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Letters & Ripov
by Albert Russo

Having spent New Year's Eve alone, Ripov resolved to lead a more sociable life and contacted Pen Pal International. But let it be stated here that Ripov was allergic to the company of humans. (A hay-fever type allergy.) Yet nothing restrained him from communicating with people long-distance.

Thus he started writing letters to the five corners of the globe. Since he'd never done this before he couldn't possibly realize at first how expensive such a venture would become. It wasn't only the letter pads and the envelopes, but the dozens of ball-point pens, the ever-increasing postage fees and all the rest.

Soon Ripov was getting an average of one hundred letters a week. He tried as best he could to reduce the operating costs of what had developed into a full-fledged business. A business that profitted the paper industry, the pen factories, the post office, the transit authority, the shoe stores, etcetera, save Ripov, of course.

Ripov now used aerograms and postcards instead of the regular stationary and the 3D viewcards. He changed his writing, dwarfing it to a third of its original size so that he could cram into the limited space as much news as possible. His eyesight gradually deteriorated and he had to order a pair of expensive glasses.

He was receiving love notes, threat notes, obscene cards, and even blank letters. Ripov was amazed at, sometimes amused by, the reactions of his pen pals. Some thought he'd betrayed them by writing so 'illegibly,' what was he taking them for, decipherers? Where were his letter-writing manners gone? Others criticized him for disrupting their private lives.

There were scenes of jealousy, misunderstandings that degenerated into crimes of passion. Still others, deceived by Ripov's new code of ethics, switched to their mother tongue, deeming that they could no longer express their inner feelings in English adequately enough.

In order to answer the recalcitrant correspondents, Ripov had to take a few crash courses in foreign languages. Then he got blamed for using trite, hackneyed phrases to purposely denigrate the other culture. One even swore he’d discourage every soul around him to learn what he now termed 'Pigenglish.' There was also a fellow from Madagascar who warned Ripov that he would stop writing to him unless Ripov sent back International Reply Coupons. Plus Snoopy and/or Peanuts letter pads cum appropriate envelopes as a Christmas present for his sweetheart.

Yes, an entire year had slipped by since Ripov first got in touch with Pen Pal International. What would he do to celebrate the coming year? With the hundreds of friends and foes he had now collected around the world?

He couldn't think of anything exciting to do, yet all the while he brooded over it, he made paperballs of the heaps of letters that filled his studio and began arranging them into a giant Christmas tree. He waited to hear the church bells announcing the New Year and lit a bonfire.