the young person looked at the filled out form, issued it seemed, by representatives of both the BoP and the BoT. A kind of colonizing missionary group had also signed the slip of paper.
"You got a problem with this?"
"Well, this is Georgia. I may not know much, but States are still States, right?"
A man shook the peanuts in his bottle of soda. "What's BoT?"
"Board of Trade. They have those all over the world. Connected to Stock Markets. You ever heard of those?" Another man was picking the peanuts out of his soda and organizing them on the back of the pickup truck. "He doesn't know all your big words yet. What's the objective here? Today."
"Okay, so did you see the storyline in all the regional magazines about the state of the fishing industry in our country?" The man organizing the peanuts did a soda burp then said in a deep, rich voice STATE. "Not like I've had time to read. I slept the whole way back from ChiEurasia."
"Are you agitated and annoyed?"
"Not exactly aggravated. Why?"
"Because there are hundreds of other writers who could document us on this peacekeeping ambassador thing-a-ma-jig."
"IGAHMO."
"What'd he just say?"
"Nobody ever knows what my cousin is ever saying." A young black man had lifted the brim of his straw hat and took a blade of grass from his mouth to say. "Related?"
"Distantly."
"Get to the point here people. Or I'll
"What? Shackle us? Make us dig more trench?"
The woman looked at the ground. "I'll have to go on without you. All."
A car behind the pick up truck started up. People looked around at the leftover sultry night steaming off swampy trees.
"Want to ride with us Country bumpkins?" A woman in coveralls asked the woman visiting this neck of the woods region.