that Sharp­tooth has been dead since the late 80s. This was West!

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24-Hour Prod­uct Diary

by

Illustration of a spread of beauty products

Mon­day. I wake at five when my train­er Sam knocks on the door. To­day is what my hus­band calls “leg day”. We squat and swing ket­tle­bells in our gym un­til I want to col­lapse and af­ter­wards I med­i­tate in the out­door cedar sauna that my hus­band im­port­ed from Mis­sis­sauga last win­ter. I don’t even want to name the price be­cause it’s obscene.

When I walk in­side my chil­dren are eat­ing break­fast with their nan­ny Lo­la, their eyes glued to their iPads. I first wash my face with the Bi­ologique Recher­ché Lait VIP O2, which smells like spoiled milk, and then ap­ply the Skinceu­ti­cals CE Fer­ulic serum, whichI re­cent­ly start­ed buy­ing in bulk — one for my­self af­ter my son’s bed-wet­ting sleep re­gres­sion left my skin dry and crusty-look­ing and an­oth­er for my teenage daugh­ter, whose dis­tress at her first pim­ple war­rant­ed not one, but two vis­its to a very ex­pen­sive out-of-net­work child psy­chol­o­gist. “I had break­outs at your age, Daisy, and I sur­vived,” I told her, to which she replied, “Yeah, but you were born be­fore the in­ter­net was even in­vent­ed.” My make­up is sim­ple, just theClé de Peau Beauté Con­ceal­er SPF 27 and the Dior­show Icon­ic Over­curl Mas­cara in 090 Black.

I kiss my chil­dren good­bye and step in­to my wait­ing car. My der­ma­tol­o­gist, Dr. Ot­to Pup­pen­spiel­er, calls to ask if the 440 units of Botox he in­ject­ed last week had tak­en sat­is­fac­to­ri­ly. We did fore­head, elevens, brows, crow’s feet, bun­ny lines, traps, DAOs, mas­seters, nos­trils, jowls, tech lines — which does mean nee­dles in your neck — and a lip flip.

“Please don’t for­get our ap­point­ment tonight,” he says be­fore I hang up. “Bi­week­ly. I have a no-tol­er­ance pol­i­cy for no-shows.” I check my cal­en­dar and there it is — Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er, 5 E. 66th St. I text my as­sis­tant Meg­gy and ask her to be bet­ter about re­mind­ing me about these things ahead of time.

About Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er. I can­not in good faith rec­om­mend him be­cause he is im­pos­si­ble to book. ****** ******, a fa­mous ac­tress, who is al­so a mom at my son’s school, re­ferred me. She cor­nered me at drop-off one morn­ing to set up a play­date be­cause she had heard about my son’s dyslex­ia and thought that her son, who is rather plain-look­ing and shy, might en­joy be­friend­ing an­oth­er boy who is al­so, in her words, fly­ing his kite against the winds of pop­u­lar­i­ty. It was over cof­fee one morn­ing while our sons played in her brownstone’s back­yard that has, get this– fruit-bear­ing trees. In Cob­ble Hill ! —  that she told me about the very taste­ful work she had re­cent­ly done. “He’ll shave twen­ty years off your face,” she said. “But he’s very par­tic­u­lar with who he takes on as a client. I’ll tell him you’re a friend.” I trust­ed her be­cause she has very ex­pres­sive eyes and talks like every­thing she says is a secret.

I stop for a pis­ta­chio-milk lat­te and get to the of­fice by 8:30. I spend the first hour of my day catch­ing up on emails and read­ing the news — WSJ, FT, HEMLOC, and Bloomberg. I keep the Pra­da Beau­ty Hy­drat­ing Lip Balm ($50 — I’m so sor­ry) at my desk and reap­ply like a tic. I’ve been at Brim­stone for eleven years. I was pro­mot­ed to se­nior man­ag­ing di­rec­tor the day that I found out I was preg­nant with my son and re­turned four weeks af­ter he was born, still wear­ing di­a­pers (Fri­da Mom Boyshort Dis­pos­able Post­par­tum Un­der­wear)

I walk in­to my boss’ of­fice and his face is cold and tight. He tells me that he has pro­mot­ed Jen­nifer to part­ner. Jen­nifer is ten years younger than me and bare­ly qual­i­fied to be an MBA as­so­ciate, let alone man­ag­ing di­rec­tor, let alone part­ner. “Did you fuck her?” I ask, which makes him laugh. I smile wide and feel my teeth slic­ing through my gums.

Back in my of­fice (sound­proofed) I scream and scream and kick over a trash can. I watch the dry-clean­ing tags fall to the floor like snow and then I reap­ply my mas­cara, Dior­show Icon­ic Over­curl Mas­cara in 090 Black. I can’t stand to look at Jen­nifer and my hap­less an­a­lysts so I leave ear­ly for my Platelet-Rich Plas­ma Fa­cial with Stem Cell Ther­a­py — it’s eth­i­cal — with Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er. His of­fice is sur­round­ed by floor-to-ceil­ing win­dows and the glass is so clean it seems like you could walk right through it and on­to the street below.

A glossy nurse walks me in­to the treat­ment room, which smells like a Dip­tyque Am­bre can­dle. “You here for Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er?” she asks, smack­ing her hot pink gum. I put my feet in the stir­rups while she takes vial af­ter vial of blood. My vi­sion goes slack then dou­bles as I watch it spin around and around in the centrifuge.

Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er walks in and lines up dozens of tiny nee­dles on a sil­ver tray, talk­ing while he wipes my face with a cold al­co­hol wipe.

“There will be blood, yes, lots of it. I hope you don’t faint, most women don’t, es­pe­cial­ly moth­ers, but the men you wouldn’t be­lieve. Fainters, all of them! You got kids?”

I tell him that I have a daugh­ter and a son.

“Good, good,” he says. “If you do faint, don’t wor­ry. I have de­fib­ril­la­tors in every room.” I look around and in­deed there are de­fib­ril­la­tors alert and wait­ing in the cor­ner of the office.

“You won’t be­lieve how good your skin will look af­ter this,” he says, “like a teenage girl’s, so full of col­la­gen, you’ll hate your own daugh­ter be­cause her skin just does this nat­u­ral­ly. Of course, time will catch up to her as well. Now, hold still.” 

He in­jects my plas­ma in stac­ca­to bursts across my face, neck, and chest. When he’s done my skin is as red as a field of pop­pies. He turns my head around in his hands and tells me that a few more mil­lime­ters of lift would make a world of difference.

“The world opens up when the face does, my pet, I have al­ways said this, it’s why I pre­fer those with flat­ter faces. Ms. ****** was a Choate lacrosse goalie, I knew the sec­ond she walked in. Flat­ter faces, you see, they per­ceive more of the world’s sub­lin­gual mes­sages.” Do you mean sub­lim­i­nal? I ask, and he ig­nores me.

“Three mil­lime­ters,” he says, “will make all the dif­fer­ence. I’m go­ing to book you for next week­end. Your hus­band won’t even no­tice the su­tures un­less he knows your face very, very well. In­vent­ed the tech­nique myself.”

Who am I to ar­gue with three mil­lime­ters? I pay for the fa­cial at the front desk ($2,150) and the glossy nurse sched­ules me for an Up­per Ble­pharo­plas­ty with Gen­er­al Fa­cial Re­con­struc­tion per the Doctor’s Dis­cre­tion ($103,000). I’m sup­posed to be ski­ing in Sun Val­ley with our in­vestors next week­end, but I sup­pose Jen­nifer, whose face doesn’t yet show all of life’s lit­tle dis­ap­point­ments, and cer­tain­ly not melas­ma, is now at­tend­ing in my place.

I email Meg­gy and ask her to book me three nights at the Car­lyle and to pay in cash. I find a bar near­by, even though Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er for­bids al­co­hol, and or­der a gin mar­ti­ni, straight up with a twist. I down it it in three big sips and then I or­der an­oth­er. I text my old deal­er, still saved in my phone as An­ge­lo Snow ❄️. My pleas re­turn un­de­liv­ered and green.

When I get home my daugh­ter is still awake, fin­ish­ing an es­say on Oth­el­lo. “They have you read­ing Shake­speare al­ready?” I ask, and Daisy says, “yeah, but I pre­ferred Loli­ta. It was way creepi­er.” She’s beau­ti­ful like her fa­ther, with full lips and big eyes and a tee­ny-tiny chin. I re­mem­ber read­ing once that women are at­tract­ed to men their own age, but all men are most at­tract­ed to 20 year-old women. You know what I think? They’d fuck a teenag­er if they could get away with it. Fuck­ing per­vs. We eat pop­corn to­geth­er over the sink and then I send her to bed.

When the house fi­nal­ly qui­ets, I tip­toe to the bath­room. I wash my face with the Bi­ologique Recher­ché Lait VIP O2 twice, scrub­bing for sev­en or eight min­utes straight, and then I ap­ply lay­er af­ter lay­er of top­i­cal anes­thet­ic be­fore I be­gin the lasers, which Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er rec­om­mends for pro­fes­sion­al-grade der­mal resur­fac­ing: the Frax­el® FTX Laser Resur­fac­ing Sys­tem, the Re­ju­ran® RF Mi­croneedling de­vice, which us­es salmon DNA to re­gen­er­ate lost col­la­gen, and an­oth­er called Der Geist 4, which Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er flies in from Korea.

All I will say is that the lasers are not as painful as childbirth.

I slather on Crème de la Mer Mois­tur­iz­er an­da Fe­tal Colostrum and Pla­cen­tal Stem-Cell Night Cream that Dr. Pup­pen­spiel­er sells in his of­fice and fi­nal­ly, the Rhode Pep­tide Lip Tint in Wa­ter­mel­on Slice, which I stole from my daughter.

In the mir­ror I no­tice the edges of my body fad­ing away, like sta­t­ic on TV. It’s sub­tle. Three mil­lime­ters, max. I lift my hand up to in­spect, ad­mir­ing the way the light fil­ters through my shim­mer­ing fin­gers. It’s beau­ti­ful. Weightless.

I slide in­to bed next to my sleep­ing hus­band and I dream all the way to morning.

Filed under Fiction on January 30th, 2026

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Reader Comments

SC wrote:

Loved this piece, would love to know more about this char­ac­ter! Very well written.

Sal Difalco wrote:

En­joyed this sto­ry a lot..funny and crisp.

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