Law and Justice (MF humor) 
© 2002  Anais Ninja  anais_ninja@hotmail.com 
 
 
[Author's note: If you're not up to speed on current events, refer to 
 http://abcnews.go.com/sections/us/HallsOfJustice/hallsofjustice.html] 
 
 
 
The press conference was held in the Great Hall, and the crowd of 
reporters and cameramen made the immense room an oasis of heat and 
humidity on a chilly Washington morning.  Banks of klieg lights shined 
on an empty podium as the crowd waited for the Attorney General to 
appear. 
 
The reason for the press conference, an announcement of the appointment 
of a special prosecutor in the Enron scandal, was nearly overshadowed by 
the brand new blue curtain that hung behind the podium.  Bearing a large 
version of the Department of Justice's official seal, the $8,000 curtain 
obscured a pair of twelve foot tall aluminum sculptures that had caused 
so much controversy of late, even though they'd stood as mute witnesses 
to these gatherings for over sixty years. 
 
"They should have just put her in a burqa," remarked a wag from the 
Times of London, referring to the bare-breasted statue known as "Minnie 
Lou", though its official name was the lofty sounding "Spirit of 
Justice". 
 
"It'd be a lot cheaper, that's for sure," a photographer from Reuters 
said. 
 
The crowd quieted down as the Attorney General, flanked by his aides and 
a protective detail of Secret Service agents, took to the podium.  He 
shuffled through his notes and cleared his throat. 
 
"Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.  I'll start with a prepared 
statement and then take questions.  We'll have copies of the statement 
available for you later this morning."  A few flashbulbs went off, and 
the click of shutters and whir of camera motor drives sounded like a 
field of crickets on a hot summer night. 
 
"This morning the Department of Justice received instructions from the 
President authorizing the appointment of a special prosec..."  The 
Attorney General was cut off in mid-sentence as the thick blue curtain 
behind him began to fall.  The crowd of journalists began to laugh as 
the curtain covered three of the Attorney General's aides who were 
standing behind the podium.  As they struggled under the fallen curtain, 
the Secret Service agents rushed to the stage to help free them.  Every 
camera in the room went off as the hundred or so photographers captured 
this slapstick sight. 
 
It took five minutes for the agents to extricate the trapped aides from 
the curtain.  A few photographers pushed their way to the front of the 
crowd and kneeled, aiming their camera up at the podium to take what 
might be the last shot of the strait-laced Attorney General with Minnie 
Lou's bare right breast floating over his head.  The Attorney General 
shuffled his papers and cleared his throat again. 
 
"This morning the Department of Justice received instructions from 
President..."  The Attorney General was cut off again by a metallic 
groan.  It seemed to come from Minnie Lou's companion, a loincloth-clad 
male statue entitled "Majesty of Law".  Nervously, he glanced over his 
shoulder at the statue.  There was another groan and the sound of metal 
grinding against metal.  Suddenly there was another sound, a ghostly 
moan that seemed to come from Minnie Lou.  The Attorney General backed 
away from the podium, his notes and papers dropping to the floor as he 
looked up and saw Minnie Lou's upraised arms begin to move. 
 
The crowd of journalists was stunned into silence as the Minnie Lou's  
arms slowly lowered, her hands gradually reaching for her breasts and 
cupping them.  Suddenly the room erupted with laughter, hoots, and 
catcalls, flashbulbs popping as every photographer tried to capture this 
amazing event. 
 
"It's a miracle!" shouted a reporter from L'Osservatore Romano, the 
Vatican newspaper.  This wasn't the first statue he'd seen come to life, 
having covered numerous stories of religious artifacts that shed tears 
or manifested stigmata, but this was the first time he'd seen a statue 
squeeze its own breasts. 
 
"It's a Clinton dirty trick.  Janet Reno must have rigged this last 
year," spat a conservative columnist from the American Standard. 
 
The Attorney General stood petrified as he watched Minnie Lou fondle her 
shiny aluminum breasts.  Her nipples began to engorge as her fingers 
danced over them, making a crackling sound like a soda can being 
crushed.  Suddenly there was another metallic groaning behind him, and 
he wheeled around to face the Majesty of Law.  The statue's normally 
dour expression began to form a smile, and there was a prominent bulge 
forming under his loincloth. 
 
"You still think Reno did this?" asked a reporter from the New York 
Times as the statue's loincloth parted to reveal a large aluminum 
erection.  "Looks more like Bob Dole's work." 
 
"I don't know what to think," said the conservative columnist. "I just 
hope it doesn't come after me.  I'm out of here." 
 
"Don't flatter yourself," the Times reporter said.  She stayed, as did 
just about everyone else, eager to witness the most newsworthy event 
since September. 
 
The statues began to take short, halting steps towards each other, their 
limbs creaking, their footfalls booming throughout the Great Hall.  The 
Attorney General stood still, paralyzed like a deer caught in the 
headlights of a truck.  His protective detail surrounded him, and the 
quartet of agents started to drag him off the stage.  They'd taken two 
steps when the Majesty of Law turned towards him, swatting the Attorney 
General and his bodyguards off the stage with the back of his hand.  
They landed in the second row of seats, a tangle of bodies.  The agents 
extricated themselves from the mess and instinctively drew their guns. 
 
"Shoot them!  Shoot them!" the Attorney General screamed.  The agents 
held their fire, knowing the effect a ricochet would have in the crowded 
hall.  They holstered their weapons and brought the Attorney General to 
his feet, hustling him out the back of the hall. 
 
As the crowd watched, the statues embraced, their shiny lips meeting and 
pressing together with a dull ringing sound.  Majesty had his hand on 
Spirit's exposed breast and she slowly reached for his erect penis, 
stroking it with a grinding sound reminiscent of a mild fender bender. 
 
As Minnie Lou gradually sank to her knees and took Majesty's shiny organ 
in her mouth, a chant of "Mo-ni-ca!  Mo-ni-ca!" began to erupt from the 
laughing crowd.  More camera shutters clicked, their flashes reflecting 
off the two aluminum giants on stage.  Cell phones chirped throughout 
the hall as reporters called their editors and described the scene.  
More than one freelance photographer called his agent, urging them to 
get in touch with Bob Guccione, hoping for a million dollar spread in 
Penthouse. 
 
The Spirit of Justice looked up at the Majesty of Law, a hungry 
expression on her sculpted face as she lay back on the thick blue 
curtain that had hidden them.  There was a loud metallic creak as she 
spread her long legs, her aluminum drapery flowing like quicksilver, 
revealing her cleft.  Majesty of Law slowly kneeled, his burnished metal 
penis gleaming under the bright lights.  They coupled slowly, becoming 
one on the Great Hall stage, directly on top of the Department of 
Justice seal. 
 
"It sounds like a slow-motion car crash," a Washington Post reporter 
dictated into his tape recorder, "as these two dignified Art Deco 
sculptures rut like a pair of hormone-crazed teenagers." 
 
The sound of metal grinding against metal forced some of those present 
to cover their ears, and sound technicians started fiddling with gain 
controls, pointing their boom mics away from the stage to keep them from 
overloading.  Except for a couple of network news cameramen who were 
doing live headshots of the reporters they accompanied, the rest of the 
lensmen were focused on the stage, recording this astonishing 
phenomenon. 
 
Majesty of Law's lips were clamped to Minnie Lou's breast, the shining 
orb that had generated so much controversy.  Their hips creaked and 
groaned as they rocked together, her hands grabbing his polished 
buttocks, urging him to thrust faster.  Their slow coupling became a 
frenzied one, and the sound of their lovemaking became almost deafening, 
like a pair of pile drivers at a construction site. 
 
Cameramen and photographers had surrounded them, though the statues 
seemed oblivious to their presence, absorbed in what must have been 66 
years of pent-up desire.  No one dared get too close, having seen the 
Attorney General get swatted off the stage like a toy soldier. 
 
"What's going to happen when he comes?" a cameraman asked his sound 
technician. 
 
"I dunno...money shot?" the techie replied. 
 
"I got $20 that says 'facial'," the cameraman said, patting his wallet. 
 
"Yer on." 
 
The pair moved closer, edging in for a close-up of the Majesty of Law's 
glistening aluminum shaft plunging into the sculpted labia of the Spirit 
of Justice.  Beneath the sound of the thundering booms of their 
coupling, a metallic moan could be heard coming from her lips, almost 
human but not quite. 
 
And then she came.  As she started thrashing beneath her partner, her 
metal limbs quivering and flailing, the crowd surrounding them began to 
edge away, afraid of being crushed, spooked by the metallic cries that 
escaped her lips.  As the circle widened, Spirit of Justice's back 
arched and her hips shuddered, her big metal hands coming down right 
where a few reporters had just been standing.  Majesty of Law's hips 
kept pumping, though his eyes were tightly closed. 
 
"You think he's thinking about another statue?" the Times reporter asked 
her boyfriend, a columnist for the Nation. 
 
"Maybe he's got the hots for the Statue of Liberty," the columnist said, 
slipping his hand under her skirt and resting it on her bottom.  "How 
about we stay in tonight.  I'll bring the silver bodypaint." 
 
"Deal," she said, discreetly rubbing the bulge in his trousers. 
 
"Stand back!" someone shouted.  "He's coming!" 
 
Majesty of Law gave one last thrust into Spirit of Justice and then 
pulled out, his polished metal phallus gleaming under the lights.  He 
reached down and stroked it once, then twice, and then he erupted in a 
spray of what looked like mercury, a supple silver liquid that pooled on 
Minnie Lou's belly.  When the geyser of quicksilver became a trickle, he 
slowly laid on top of his partner, their lips meeting with a grinding 
sound as they kissed.  The crowd burst into a mixture of laughter and 
applause. 
 
"You win," the cameraman said to his tech, pulling a $20 bill from his 
wallet.  As they zoomed in for one more shot of the statues in repose, 
Majesty of Law slowly turned his head and looked at them.  His sculpted 
lips began to move. 
 
"Do.  You.  Mind?" the statue said, a tone of annoyance in his booming 
metallic voice. 
 
With that, the crowd began to disperse, filing out of the hall while the 
statues relaxed on the stage, reclining on top of the thick blue 
curtain.  While cameramen began to set up outside the hall and reporters 
began filing their stories, someone placed a pack of cigarettes and a 
lighter on the stage. 
 
The woman from the Times and her boyfriend hailed a cab, heading to her 
place for a nooner.  As the cabbie negotiated the traffic on 
Constitution Ave., they passed the Washington Monument.  Suddenly the 
driver slammed on the brakes. 
 
"Holy shit," he said, pointing at the gleaming white spike as veins 
began to appear under its marble cladding and the apex began to swell 
into a helmet-like shape. 
 
 
 
 
                                  -30- 
 
               © 2002  Anais Ninja  anais_ninja@hotmail.com 
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