When the two rookie cops volunteered to serve a summons at the local wrestling club, they had no idea what they were getting themselves into.
d e v o n

No title available
almost home

Product Placement
ojovivo
taylor price
KIROKAZE
No title available
dirt enthusiast

roma★
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

★
sheepfilms
Monterey Bay Aquarium
hello vonnie

JVL
Peter Solarz
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Three Goblin Art
trying on a metaphor

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Switzerland
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Türkiye
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@humiliation-and-stuff
When the two rookie cops volunteered to serve a summons at the local wrestling club, they had no idea what they were getting themselves into.
TSA Incident
No, Sir, I don't know who you or your father is. But if you were as important as you think you are, you wouldn't be here in my lane today. Unless you want to end up on the no-fly list, you wil close your mouth and follow my instructions verbatum. You can collect your belt and other personal effects after we complete the secondary security screening. Now raise your hands over your head and do not move a muscle until I finish frisking you.
Apparently, Jake left his walkie talkie on as he was chatting up the crane operator's girlfriend on his break.
In hindsight, outsourcing the department's uniform manufacturing to the prison sweatshop may have been a mistake.
“Bit bold cos-playing Harry Potter out in public like that. Not worried about being a laughing stock? Let me guess—one little wave of your magic wand and this ticket just vanishes, right?”
"Yeah, something like that."
"Don't make me take my belt off in front of all these people you little.....SHIT."
Jake’s downfall didn’t begin with a costume. It began with a comment he absolutely should have kept to himself.
It was a Tuesday, the kind that hummed with fluorescent lighting and quiet resentment. Dan was presenting quarterly numbers, voice just unsteady enough to register, when Jake leaned back in his chair and lobbed his favorite philosophy into the room like it was universally helpful.
“Dan, relax,” he said, a little too loud, a little too casual. “People aren’t judging you as much as you think. Half the battle is just owning the room.”
The room didn’t explode. It didn’t argue. It just… cooled. That subtle temperature drop that happens when everyone collectively decides you’ve said something technically true and socially unbearable.
Dan nodded, finished, sat down.
Jake, satisfied, folded his hands like he’d just dispensed wisdom.
Then, from the far end of the table, Maya tilted her head.
“Interesting,” she said.
Jake glanced at her. “What?”
“You’re big on that,” she said. “Confidence. Owning the room.”
“Yeah,” Jake replied, already defensive. “Because it works.”
A pause. Not empty. Loaded.
Kevin leaned forward slightly. “So just to be clear,” he said, “this is coming from the guy who wears long sleeves in August?”
Jake blinked. “That’s not—”
“And,” Maya continued smoothly, “who goes up three floors to use the empty bathroom instead of the one on this floor.”
“That’s just quieter—”
“And,” Dan added, finding a small, brave foothold, “who showed up to the company pool party fully dressed. Like… shoes and everything.”
A few people looked down, trying not to smile.
Jake sat up straighter. “Okay, those are completely different things.”
“Are they?” Maya asked.
“Yes,” Jake said firmly. “Those are preferences. I’m talking about confidence in situations that actually matter.”
Maya nodded slowly, like she was accepting that premise while quietly dismantling it.
“Alright,” she said. “So prove it.”
Jake narrowed his eyes. “Prove what?”
“That it’s not just advice you give other people,” Kevin said. “That you can actually do it when you’re the one on display.”
Jake let out a short laugh. “I don’t need to ‘prove’ anything.”
“You kind of do,” Maya said lightly. “Because right now it sounds like you’re saying ‘just be confident’… unless it’s you.”
Jake opened his mouth, closed it, then leaned back again, irritation starting to edge in.
“What exactly are you suggesting?” he asked.
Maya and Kevin exchanged a glance. There it was. The opening.
“There’s this place,” Maya said, keeping her tone casual, almost offhand. “Chez Bruno. Small performance venue. They run themed costume contests judged for a decent cash prize.”
Jake frowned. “That sounds like a lot of things I don’t want to do.”
“It’s not a whole production,” Kevin said quickly. “You don’t have to mingle. We know someone who can get you in through the stage door. You change backstage, step on stage with the other bea--contestants-- maybe flirt noncommittally with the audience, done.”
Jake crossed his arms. “What kind of crowd?”
Maya paused just long enough to make it feel unplanned.
“It’s a very… appreciative crowd,” she said. “They know what they like. And they’ll love you.”
Jake’s expression shifted, just slightly. Suspicion, yes, but also something else. Curiosity, maybe. The idea landed in that quiet place he didn’t usually examine too closely.
“It’s a themed thing?” he asked.
“Yeah,” Kevin said. “This week’s theme is ‘bears.’”
Jake huffed. “Of course it is.”
“But that’s the point,” Maya said, leaning in just a fraction. “You keep acting like your build is something you have to manage or hide. There, it’s the whole show. You wouldn’t be out of place. You’d be exactly what they’re there for.”
“And there’s prize money,” Kevin added, because he knew which lever to pull.
Jake hesitated longer this time. He didn’t like the setup. Didn’t like how neatly it boxed him in. But walking away now would feel like conceding the argument, and Jake had built too much of his identity on not doing that.
“I’m not mingling,” he said finally.
“You won’t have to,” Maya replied.
“I go in, I win the cash, I go out.”
“Exactly.”
A beat.
“…Fine.”
—
The alley behind Chez Bruno felt like the backstage of a decision that had already gone too far. A stagehand opened the door with immediate recognition, waved them in, and Jake barely had time to question that before he was being ushered through dim corridors lined with props that didn’t quite match the mental picture he’d built.
Picnic baskets. Bright fabrics. A foam honey pot that looked aggressively cheerful.
Jake slowed slightly. “This is… specific.”
“Immersive,” Maya said, guiding him forward before he could linger.
The costume they handed him was minimal in a way that made his stomach drop just a little. Not ridiculous. Not absurd. Just… exposing, in a way he spent most of his life avoiding.
“This wins?” he asked.
“Easily,” Kevin said. "We're going to go find our seats. See you soon" he added with a smirk.
Jake muttered something under his breath but changed anyway, because backing out now would mean admitting too many things at once.
In the dark, the stage manager positioned him int he center of the stage.
Jake nodded, took a breath, and moved forward as the curtain began to rise.
The lights hit him first, bright and flattening, erasing shadows and options. Then the rest of it came into focus all at once: the banner, the balloons, the rows of faces.
Families. Children. Balloons. A "Teddy bear picnic costume contest" banner.
Jake stopped completely, caught mid-step as the reality rearranged itself into something unmistakably wrong. On either side of him stood giant plush teddy bears, soft and smiling. Jake, by contrast, looked like he had wandered in from a completely different kind of event.
In the front row, his team sat together, watching with intense, barely contained anticipation.
The audience gasped, then broke into laughter, the kind that builds fast and spills over.
Jake turned to leave.
He didn’t make it far.
The pivot was too fast, the space too tight, and he collided squarely with the teddy bear to his left, which wobbled and pulled him off balance for a split second that felt much longer. As he stumbled back, his arm caught the curtain, fabric wrapping around him and refusing to let go.
And then, as if the situation required escalation, the side string of his black mesh bikini bottoms slipped loose.
Not fully. Just enough.
Jake felt it immediately, that precise, horrifying shift from barely acceptable to absolutely not, and now he had two problems unfolding at once. He clamped a hand down instinctively, trying to keep things from going completely off the rails while still untangling himself from the curtain and the very patient, very confused teddy bear.
Jake finally tore free, half-stumbling offstage, one hand occupied in a way that made any sense of dignity purely theoretical.
Backstage, he moved fast.
“Clothes,” he muttered. “Clothes, clothes—”
The rack was empty.
Jake stopped, breathing hard, staring at the space where his shirt should have been. A small note hung there, almost cheerfully.
You were right. All you need is confidence.
Jake closed his eyes for a second, the realization settling in fully now, heavy and undeniable.
Footsteps approached. Voices. People moving through backstage, likely looking for the unexpected highlight of the show.
Jake ducked behind a stack of props, crouching low, trying to make himself smaller, which was not particularly effective under the circumstances. He waited until the voices passed, then slipped along the wall, scanning for an exit.
He found a door, moved quickly, slipped through it, and pulled it shut behind him, exhaling in relief as cool air hit his face.
He turned, reached for the handle, and pulled.
Nothing.
He tried again. Harder.
Locked.
Jake stared at the door, then at the alley stretching out around him, then back at the door, as if the universe might reconsider.
It did not.
So there he was. Outside. Under-dressed. Fully locked out. The muffled sound of cheerful music and distant laughter leaking faintly through the wall behind him.
Jake rested his forehead briefly against the door.
“…I deserve this,” he said.
And for once, he didn’t argue.
Maestro Leopold D’Angelo had faced hostile critics, temperamental soloists, and entire horn sections determined to enter a bar early. None of that compared to tonight. This wasn’t just another concert. Officially he was merely the guest conductor for the evening, but everyone in the hall knew what the engagement really meant. Scattered among the audience were the orchestra’s board of directors, quietly attentive and carefully observant. If the performance dazzled them, Leopold might walk away with the permanent music director position. If it didn’t… well, Leopold had long maintained that audiences, boards, and critics alike rarely understood true greatness when it stood before them.
His nerves had already been frayed before he even stepped onto the stage, though he would have described it, if pressed, as irritation rather than anxiety. The airline had lost his luggage somewhere between cities, which meant the beautifully tailored tuxedo he normally wore was currently traveling without him. In its place he had been forced to accept a rental tux, hastily acquired that afternoon. It fit him with a kind of optimistic approximation rather than precision. The waistcoat felt slightly tight across his stomach, the jacket buttons looked as though they were clinging to their posts out of sheer stubbornness, and the trousers… the trousers were held together by buttons that struck him as suspiciously democratic in their commitment. Still, a maestro must project authority, and Leopold marched toward the stage convinced that authority, like genius, radiated from within.
The audience greeted him with warm applause as he stepped onto the podium. From the corner of his eye he spotted several members of the board seated in the front rows, leaning forward with polite, evaluative smiles that suggested they were watching everything. Leopold acknowledged them with the faintest nod, as one might acknowledge a group of particularly attentive students, before turning to the orchestra, lifting his baton, and fixing the musicians with the commanding gaze for which he was famous. When the baton fell, the symphony began.
The orchestra responded magnificently. Strings surged forward with rich intensity while the woodwinds curled delicate phrases through the air, and Leopold gradually lost himself in the music, shaping it with sweeping gestures that seemed, at least to him, nothing short of transformative. Then, somewhere in the middle of the first movement, a sharp pop interrupted the moment. One of the buttons from his tuxedo jacket shot free, bounced off the podium, and rolled toward the viola section like a tiny act of rebellion. Leopold felt the disruption but refused to acknowledge it; he simply continued conducting as though such trivial mechanical failures were beneath his notice, even as the jacket now gaped slightly open, revealing a patch of impressively hairy stomach beneath the waistcoat.
He did not notice the growing exposure, but the orchestra certainly did. A violinist coughed into her shoulder, and a flutist bent very low over his music stand in what appeared to be intense concentration. A moment later another pop sounded as a second button surrendered. The jacket opened wider, the hairy situation became unmistakable, and several musicians suddenly found the printed notes on their pages absolutely fascinating. Leopold, however, remained blissfully unaware, entirely focused on shaping what he was certain would be remembered as a definitive interpretation.
What he did notice, a few minutes later, was a subtle shift at his waist. At first it felt like nothing more than a minor inconvenience, the sort of thing lesser performers might find distracting. Then came the faint tkk of a button giving way. The top button of his trousers had come undone. Leopold’s heart skipped, though his arms continued moving with grand authority, as if sheer confidence might fasten fabric. He told himself it was nothing, that the orchestra required his guidance and that garments, like audiences, could be managed through force of will. But a few measures afterward came another quiet tkk, and he felt the trousers settle slightly lower on his hips.
A chill of dread crept up his spine, unwelcome and increasingly insistent. The musicians, meanwhile, were engaged in a remarkable feat of professional discipline: performing the symphony beautifully while pretending not to notice that their guest conductor appeared to be slowly coming apart at the seams. Leopold tried to adjust his stance subtly, tightening his core and elevating his posture in the hope that gravity might be persuaded to respect the occasion. Unfortunately gravity, like criticism, proved indifferent to his reputation.
The music surged toward a passionate crescendo just as another button gave way. Leopold felt the trousers slip again, a little farther this time, and he knew with terrible certainty that the situation was progressing in a direction no amount of artistic authority could reverse. He dared not look down. Looking down would acknowledge the problem, and acknowledging the problem would mean admitting, however briefly, that he was not entirely in control.
He resolved, with the stubbornness that had defined his career, to finish the movement.
The orchestra thundered toward its climax while Leopold raised both arms high, summoning the full power of the ensemble with one sweeping gesture. At that exact moment the final button surrendered, and the trousers slid down in one smooth, inevitable motion until they pooled neatly around his ankles. For a suspended instant the maestro stood on the podium conducting with undiminished intensity, his jacket hanging open to reveal his hairy stomach and, beneath it all, a pair of startling bright red thong underwear that the rental tuxedo had never intended to display.
The music did not stop, because it could not stop, and because the orchestra—disciplined and unyielding—pressed forward with professional resolve. Leopold, however, felt something inside him give way. He became suddenly aware of everything at once: the cool air at his legs, the sea of faces before him, the board of directors watching, and then—inevitably—the laughter.
It began as a ripple, a few scattered chuckles that might have been dismissed under other circumstances, but it spread quickly, gathering confidence, rising into something far less charitable. The audience, so recently attentive and reverent, now leaned into the spectacle with open amusement. Whatever greatness Leopold had imagined projecting dissolved under the weight of it.
His conducting faltered. The crisp authority of his gestures unraveled into uncertain, fluttering motions as his baton wavered in the air, no longer commanding but merely indicating. The orchestra followed through instinct alone, their playing steady and unwavering, eyes fixed resolutely on their music as if the man in front of them had become an unfortunate but irrelevant detail.
Leopold attempted, briefly and without success, to reclaim control—of the music, of himself, of his trousers—but the effort collapsed almost immediately. His face tightened, then twisted into something less dignified, and a strained, involuntary sound escaped him, halfway between outrage and despair, before dissolving into uneven, undignified sobs that only seemed to encourage the laughter from the hall.
And still, the orchestra played on.
They carried the symphony forward with impeccable discipline, strings soaring and brass resounding, delivering the final passage with a level of precision that bordered on defiance. The audience’s laughter ebbed and surged in waves, occasionally clashing with the music in a way that would have horrified Leopold under any other circumstances.
When the final chords rang out and faded, the orchestra lowered their instruments in perfect unison, the piece concluded with flawless execution.
Leopold, however, remained on the podium, trousers still at his ankles, breath unsteady, dignity thoroughly dismantled, no longer the towering figure he imagined himself to be but rather an awkward, overdressed man who had just been upstaged by his own clothing.
The applause, when it came, was enthusiastic—though not, perhaps, for the reasons he would have preferred.
The cockiest lumberjack in three counties had been bragging all afternoon when the town’s amateur wandered down to the river.
“Log rolling?” the kid asked.
The lumberjack grinned like someone had just been offered free money.
“Son, I can dance on a spinning log better than most men can walk on dry ground.”
Someone in the crowd yelled, “Make it interesting!”
The amateur shrugged. “Strip bet. Lose a round, you drop a piece of clothing.”
Another voice chimed in from the bank. “And the winner keeps it!”
The lumberjack barked a laugh. “Perfect. Kid, I hope you’re not sentimental about your wardrobe.”
They climbed onto the log.
First round—splash.
The amateur flailed like a windmill in a tornado, arms everywhere, knees buckling.
The lumberjack smirked… right until the log shot out from under him.
He hit the water with a cannonball splash.
The amateur somehow stayed upright on the spinning log, blinking in surprise.
The lumberjack stood up in the shallow water beside the log, muttering under his breath. He kicked off his heavy boots, peeled off his soaked wool socks, and hurled them toward the bank where they landed in a growing pile of winnings.
The kid balanced there on the log, now suddenly the proud owner of two dripping boots and a pair of wool socks.
“Warm-up,” the lumberjack grumbled, hauling himself straight back onto the log from the water.
Second round—splash.
The amateur nearly fell three times in ten seconds.
But the lumberjack leaned too far correcting for the kid’s chaos, and the spinning log betrayed him again.
Back into the river.
Now the laughter from the bank was louder.
Standing waist-deep in the shallows, he unbuttoned his suspenders with the slow dignity of a man pretending this was all part of the show. The pants came off and he flung them up onto the bank to join the pile.
Now he was down to a red flannel shirt and tighty-whities.
“Nice undies!” someone yelled.
The amateur wobbled but somehow stayed on the log while watching them land with the rest of his new collection.
Third round—splash.
This time the lumberjack came out of the river breathing hard.
The amateur was still standing on the log looking shocked, like a man who had accidentally tripped into winning three lotteries.
The lumberjack stood there dripping in flannel and soaked underwear while the crowd howled.
He frowned down at himself, doing the math.
“Wet underwear goes see-through,” he muttered.
He tugged the flannel down experimentally. It hung low enough… barely.
“Shirt’s long enough.”
So off came the tighty-whities.
A roar went through the crowd as he flung them toward the bank and yanked the long flannel down like a curtain before climbing back onto the log from the water, clutching the hem like it was critical structural equipment.
The amateur remained standing there, now wobbling beside a shoreline pile that had grown considerably.
Now came the fourth and final round.
The lumberjack stepped onto the log again, gripping the wet bark with one hand while the other clutched the tail of his long flannel shirt like it was mission-critical equipment.
The amateur steadied himself opposite him, wobbling already.
The log started to spin.
Faster.
Faster.
The amateur pinwheeled wildly—and somehow stayed up.
The lumberjack tried to counter… but balancing one-handed turned out to be a terrible idea.
With a flash of his bare ass, the lumberjack plunged into the water for a final time. This time he stayed there, chest-deep in the water.
On shore, the amateur, still bone dry, carefully climbed off the log and gathered his pile of new, thoroughly soggy clothes—boots, socks, pants, underwear—and finally the drifting flannel shirt that floated within reach.
Out in the river, the lumberjack glared sheepishly toward the crowd on the bank, very deliberately not climbing out.
“Hey!” he shouted. “Anybody got a towel? Anyone? Please?”
It was the perfect intimate weekend--until he accidentally clicked "send to all" instead of "make private" on his new phone.
Officer Jake rolled up to Mrs. Dalloway’s house expecting a routine favor and perhaps a cookie for his trouble. She was exactly what the dispatcher had promised: a sweet little old lady with tidy white hair, a watering can in hand, and a ring of cactus pots guarding her porch like spiny little sentries. Her keys were visible through the kitchen window, taunting them from the kitchen counter. Jake assured her this sort of thing happened all the time and began inspecting the property with the confident air of a man who believed the afternoon would end with quiet heroism.
He checked doors, peered through windows, and wandered around the yard making a few casual remarks that were meant to sound professional but landed a bit sideways. At one point he gestured vaguely toward her carefully arranged cactus garden and chuckled that the place looked like “a retirement home for porcupines.” Mrs. Dalloway’s polite smile tightened almost imperceptibly. She continued watering her plants with slow precision and said nothing at all.
Jake eventually crouched beside the doggy door and decided it looked just big enough for a determined officer. “Might save us waiting for the locksmith,” he said, already pushing an arm through the flap. The plastic door clapped against his shoulder as he wriggled deeper, one leg kicking behind him for leverage. For a moment it looked like he might actually pull it off.
One more push and he'd be able to obtain the keys, become the hero, and spend the rest of his shift hiding out in his squad car. He braced his legs, lifted his ample posterior in the air, and pushed. Then came the sound of instantaneous regret.
RIIIP.
The back seam of his uniform pants gave out completely. Jake froze halfway through the door, realizing that he just flashed a sweet little old lady more than a glimpse of his tighty whities.
"Honey, you really shouldn't be going commando like that. It's not hygenic," Mrs. Halloway said with a modicum of concern for the officer's wellbeing as she placed a large, prickly cactus directly behind his bare backside. He suddenly remembered that in his haste to get dressed for work, and not being able to find a clean pair, he decide to go without. What could go wrong?
He backed out quickly, hoping to salvage what dignity remained. Unfortunately, in his haste he backed directly into the cactus Mrs. Dalloway had set down moments earlier.
The contact produced a startled yelp that echoed across the yard. Jake sprang forward again in reflex, banged his head on the doggy door frame, then scrambled free while trying very hard not to think about the number of tiny needles currently negotiating with his backside. Mrs. Dalloway murmured a sympathetic “Oh my,” though the corners of her mouth twitched suspiciously.
Jake straightened, tugged his shredded trousers back into something resembling coverage, and pretended none of it had happened. That was when he noticed the small upstairs bathroom window sitting open a few inches. The locksmith, he remembered dimly, was still fifteen minutes away. There was still time for him to save the day himself.
Minutes later he leaned a rickety ladder against the house and Officer Jake was climbing toward redemption. The aluminum rungs creaked beneath his boots while Mrs. Dalloway stood below with one hand on the ladder as if carefully holding it steady.
He was so focused on th mission, he completely forgot about the view he was affording Mrs. Dolloway and the group of neighbors who gathered to watch the police operation.
“You don’t have to hover, ma'am” Jake muttered down at her. “I'm a professinal. I know how to use a ladder.”
Mrs. Dalloway only smiled and kept her hand on the rail.
He climbed higher. Just as he reached the window and began hauling his torso over the sill, Mrs. Dalloway shifted her grip to “steady” the ladder. It scraped softly against the siding as she tugged it an inch—then another—away from the wall.
Jake didn’t notice. He was busy wriggling his chest inside the bathroom while his boots searched behind him for the rung that was no longer there.
Then Jake’s boot swung back for the ladder and found nothing but air.
His legs immediately began flailing as he tried to hook a rung that was no longer there. The frantic kicking had an unfortunate side effect.
His already-split trousers lost their last argument with gravity.
The waistband slid down over his hips.
Then lower.
The crowd below watched in fascinated silence as Jake’s pants slithered steadily down his thighs while he kicked and windmilled helplessly in the air. They slipped past his knees, then his calves, and finally collapsed in a defeated pile around his ankles.
His legs kept flailing.
The view from the yard was… memorable.
Just as Jake managed to stop himself from sliding backward out of the window entirely, the old sash suddenly dropped.
CLACK.
It slammed down hard across his waist and pinned him in place.
Jake froze, half inside the bathroom and half dangling outside over the gathering crowd. His pants remained tangled around his ankles, boots waving helplessly in open air. Someone in the audience snorted with delight.
Jake tried to pull himself forward. The sash pressed harder into his back.
From below, Mrs. Dalloway shaded her eyes and called up in a concerned voice. “Oh dear… I forgot to mention… the plumbing in that bathroom is broken.” Jake, sweating and desperate, had already grabbed the nearest pipe beside the toilet tank.
“You might not want to pull the stop cock open,” she added.
Jake had already pulled.
There was a deep, ominous gurgle somewhere in the pipes. Jake stopped moving as another gurgle answered, louder and wetter this time, like a warning clearing its throat. Mrs. Dalloway raised her voice slightly.
“Maybe let go of that, dear—”
Too late.
The toilet erupted with a violent surge that blasted brown sludge up the wall and directly onto the trapped officer. It splashed across his shoulders, soaked his shirt, and ran down his back with dreadful determination. The crowd below groaned in perfect unison.
Jake shut his eyes.
Mrs. Dalloway quietly called the fire department.
When the fire engine arrived, the firefighters stepped out and stared for a long moment at the spectacle: a police officer wedged in a second-story bathroom window, pants at his ankles, dripping unmistakably unpleasant liquid. Captain Morales folded his arms and tilted his head.
“Well,” he said thoughtfully, “that’s a new one.”
The rescue took some time. First, they thuroughly documented the scene with still pictures and video. Then they stabilized the ladder while two firefighters climbed up beside Jake and tried to lift the sash off his waist. Another firefighter shouted encouragement from the yard.
“Hang in there, Officer...Literally. And remember not to use the good towels. They're only for company”
A few neighbors laughed. Someone was absolutely filming.
It took several awkward minutes of maneuvering before the firefighters finally freed the sash and began backing Jake slowly out of the window. His pants remained firmly tangled around his ankles throughout the entire operation. Gravity ensured the visual situation never improved.
But the ordeal wasn’t over. Protocol required full decontamination.
A portable plastic shower stall was set up right there in the yard. Its translucent sides offered only the faintest illusion of privacy while firefighters explained that every contaminated item of clothing had to come off. Inside the flimsy enclosure, Jake stood completely stripped while a hose blasted him with long, methodical sprays of ice water meant for hazardous spills. From outside the stall his blurred silhouette left very little to the imagination.
Captain Morales watched with folded arms and shook his head slowly. “Next time,” he called out, “maybe wait for the locksmith.”
As if summoned by fate, the locksmith finally arrived. He walked up to the front door, unlocked it in about fifteen seconds, and tipped his hat politely. Mrs. Dalloway thanked him kindly and offered him a lemonade.
Officer Jake continued standing under the frigid spray, reconsidering every decision he had made that afternoon.
The dining room of L’Ours Doré, the most exclusive restaurant in town, glittered beneath perfectly arranged chandeliers, their light settling across crystal and polished silver. Guests called the atmosphere serene, but what they meant was controlled. Nothing happened by accident. Every gesture carried intention.
Jacques believed in intention. His hair and beard were trimmed with geometric precision, his vest immaculate, his manner so severe that diners mistook vigilance for arrogance. He even insisted on a private changing room, claiming authority required distance. In truth, privacy meant safety.
Chaos arrived before service began.
A nervous junior waiter collided with him in the corridor, sending a trendy coffee cascading down Jacques’s pristine uniform. The young man froze. “Monsieur Jacques, I’m so sorry.”
“Fetch towels,” Jacques said evenly, already calculating the minutes until opening. In his changing room he replaced shirt and trousers with spare ones, only to discover his undergarments were ruined. A hesitant knock followed.
“I… think you might need these,” the waiter said, sliding a folded bundle through the door. “They’re new. I swear.”
Jacques unfolded baby blue briefs covered in cartoon bears . The service bell rang. Time expired. Professional duty prevailed. He dressed quickly, ignoring how the snug his new garments felt, especially the panties that promptly vanished between his cheeks and fit far more comfortably than they had any right to.
Throughout service he felt compressed inside his replacement uniform. His vest pinched, his shirt crept upward revealing his hairy belly, and his overstretched trousers threatened betrayal. He stood more erect, moved more cautiously, and make a constant effort to suck his gut in to avoid a uniform disaster.
He corrected tiny imperfections with unusual sharpness while secretly checking reflections in wine buckets and cloches to ensure nothing showed. Staff interpreted that as arrogance. When two busboys gave Jacques a quick glance and snickered, he knew that the junior chef spilled his secret, making him even more self conscious about his every movement.
Jacques was finally starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel when the birthday cake arrived in the kitchen. He loathed birthdays in the restaurant. The kitchen staff, lacking proper reverence, found them charming. Jacques found them theatrical disruptions. Singing. Clapping. Sentimentality. A fine dining room reduced to Chuck E Cheese.
Jacques believed the highest form of service was invisibility. The perfect maître d’ left no impression except that everything had gone exactly as it should. He had mastered the art of controlling the dining room without calling attention to himself. Now he was forced into the limelight.
The cake was offensively cheerful: pastel frosting piped in looping blue garlands, pink sugar flowers dotting each tier, and a glittering topper declaring Happy Birthday in looping letters. Five candles burned brightly, their tiny flames wobbling with optimism Jacques refused to share.
“Jacques. Table forty-three.”
He lifted the tray and entered the dining room. Conversations softened as guests watched him advance with solemn precision. Halfway across the room, he felt a shift at his waist.
Pop.
The button shot away and vanished beneath a table. Jacques tightened his abdomen and kept walking, willing control to hold. For a moment, it did.
Then the zipper began to descend, slowly, deliberately. Passing a polished cloche, he caught his reflection and saw a single bright bear peeking beneath his vest. His breath shortened. He froze, subtly squirming, but each correction hastened the fall. The waistband slipped lower. The bears multiplied. Murmurs spread as realization dawned.
He could not drop the cake. Could not reach down. Only endure.
He turned toward the kitchen. The motion ended everything. His trousers slid to his ankles as laughter ignited behind him. Attempting escape, he shuffled forward, his ample, hairy posterior wobbling like a panna cotta freed from its mold. Fabric tangled. His foot caught.
Still protecting the cake, Jacques pitched forward in painfully slow motion and landed face first in buttercream. Frosting burst across the marble; candles scattered; silence held one breath before the room erupted in laughter.
Jacques rose slowly, frosting clinging to beard and lashes. His trousers remained abandoned on the dining room floor. He did not retrieve them. He straightened his vest and walked into the kitchen.
The doors closed, muting the laughter. Service continued uninterrupted. The chef glanced up once.
“Are you hurt?”
“No.”
“Good. Go home.”
A dishwasher handed Jacques a small towel meant for cleaning his face. Misunderstanding entirely, Jacques wrapped it around his waist with solemn precision. It covered very little. He adjusted his posture to compensate. No one corrected him.
Outside, a taxi waited. Jacques climbed inside, holding the inadequate towel in place. The driver glanced in the mirror, taking in the elegant vest, the frosting, and the cheerful waistband beneath.
“Rough night?”
Jacques stared straight ahead.
“Just drive.”
From the moment they stopped at the bait shop, the trip had already turned into a quiet, coordinated operation and Jake never noticed. While he argued about lure colors and someone else grabbed ice, his duffel got set down by the door and simply never made it back into the truck. Nobody mentioned it later at camp, and with the fire going, drinks flowing, and stories getting louder as the night stretched on, Jake had no reason to suspect he’d already been carefully disarmed.
They rousted him at an hour that barely counted as morning, all hushed urgency and talk about deer moving early. Jake stumbled out of his bunk in a fog and headed for the outdoor shower while the others hovered just long enough to keep the pressure on. By the time he stepped out, still half asleep, his clean briefs had vanished from the hook and someone quickly handed him a “backup pair” from his duffle before ushering him to hurry up if he wanted to make first light. Jake dragged them on without looking, too groggy to question anything, while the rest of the camp somehow managed to get very quiet very fast.
They rushed him out with gear, claps on the shoulder, and promises they’d be right behind him. Jake headed into the woods feeling like the only guy on earth trying to hunt with a hangover and three hours of sleep. The forest was warm, still, and forgiving in that early light, and for a while it felt like the morning might actually settle into something normal.
Then the mud got him.
One step off the trail near his stand and the ground swallowed his boot, pitched him forward, and dropped him into a thick, body-length splash that coated him from chest to ankles. As he struggled up, his soaked pants dragged heavily and then slid straight down, and that was the moment the awful truth hit him. Jake stared down, blinking through mud and disbelief, finally registering exactly what he’d been sent into the woods wearing--the skimpiest camouflage thong with, unfortunately, too much material in the pouch and not nearly enough in the back.
Realizing that he would not make it through the day in his sodden clothes and safe in the knowledge that his hunting party were spread out over acres of woodland and he was utterly alone, he peeled off the muddy clothes, hung them along the base of the stand, and climbed up to the tree stand to wait for his clothes to dry. The warmth, the exhaustion, and the slow buzz of insects eventually pulled him into a nap whether he liked it or not.
When he woke, it was to movement in the distance. A majestic eight point buck stepped into view, calm and steady, sunlight catching along its rack. Jake leaned forward, impressed, until he noticed something tangled in the antlers: a pair of camouflage pants. For one shining second, he thought it was the funniest thing he’d ever seen in the woods.
Then he recognized them.
Jake scrambled down the ladder to where his clothes should have been. Nothing. He turned toward the buck, whisper-yelling and waving his arms, trying in vain to convince the deer to drop what was left of his dignity. The buck watched him with the serene patience of a creature that knew it had already won, then turned and vanished into the trees with Jake’s pants flapping from its rack like a banner.
By the time Jake trudged back into camp in the late afternoon, he was dried mud from head to toe, wearing only his boots, lucky hat, and the thong he’d been tricked into. The guys looked up from their coffee like they’d been expecting nothing else. One of them raised an eyebrow and said, very calmly, “Rough morning?”
Jake answered with a grunt that carried the emotional weight of a full incident report. He didn’t slow down, didn’t make eye contact, just limped past the fire pit and into camp, dried mud cracking along his sleeves and neck while his boots thudded heavily on the ground. He looked like a man who had been excavated rather than returned from the woods.
He went straight for the spot where his duffel should’ve been.
It wasn’t there.
Jake stared at the empty patch of ground for a long second before asking, flatly, where his bag was. The answers came in the vague, unhelpful fragments of men reconstructing bad decisions: somebody thought it had been near the truck last night, somebody else remembered seeing it at the bait shop, and after a bit of slow, guilty silence, the group more or less agreed that yeah… it might still be sitting there by the minnow fridge.
One of the guys finally said they could run him back into town to get it.
Then he checked the time, looked at the others, and everyone collectively remembered just how much they’d had to drink throughtout the day. Nobody was sober enough to drive right then, and the bait shop would be closing soon anyway. With the kind of helpfulness only coworkers possess, someone fished out a set of truck keys and tossed them to Jake.
“Your call,” he said. “You can head into town… or ride it out.”
Jake looked down at himself. Boots. Hat. Thong. A thin crust of drying mud still clinging in places he didn’t want to think about.
He looked back at the woods.
Then at the truck.
Jake tossed the keys on the table, grabbed a coffee instead, and sat down by the fire without a word. If the universe wanted him to finish the weekend like this, he figured he might as well commit to the bit.
By Monday, the story had already outrun him back to the precinct. It grew with every retelling, acquiring new details, better dialogue, and at least one version where the deer supposedly bowed before running off with his pants. Jake knew it would never fully die, but he also knew something else: somewhere out there was an eight-point buck who’d accidentally helped create the single most persistent legend his unit would ever have.
Proposal Gone Wrong
Jake’s carefully choreographed proposal was supposed to be unforgettable for all the right reasons.
To surprise his hockey-obsessed girlfriend, he agreed to dress as the rink’s clown-show custodian, completely unaware that the act included a long-running gag where a clown yanked away the coveralls to reveal goofy heart-patterned boxers underneath.
No one warned Jake.
Disgusted at the thought of wearing another man's used underwear, he wore the bright red thong his fiancée had once jokingly given him, never imagining it would matter, and it might pay off later tonight.
At halftime, amid cheering mascots and flashing lights, he skated to center ice as she was escorted out to meet him, dropped to one knee with flowers and a ring, and opened his mouth to propose.
With expert timing, that was the exact moment the clown pulled the rope he covertly attached to the back of his breakaway coveralls. In a flash, the coveralls vanished. The arena froze, then erupted in laughter as Jake stood stunned and immobile in scarlet disbelief.
His now ex fiancee gasped, covered her face, and fled the ice, while Jake remained rooted in place, encircled by cackling mascots and a stadium full of witnesses to a proposal that derailed in a single, merciless tug.
Jake and his new rookie, Ellis, were on patrol at the Wet Zone Family Fun Grounds municipal pool. The entire complex buzzed with shrieks, splashes, and sunscreen-slick chaos. Jake, in his standard issue patrol uniform, scanned it all with the expression of a man inspecting a crime scene that insisted on calling itself “family fun.”
Ellis was short, solid, and unfairly photogenic in his official board shorts with embroidered police insignia and muscle shirt with “POLICE” in large block letters, was having a very different patrol. Patrons smiled at him, waved, even tossed the occasional playful catcall his way. He soaked it up like sunlight. Jake noticed. Jake said nothing.
They cut past a mushroom fountain just as it dumped a fresh sheet of water. Ellis came out of it shining, droplets tracing down his arms and shoulders like he’d stepped out of a swimsuit issue of a famous illustrated sports magazine. Jake came out somewhat worse. His light blue shirt plastered to him, revealing each ab that he didn't have. His cargo pants gained 10 pounds of water weight and sagged severely. His shoes and socks made a miserable squishing sound with each step. Ellis grinned. Jake did not.
Their patrol brought them to the crest of the hill, where the slide mouths yawned beside the path, fiberglass gleaming, water rushing invitingly toward the twisting tunnel. A couple kids were having a sword fight with pool noodles. The lifeguard letting people down the slide carelessly tossed his banana peal toward the garbage can. The safety rail at the mouth of the slide was way too low and swinging in the breeze. “Look around, Ellis, what do you see?” Silence. “A good officer anticipates risks instead of reacting af—” whump, splash, echoing tunnel noises. Jake was gone.
Inside the tunnel, the ride turned immediate and violent. Water shoved him along; his shoulder slammed one wall, then his hip into the other. The last thing he heard from his radio was Ellis saying, “Sir, you’re not supposed to go down headfirst. You might get…” before it crackled and died.
His shirt caught next, first with a sharp tug at the shoulder, then a tearing crawl across the seams as the slide twisted him from side to side. Buttons pinged away into the rushing water like tiny escape pods. Fabric split in uneven stages, each bend claiming another piece until the shirt hung from him in damp, useless ribbons that slapped against his ribs as he tried to brace. By the time he planted his forearms against the tunnel to slow himself, there was barely anything left to grip but shreds and soaked cotton clinging out of stubborn habit.
The soaked utility belt turned traitor a moment later. It had been dragging heavily already, each pouch filling with water, each turn tugging it lower. It shifted once, twice, then slid free with a sickening inevitability, spinning past him in the current like it couldn’t wait to get to the exit first. Watching it go, Jake felt the first real spike of dread twist in his stomach. Gear was replaceable. What came after it was not.
He tried digging in with his boots, forcing his legs wide to create friction, but the cargo pants were already waterlogged anchors. They pulled, sagged, and twisted around his hips with every curve. One sharp bend later they snagged just long enough to seal their fate. The fabric yanked tight, the waistband rolled, and in one humiliating, unstoppable motion they stripped clean off and shot ahead into the glow at the end of the tunnel.
For a second he just stared after them, heart thumping, the rush of water suddenly feeling much colder. Ahead was daylight. Ahead was the pool. Ahead was an audience. The realization landed hard: if he didn’t stop himself soon, he wasn’t just exiting the slide. He was making an entrance, the kind you never recover from.
Jake’s survival instincts finally overrode momentum. He threw his shoes and hands outward, jamming the soles against the curved sides of the tunnel and bracing his arms hard despite the slick plastic fighting him. For a moment it felt like trying to stop a runaway cart with nothing but stubbornness, the current still shoving at his back, but friction slowly began to win. His descent shortened to a crawl, then a shuddering slide, and finally stopped with water slipping around his legs and rushing past into the open air ahead.
He stayed frozen there in the dim blue tunnel facing the continuous flow of water gushing toward him. He didn’t dare turn around to assess his situation. Judging from the glow from the sunlight and muffled noises of the people in the splash pool, the opening was probably just a few yards away. Any misstep, any lapse in balance, any change in the water pressure and he would be flushed out like a goldfish down the toilet bowl.
Then, drifting lazily back along the shallow current inside the tube, came the final insult. A pair of extra large tighty whities that had obviously gone through an ordeal bobbed into view, turning gently in the flow. Jake stared as his last scrap of modesty floated past his feet and continued serenely toward the sunlight. He closed his eyes for a single beat, the kind of stillness that comes right before a man accepts the universe has decided to make an example of him.
When he opened them again, his voice carried back up the tunnel, controlled but tight.
“…Rookie. Towel.”
Ellis obeyed… then, because Ellis was Ellis, decided it would be faster to bring it himself. He ripped his shirt off, grabbed a hand towel from he lifeguard station, and launched into the slide in the regulation feet first, legs crossed, head up position. His confidence fare outweighed his foresight. The rushing water turning him into a fast, solid projectile. He shot through the curves, gaining speed, the tunnel amplifying the sound of the water and his approach until it was obvious he wasn’t stopping.
As he rounded the final bend, the rookie saw Jake braced in the exit, left in only his shoes, socks, and shredded soaking wet uniform shirt. Ellis’s expression shifted from determination to immediate, helpless horror. If he had more time and could do math, the he would have been calculating the clearance between Jake’s legs and trying to compensate by lying as flat as possible. Instead, he let out a “Noooooooooo!” without realizing that that left him in a less than optimal position for his impending collision with his commanding officer's groin.
They could almost feel the impact arriving before it happened, that awful suspended moment when both men know exactly what physics is about to do and neither has any leverage left to stop it. Ellis involuntarily put his head up to see what was happening. Jake tried to brace harder and increase the clearance between his legs. The slide gave them no room, no mercy, no alternative ending.
Then physics finished the job.
Ellis plowed into him headfirst and mouth wide open. Jake instantly doubled over in pain and slid down the rookie’s chest and landed squarely in his lap. Without slowing down, the two officers burst out of the tunnel together in a single dramatic splash that sent water across the deck and silenced the nearby chatter for half a beat before laughter and applause took over.
After a brief recovery period, Ellis stood up with Jake still clinging to him like a slightly less hairy koala bear. He staggered around a bit with the extra weight and disorientation of walking through water, enough to ensure everyone in the park got a good view of Jake's ample posterior barely covered by what was left of his now transparent, tattered uniform shirt.
“Don’t help. You’ve done enough.” Ellis complied and dropped him in the shallow water with a splash and a thud. Jake jerked his head toward the locker room and started walking. Ellis followed obediently three steps behind and not offering any more help, not even to block the view of Jake’s bare backside from the crowd of amateur paparazzi gathered for the walk of shame. They both agreed never to mention the water park incident again, and maybe request different partners for future patrols.
They both agreed never to mention the water park incident again, and maybe request different partners for future patrols.
Officer Jake had already decided this fair assignment was beneath him: muddy parking lot, deep fried "food" on a stick, and a rookie who stood like he was posing for a recruitment poster. The rookie, on the other hand, looked like a man determined to impress the academy, the department, and possibly history itself. Jake was midway through a lecture on “maintaining visible authority presence” when the rookie suddenly stiffened. “Sir. Don’t move.” Jake frowned. “Why?” The rookie leaned in, voice tight with urgency. “Horsefly. Big one. On your shoulder.” Jake tried to turn. “NO, sir, hold still!”
SMACK.
Jake jerked. “What are you—”
SMACK.
“Almost had it!”
Now the rookie circled him with intense concentration, swatting again as Jake twisted in confusion. “Persistent little thing, sir!” The last mighty swat aimed directly at Jake's forehead clipped his hat just enough to send it sailing backward. In slow motion it bounced once, twice, and landed in a brown puddle with a thick, final splorp. The rookie stopped moving. The air went still. “…Nearly had it,” the rookie said.
Jake stared at the puddle. Then at the rookie. Then back at the puddle. “Go get it.”
The rookie hesitated, studying the mud like it required certification. “Sir… if I step in, my boot tread carries the contamination outward in a widening pattern. That spreads it to the cruiser, then to the precinct, then to the chief's office, which makes the problem mobile.” Jake blinked slowly. The rookie continued, calm and patient. “If you retrieve it from the perimeter, we localize the disturbance to a single point. I provide counterbalance, we shorten exposure time, and we avoid creating secondary mud vectors.”
Jake squinted. “…Secondary mud… what?” “Vectors, sir.” “…I don’t understand how that helps.” “It keeps the situation contained.”
Jake stared at him another moment, then sighed the sigh of a man surrendering to logic beyond his comprehension. “Fine. Hold onto me.”
He stepped to the edge while the rookie grabbed the back of his uniform. Jake leaned out carefully, stretching… a little farther… fingertips brushing the muddy brim… and then his balance shifted just enough to tip past recovery. For one suspended instant he hung there while the rookie adjusted his grip and gave a barely perceptible tug.
Then gravity took over.
Jake dropped chest-first into the puddle with a wet, spectacular collapse. Mud swallowed him to the elbows with a heavy suction sound, cold soaking through his shirt in an instant. His boots stuck fast, his radio burst into frantic static, and the impact sent a slow, oily ripple across the surface like the puddle itself was savoring the moment. Behind him, the rookie stood frozen, still holding a section of detached fabric that didn’t immediately register as important.
Jake pushed himself up with effort, breathing hard, hat finally recovered. Mud coated the entire front of his uniform in a thick, clinging layer that dragged at the fabric and oozed when he moved. It smeared across his badge, filled the seams of his sleeves, and dripped steadily from his cuffs.
“How bad is the back of my uniform?”
The rookie leaned slightly to check, his expression carefully neutral, eyes flicking once to the damage and then back up again. “Not nearly as much mud as the front, sir.”
Jake spat, wiped his face with a muddy sleeve, and looked toward the cruiser like it was the last lifeboat on earth. “That’s it,” he said. “We’re going back to the car. I’m done with this place.”
The rookie shifted uneasily. “Sir… if we return to the cruiser like this, the interior becomes the new contamination site. Seat fabric, floor mats, equipment surfaces. That spreads the problem instead of resolving it.”
Jake closed his eyes for a second. The rookie pressed on, gently but persistently. “The fairgrounds have that new livestock wash system. The one that can clean an entire heifer in three minutes flat. Facilities like that are designed for heavy soil removal. Faster, more thorough, and it keeps the cruiser operational.”
Jake looked down at his shirt, heavy with mud, then back at the fair entrance where distant laughter and music drifted out into the lot. He exhaled slowly.
Jake nodded, reassured by that. “Good enough. Let’s just get cleaned up.”
He turned and started toward the fairgrounds, stiff with drying mud and wounded pride. Each step made a faint sucking sound as his boots pulled free of the ground. The rookie followed a step behind, still holding the torn fabric, maintaining a professional distance like he was escorting evidence.
They passed through the gate and into the crowd. Conversations faltered almost immediately. A child pointed outright. Someone’s sentence just… stopped. A teenager made a strangled noise trying to hold in laughter. A vendor leaned halfway out of a booth, eyes tracking them with open fascination. Jake kept walking, chin up, convinced the mud was the spectacle.
What he didn’t realize was that from the waist down his uniform no longer met any known structural definition of “pants,” and that the reason people weren’t staring at the mud was because they had already noticed something far more revealing.
The rookie walked behind him in silence, face carefully composed, still carrying the torn fabric like documentation, as they disappeared deeper into the fair.
Officer Jake had always imagined crowd patrol as the calm cousin of real police work. Stand around, look official, maybe direct a few people away from the hotdog cart. Easy. So when he was told he was being “loaned out” for protest duty and handed what looked like a medieval armory’s worth of riot gear, he laughed.
“Wow,” he said, gesturing at the armor. “What are we expecting, a medieval uprising? This is a peaceful protest. You guys always cosplay this hard?”
The room went quiet. A few helmets turned slowly in his direction.
One of the officers smiled. Another cracked his knuckles.
“Suit up,” someone said, far too cheerfully.
First came the rigid breastplate. The thing locked his torso into an awkward, upright posture, like a plastic action figure fresh out of the box. He tried to bend, failed, and settled for rotating his entire body instead.
“Can you scratch my nose for me?” he asked, already regretting that question.
Then came the shoulder pads. The elbow guards. The thigh padding. Someone tightened something around his waist. Someone else adjusted the helmet and visor, which immediately fogged up. Jake’s world shrank to clanks, Velcro rips, and muffled voices.
“All good?” one of them asked.
“Yeah, I think so,” Jake said, assuming they knew what they were doing. He certainly couldn’t see enough to verify anything himself.
They marched him out to the protest line, shields up, posture proud. The crowd noticed him immediately. Not in the usual boo-or-chant way—this was different. Laughter rippled outward like a wave.
Jake blinked behind the visor. Someone pointed. Someone else doubled over laughing. A chant started, fell apart, then restarted as pure giggles.
That was when a breeze hit his legs.
Jake looked down as far as the breastplate allowed. Beneath all that official-looking padding… was a very noticeable absence of uniform pants.
Behind him, his teammates were losing the battle to stay professional. One had turned away entirely. Another leaned on a shield, shaking.
Jake exhaled slowly. “You did this.”
The only reply he got was, “Cosplay’s all about commitment.”
The protest dispersed peacefully that day.
Mostly because nobody could stop laughing long enough to be angry.