Jack and the Beans Talk

                                                                                                 copyright © 1999 by Robert L. Blau

    Once upon a time, there lived a poor widow and her son Jack.  Jack was goodhearted, but a brick or two short of a load.  One day, Jack's mother asked him to go to the co-op and buy some chicken soup.
    "This is the last of our money," she said, "and chicken soup is the best food ever made, so I figured we better go with it."
    Jack started obediently out for the co-op, but it was rather a long walk.
    "Chemical Food Giant is closer," thought Jack.  "What's the difference?"
    So, Jack went to Chemical Food Giant instead.  Well, CFG was a lot bigger than the co-op, and before long Jack got lost.  As he was wandering around looking for chicken soup, an unfamiliar voice spoke to him.
    "Psst!  Hey, kid!"  said the voice.  "Buy us!"
    Jack looked all around.  There were plenty of people, but none of them seemed at all interested in him.
    "No, no!" said the voice.  "Over here!  In the bin!"
    The voice was coming from a bin full of beans.
    "Beans can't talk," said Jack simply.
    "We can," answered the beans.  "We've been genetically engineered.  We're as smart as you are.  Make that twice as smart."
    "Wow!  Talking beans!"  said Jack, starting to get interested.  "But I can't buy you.  My mother told me to buy chicken soup."
    "Chicken soup!?"  scoffed the beans.  "Bor-ring!  Get something interesting for a change."
    "I don't know ..." said Jack.
    "Be a man!" wheedled the beans.  "Make your own decisions.  Your mother will be proud of you!"
    And so, Jack bought the beans and took them home.

    "Beans!" Jack's mother cried.  "Is that all you got with the money I gave you?  We can't live on beans!"
    She reached for the beans, meaning to throw them out the window.  But the beans deftly sidestepped her lunge, twisted her arm behind her back in a hammerlock, and threw her out the window.
    "How about some supper?"  they suggested.
    Jack ate some of the beans.  Shortly after, he began to hallucinate.  In his hallucination, Jack was running around a castle hiding from a vicious giant.
    "Fee, fi, fo, fum!" bellowed the giant.  "I smell the blood of an American!"
    Fortunately, the giant tired and fell asleep, and Jack was able to heist the giant's magic, golden-egg-laying hen. When he came to, Jack found that feathers were beginning to grow out of his skin.  Unfortunately, his eggs weren't golden.
    Although his first experience with the beans was less than satisfactory, Jack ate beans a second time.  After all, there was nothing else to eat.  In short order, he found himself running around the giant's castle again.
    "Fee, fi, fo, fum!  I smell the blood of an American!"
    The giant fell asleep again.  This time, Jack pinched a sack of the giant's gold.  When he came to himself, his skin had taken on a dull golden sheen.

    Well, hunger will have its way, and Jack had a third helping of beans.  Quicker than you can say "Jack Whatever-his-last-name-is," Jack was back in the giant's castle.  This time the giant caught him and popped Jack into his mouth.
    "Fee, fi, fo, foo!" screamed the giant.  "You taste like something from the bottom of my shoe!"
    And he spit Jack out.
    When Jack quit hallucinating, he found that he was turning into a bean.  A feathery, goldish bean.
    There was one bean left.
    "I think I should have gotten the chicken soup," said Jack remorsefully.
    "Don't beat yourself up, kid," said the bean.  "The chickens were genetically engineered, too.  If you think you’re a mess, you should see the guy that bought the chicken soup!"

This story was first published in the Wheatsville Breeze, March/April 1997.