There really should be a question mark after this, a bit disappointing.
Thursday, 12 April 2012
Tuesday, 10 April 2012
193 and counting
So here comes the very necessary,
patronising bit, that piece that you have to include, that irritating
passage, badly over written and cliched that (has too many thats in
it) exhausts the readers, perplexes the audience and alienate anybody
with any common sense or normal level of intelligence. Anyway despite
knowing all that you persist, you add these sledgehammer phrases and
terms and allow the whole passage the opportunity to shrink and sink
without trace. That's the conundrum, knowing and seeing the
fundamental weakness in your technique and work and being unable to
change it, so trapped in your own thought processes and ways of
working that you cant escape. It's a life sentence and a treadmill, a
piano headed up a mountainside and you're the one pushing it,
inevitable...that's what he thought and believed until she walked
into his life.
When he first saw her it was like some
fuzzy moment, a shot taken through a special lens, there was
blurring, there was mystery, he wanted to wipe his eyes, clear the
glass. Slowly the haze cleared, that fog and mist and visual clutter,
those indistinct images sharpened up, he was escaping from himself.
She was the exit, it seemed.
She made his eyes hurt, it was like
that, he wanted to stare and never stop. It was intense, like a burn.
She was perfect, a perfect problem, mouth, hair, face and then that
expression, that thing, that glint in here eyes, like a smile and a
twinkle and all the cliches floating together in some wonderful
construction that transcended any normal experience. It was almost
religious and it was certainly mystical in it's highest, most magical
manifestation. “Love”, he thought, “if this is love then it is
truly mystical...and we've not even had any sex yet.”
“I took your picture with that old
black and white camera, well the film was black and white, you were
about to turn away and I called your name, you were separated from
the others, they'd gone on but you'd stayed back. We hadn't had the
conversation and I was just muddling along, fiddling with the camera,
hoping for an opportunity or a snap and then the moment came. It was
like that and then over, but I knew it would stay with me forever. I
has, even it this, today is the end of forever, which it may well
be.”
Tuesday, 3 April 2012
Ends of Fragment
“I am obsessed with colour,” she
whispered, “I am obsessed with colour,” she said, then she
repeated, “I am obsessed with colour, it means so much,
so...colourful...so...full of colour, fantastic, I want my world to
be colourful all the time, everything, bright and cheery.” She
thought in colour or so she thought, she though her coloured thoughts
were the brightest thoughts, thoughts that were dazzling,
unsubstantial in content but dazzling in colour. Colours banging
against one another within her stated boundaries of chaos, fabrics,
patterns, designs. She likes the phrase “eye popping”, she wanted
everything to be eye-popping, like a 60's shop window, an explosion
in a paint factory, an explosion in a panty factory, an artistic
explosion, of any kind. No room for mixed feelings whatsoever.
“Everybody is disturbed in some way,
everybody is working on some instinctive level, a level of reaction,
a level where you are reacting, reacting to the stream, to the great
stream, the constant stream of colours that are just like punching
you in the face. Everyday, every waking hour, like you're thinking
god's own thoughts, mad coloured thoughts, again outside the
boundaries. I still love looking in shop windows though, not so
bothered about going in, not shopping, just looking at the colours in
their compositions, set up, just there to be looked at, that's their
purpose. Is that some higher purpose, to be their outside, nose
against the window, looking, staring, taking it all in al the
colours. That's what I like doing best, me, alone.”
She thought about her clothes, her
style, her package and scrabbled contents of bits and bops and tops
and bottoms and eyes and nails and shoes that made her up. Hair and
skin and flesh tones scrubbed over and away and replaced with the
colours, the tones, the rainbows and the heat. The red heat of
colour, the blue heat of colour, the yellow heat, the green heat,
those hot heats, the burn, the burning sensation in the retina,
turning inwards, hitting the brain, blurred at the edges, the
enormous waterfall of colour, flowing one to another over edges,
hedges, windows, shop windows, back to those windows, displays, shops
and the random colours. Things put in there by stupid girls and thin
men, placed as if on purpose, for effect but creating, for her
another effect altogether. Other effects, in the mind, in the heart,
when the colour truly hits the spot.
“In twenty years time, there will be
more colour, more. The sun will burn more brightly, turning up those
colours, amplifying them, making them pulse in the cerebral way,
pulse like a pulse, steady and rhythmic, colours that pulsed and
danced. Much more than average, more than average, always more than
average is so much more than average,” or so she thought.
“Whatever this is it isn't art,
whatever it is, it's not what it is, it can't be just because you say
it is, things can't just be what you say they are just because you
say they are, that's what your parents would say, say things that are
always about must or have to. So I'm not really bothered about art,
I'm not really bothered about anything except taking in those
colours, sucking them in, taking them in, stealing them like they
were things you could shop lift or something, found things that have
been claimed, found so that they suddenly start to matter, then they
just turn to colour, colours I have found. I like to find colours, I
like that feeling of shock and surprise and then embarrassment.
Embarrassed by colours and their effect, overwhelming. More colours
to play with. That's what I want.” She puffed a cigarette, the ash
was hanging long on the burning tip, long, ready to drop, drop on the
carpet, drop and stain, a grey stain. Not coloured.
Little tiny stitches, in fabric, little
tiny holes, cuts and thread, like punctuation marks, stops, starts
and pauses inside your head, gaps in the neurons, spaces between,
important spaces between the heroic gaps, gaps that can be filled
with colour, buttons, jewels, more bits, more detail, colour catching
light catching spectrum bending, making the colour come alive, “I
am obsessed with colour,” she whispered. “I remain there, I
remain in the colour, that is where I am.”
Thursday, 29 March 2012
Viva Maria
Ok, he thought, she's not beautiful in
the traditional way, neither is she ugly pretty, she's something
else, really something else and he couldn't put a finger to it or
quite find the word. Her clothes were well chosen, intelligently you
would say, her grooming and make up just right; he wanted to touch
that hair, feel it. She was attractive and fascinating, maybe that
was it, maybe it was the fascination that she engendered just in
bucket loads, she was no model but she was fascinating. He couldn't
stop thinking about her. That's where it gets a man, when he can't
lose a woman in his thoughts. She kept on invading them and he was
chasing her in them but chasing her through a maze, her back to her.
She wasn't running fast or sprinting or sweating, she was just ahead
of him, all the time. Out of touch, out of reach, elusive, but he had
to catch her.
She was a regular visitor to another
department in the building, he watched her come and go from his
office, he looked for a pattern in times, he planned to bump into her
in the foyer or the corridor or in the lift, get a few words in, say
hello and take it from there. He had seen her now about a dozen times
in the past few weeks, a couple of times quite close, no wedding
ring, no companions hanging about. He'd made a few discreet enquiries
with reception and with a couple of girls across the office. Not much
was known about her but she always came and went alone. She was
working for a consultancy, advising on a project, something to do
with financial structures, she was in demand by all accounts. Good,
she'll keep on coming back. His feelings were...err...galvanising.
It was on a Wednesday that she next
arrived, she was driving a silver Golf, he saw her down across the
car park making her way in across the car park. It was drizzling, she
was wearing a tan mac and holding one of those transparent umbrellas.
We watched her weave around the cars, down the block paved path,
under the entrance canopy and into reception out of sight. He
could've watched her move like that all day. He gave a cough, nodded
across to a colleague and pointed towards the door. “Water!”
By the time he'd got down to reception
the swing doors leading to accounts and the financial directors
office were swinging closed. Missed her. He smiled at the glum
receptionist and point to the door, she nodded, “missed her.” He
gulped, turned on his heels and headed through the doors towards
finance. He was blinking and felt a hot sweat across his back,
perhaps he would catch up, perhaps she'd be waiting on one of the
couches or at the cooler or something. He was headed down the
corridor, all the doors were closed, nobody in sight. The corridor
ended with two fire doors and led into an open office full of
workstations, headsets and at the far end partitioned private
offices. He had momentum now, he kept going, this was the maze, this
was the daydream coming true, this was the chase, this was blurring
at the edges but hot, purposeful and focused right there at the
molten centre. A man searching for a mate, quarry, a prize, a tilt, a
chance, an opportunity. “Winners make their chances and winners
take their chances”, said an inner voice. The voice overpowered any
office noise, chatter or hellos that were swirling around, he was
travelling with a purpose.
Ahead was the door of the financial
directors office, it was closed. He could hear voices. Not now, he
couldn't go in now. He was stuck like a bloodhound that couldn't
follow the scent across the water. Stuck. He stood for a few seconds
mentally marking the boundary of his territory and headed back to his
desk, a bit more slowly this time. As his thoughts settled he felt
good, he had acted and taken a sensible course of action in not
bursting into the meeting to say...what? Now he knew where she was,
knew she'd be here most likely all, she's on his turf and he can
wait, at least wait till four or five or whenever she leaves. Today
he will hover, he will bide time and then he will act.
His idea, when it arrived seemed
simple. Get to the car park and park close to or next to her but the
silver Golf was in a visitor’s space along way from his parking
spot. He needed to get in there, into that space, parallel parked. At
about three thirty he made a lame excuse about his reading glasses
being in the car and left the office. He walked lowly past her parked
vehicle, no spaces close by yet. Ok, there's time, I can do this,
I'll get my car over here and loiter until a space comes up.
Two hours later he's hoped out of eight
spaces and is two cars away from the Golf, there is sweat building on
his brow and he needs to pee, to eat and to drink. The radio is
driving him crazy, he punches the wheel, still she does not appear.
In the building office lights are slowly going out, more staff and
visitors have left, now there are more spaces than cars. Her's still
sits there, stubbornly defiant. It's dulling over and the rain has
returned. He wakes up in the dark, he's cold, really does need to pee
now and the dashboard clock says 01:30. Bugger.
Next morning he arrives a little late,
the Golf is gone, strange cars occupy all the visitors spaces, the
world has turned; things have moved on. He goes up to the office,
sits at his desk and picks up a mail and new appointment from his
manager. “please see me when you come in.” He shuffles over to
the other side of the office, his manager gestures for him to come in
and sit down. “Last night's CCTV is quite interesting, the security
company forwarded me a link, can you tell me what's going on here?”
He explains, not in detail that he's taken a shine to this woman,
maybe gone about it the wrong way, sorry for any confusion
created...and so on. The manager grins, “maybe I can help you a
little on this one, she's in to audit some project team, with us for
about another week, her name is Maria Bennet, I think, don't know
much more, the girls in supplies were giggling about her, I overheard
a bit of it.”
That night he drove home, she hadn't
been into the office today so today seemed extra empty. He thought he
needed to find some phrase, some term to hold onto to describe the
feeling. It was as if humiliation was orbiting around the planet of
frustration where he lived in a house called inadequate doing a job
called futile working for a firm named uncaring whilst living a life
called empty. Then his phone rang, the number was withheld.
“Hello?” “ Hi, my name is
Maria...”.
Saturday, 24 March 2012
Well that's that
Just sold the Cougar on Gumtree. It was inevitable that it should go and come the day it went pretty quickly. Clean, dirty and gone into the March mist. Irreplaceable but that's just what happens, life goes on.
Saturday, 17 March 2012
Losing track of things
An inventory of shirts, in the wrong place. |
It's quite important to me to that I
don't lose track of things. I like to know, with a fair degree of
certainty where things are. I like the secure feeling I get when I
can experience a strong sense of “everything in it's proper place”.
I'm anxious if I'm unsure where something is or if I perceive it to
be in the wrong place, whatever you take from that. None of this
means I'm well organised or that my possessions and assets are in any
kind of obvious order. Quite the contrary, I'm not really sure that
much of the methodology that I employ to organise my life would stand
up to real scrutiny. So this whole “placing” of things is quite
subjective and indeed based around feelings and the interpretation of
the moment. What items do I value? What should be in it's proper
place? Well I suppose that I could produce a list of the premier
divisions of items that I would place high up there in my life
inventory, it would look something like this I guess:
Wallet – in my pocket (upper jacket
or rear trouser) or on the stand by the hall, (the wallet contents of
course represent a lower level of inventory direction), subsets of
bank and credit cards, receipts, cash, driving licence and so on.
Also two unclaimed jackpot winning lottery tickets that I rather like
holding onto until the last minute.
Keys – almost all on the one main
ring, in my pocket (lower jacket or coat) or on the hall stand.
Mobile phone – pocket (upper jacket
or coat), on hall stand, windowsill at work, on the piano charging or
on bedside cabinet at night.
i.Pad 6 – under the bed.
Passport – pocket (jacket upper) or
bedside cabinet.
Prehistoric shark's teeth – in
shark's skull above fireplace.
Guitars – in cases upstairs or one
(currently in use) downstairs on stand. 1 x Ex-Hendrix (white) Strat in
garage.
Robert Burns unpublished works, papers
and out-takes – Stationary cupboard, dining room.
Birth certificate – bedside cabinet.
Time machine – De Lorean in garage under
tarpaulin.
Sawn-off shotgun – boot of car under
spare tyre, cartridges in bathroom cupboard.
Inter-dimension keys – x-ray proof
box under dining room floorboards.
Serum of eternal life – bathroom
cabinet (next to the Ibuprofen).
Spare organs (fully serviceable) –
bottom section of the kitchen freezer.
Spare organs (repairable) – Cryogenic
Crypt #2, Roslyn.
Evidence of anti-Christ – Archive
Crypt #2, Roslyn.
Photographs and transcripts of alien
conversations (3 x copies) – Apple Macbook (downloads folder),
safety deposit box in RBS Gogar and also at the rear of the secret
cave.
Plectrums – dining room cupboard,
bedside cabinet, acoustic guitar cases.
Heart of Robert the Bruce – wooden
casket under hallway floorboards.
Cuff links – leather box by bedside.
Diamond as big as the Ritz – New
Mexico.
Tins of Mackerel (in oil) – upper
kitchen cupboard.
Swiss Army Knife – in hall stand.
Cat's prawns – top drawer of freezer.
Cat's luxury prawns – top drawer of
freezer.
Batmobile (1965 model) – rear of
garage.
Diary – briefcase, back section.
Spare keys – briefcase, rear pocket.
Da Vinci sketches (originals) – top
shelf, dining room cupboard.
Da Vinci sketches (apprentice copies) –
cardboard box, laundry cupboard.
Da Vinci sketches (modern copies c/w
interpretation) – other cardboard box, laundry cupboard.
Belvita Breakfast Biscuit supply –
lower (small) kitchen cupboard and left hand office drawer (bottom).
Cuppa Soup - left hand office drawer
(top front).
I think that does it, there may of
course be more bits and pieces out there but now that I've made up
this list I'm pretty sure I've got the main things accounted for. I
find that quite reassuring.
Monday, 12 March 2012
Who was Doreen Weston?
She said that she wanted to drive and I
was in no mood to argue, I'd also supped three very decent brandies
within the last three hours. It had been a long day, the negotiations
had seemed never ending, I thought the deal was going to fail and
then out of the blue we broke through and agreed terms and most
importantly the right price. I was now the proud owner of Bentley
Mullinier on a really good deal, al perfect except for the fact that
though I might own it, it to for my wife, a birthday surprise, the
colour, the trim, the model she had wanted. When she first mentioned
Bentley I was surprised, I understood she was more than happy with
the Range Rover and she seemed more than a little contemptuous about
the Maserati (she probably couldn’t even spell it) and would hardly
travel in it never mind drive it. The Bentley however seemed to tick
all the necessary boxes. “It's such a statement,” she said, “it's
elegant, it's strong, almost British and it eloquently tells
everybody in the way or on the edge to politely fuck off.” That was
her logic, her thinking and in many ways summed up her attitude to
life in general. I was glad she wasn't here with us today.
It was my personal assistant Doreen who
was driving, she was quiet and confident and knew me well enough to
sense that this car, lovely as it was, was not for me and that my
relationship with it would be like my relationship with my wife,
troubled, strained and expensive. Doreen was a natural and
enthusiastic driver, normally she drove a small BMW but took to the
Bentley without any bother. She had been floating around all day and
as was her way had paid attention to everything in the sales and
technical presentation. I could have had the car delivered of course,
I could have done many things but I like to take possession, it's
what I do in business, in commerce and in love. There was like just
one big exception of course, my lovely and headstrong wife. She was
not one to be possessed, she was one to be orbited, pampered and
fawned after; hence the ongoing conflict as I gave and gave and on
brief and unspecified occasions took a little back.
Doreen let the car off the lead and
sped onto the motorway, in a few seconds we were up to 80, smooth as
silk, silent as a submarine, the bright lights pushing ahead on the
nearly empty road, trucks and slower vehicles blurred behind in our
swishing wake as we headed home. I pressed back in the passenger
seat, closed my eyes, tasted a little of the brandy at the back of my
tongue and let the warm travel fever paint a coral blue pattern
across my subconscious, I stroked the hem of sleep, touched the
frayed edge and drifted away. That's all I remember, that's all I
recall, the blue Bentley haze and the comfort of the dreamless void.
Then I wake up here. Here looks like the wrong side of a hospital
bed, flat on my back looking up into the clinical lamps, beeping
noises, a wide area of pain that should belong to nobody and those
swirling motorway last minute lights.
I don't how long I drifted in that
place, there were words and messages, ideas, questions, all of which
eventually passed through that injured sieve that my mind had become.
“He's well enough to talk.'” a voice said. “Mr
Severin...James...I've something to tell you...I'm Chief Inspector
David Lomax of the Thames Valley Police...your wife, Jennifer has
been killed..it happened five days ago.” I felt a tremor like an
earthquake, I felt my own sweat, I wanted to speak, I want to cry but
all I did was freeze up, except for a tremble and spasm that threw my
arms up behind my head pulling wires and tubes. “Mr Severin, I'm
very sorry...but I need to ask you a number of questions.”
“OK,” I was talking, my voice came
out compressed and small, like a man talking through a toilet roll
tube with lips part sewn together, “I'm OK, I'll talk, I'm just not sure
what I'm hearing you say...you're saying things I don't understand.”
Lomax spoke for a while, he explain that I'd been injured and that
I'd been in a serious road accident, he explained that Jennifer had been involved in the road accident too, killed instantly, it had all happened in fractions of seconds. Everything I was hearing seemed like me snippets from a bad and bizarre movie script, drowning
me in a relentless water boarding of words and described events. Now I
was choking, spluttering and coughing up contradictions and personal
horrors in jagged technicolour recollections.
Lomax was standing at the foot of the
bed, his face was grim and straight as an undertaker on the job. “Mr
Severin, I need to present you with some facts about your wife's
death and your injuries. On the evening of the 27th your
wife was outside of your house, the family home. She was standing at
the top of the drive way removing some shopping bags from the back of
her Range Rover. You were approaching in a Bentley, apparently newly
purchased by you on that same day. For no obvious reason the Bentley was being driven at
high speed and collided with the rear of the parked Range Rover. Your
wife Jennifer was killed instantly by the impact. You were found in
the driver's seat of the Bentley, your passenger Doreen Weston was
also killed instantly. We've looked at the evidence, the cars, the
tyre marks on the driveway and at the CCTV images from your security
system and I have to tell you that your direct actions appeared to
have caused this terrible incident and the two fatalities. Is there
anything you'd wish to say?”
Hidden in a lengthy footnote in the
Bardo Thodol (Tibetan Book of the Dead) in the “sidpa bardo” is a
brief explanation of the transition and transformations a soul must
make when death is closing in:
“Imagine that a swimming fish eats a
fish and then that fish is eaten by another larger fish and then that
same fish is eaten by yet another larger fish. How many fish are
there? There is of course one, the one that has triumphed by natural
process over those that were consumed but whilst those that were
consumed may no longer swim themselves they are still as fish and
their spirit ranges and travels looking for a place to rest. In the
final transformation, in extreme situations of passion and pressure
there may indeed be manifestations and movements between places and
in bodies that seek to bring a final justice and judgement – to
close out. This may make no sense to us as we are unable to see every
fish that is in the pool and understand the complexity of their
relationships as there are many fish each swimming at different
levels. The eye can only see so much, those who travel in some final
cycle may move sideways or backwards as well as forward.”
“No man is born with spiritual
understanding, he must acquire this through special training and
experience. It is good that such to all intents and purposes useless
books exist. They are meant for those (queer) folk who no longer set
much store in the uses, aims and meanings of present day
civilisation.” - Carl Jung.
Friday, 9 March 2012
It's an awkward age
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A wise woman once said...but then maybe is was all a kind of rough plagiarism. |
2. Her artistic sense was exquisitely refined, like someone who can tell butter from I Can't Believe It's Not Butter.
3. She was as unhappy as when someone puts your cake out in the rain, and all the sweet green icing flows down and then you lose the recipe, and on top of that you can't sing worth a damn.
4. Long separated by cruel fate, the star-crossed lovers raced across the grassy field toward each other like two freight trains, one having left Cleveland at 6:36 p.m. travelling at 55 mph, the other from Topeka at 4:19 p.m. at a speed of 35 mph.
5. The politician was gone but unnoticed, like the period after the Dr. on a Dr Pepper can
6. Her pants fit her like a glove, well, maybe more like a mitten, actually.
7. He was deeply in love. When she spoke, he thought he heard bells, as if she were a garbage truck backing up.
8. He was as tall as a 6′3″ tree.
9. The sunset displayed rich, spectacular hues like a .jpeg file at 10 percent cyan, 10 percent magenta, 60 percent yellow and 10 percent black.
10. The little boat gently drifted across the pond exactly the way a bowling ball wouldn't.
11. The ballerina rose gracefully en pointe and extended one slender leg behind her, like a dog at a fire hydrant.
12. John and Mary had never met. They were like two hummingbirds who had also never met.
13. The lamp just sat there, like an inanimate object.
14. He was lame as a duck. Not the metaphorical lame duck either but like a duck that was really lame. One that had stood on a land mine or something.
15. He spoke with a wisdom that can only come from experience, like a guy who went blind when he looked at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it and now goes around the country speaking at conferences and schools about the dangers of looking at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it.
Thursday, 1 March 2012
Disloyal to the brand
The blind madness of an impulsive purchase, the blood soaked, brain zapped moment of insanity when reason escapes, chased by cats scattering furniture, ideas and artists who's work is still in progress (as above). My life is a long line, progression, process, parade and carnival of these things. Ill thought through and ill conceived then punctuated with odd segments of clarity, remorse, joy and fulfilment. I'm never quite sure the order in which these will arrive or how long they'll last. They move along quite nicely which I suppose is a good thing.
As you get older you get used to the world and then you get used to yourself. Some might say you grow into yourself, as if you were a deflated balloon of indeterminate shape that needs 50 plus years of slow inflation before you can see the final shape. Then you stand a chance of knowing yourself. Anyway I bought a Volvo a few weeks ago, that was a strange experience. I still have the Cougar (waiting on all the paperwork), it's parked up but now signs are that the power steering's probably knackered.
Sunday, 26 February 2012
Going to sleep
They went to bed and fell asleep with Gilda, then they woke up with some crazy mixed up actress, so they said. Of course that would never happen these days. Gilda was just the figment of a writer's imagination, a character in a film noir plot, a shadow and an illusion. Some light and shade flickering on the tarnished silver screen, walking across, following directions and instructions, making a career and then blowing it. Dreams, illusions and reality, very hard to deal with when they get blurred and confused.
Friday, 24 February 2012
Obsessive drum
Watching yourself in mirrors, staring
into that void and not seeing and then seeing but not recognising
that foreign face and frame, the total loss of the sense of self.
Making eye contact with a complete and nameless stranger who is
travelling in some different and unknown direction but only exists
within the confines of that reflected and forever cheating surface.
The transparent trap that calls us with it's banal and unreasonable
fascinations to move into a more murky place where consciousness and
ego float like helium balloons, just out of reach and no more. I
don't know why those images should be labelled as stupid, why is that
the only word that will do? Stupid is as stupid does as it stupidly
reflects and flashes back in it's red anger without question, perhaps
that's the heart of the definition. Then there is the long borne out
frustration in the called out attraction of the place and never being
able to reach into it. Like deep water, like the patterns in a pool,
like drowning in a teaspoon. Never quite forming or asking the right
questions because there is no answer, only that obsessive drum beat
that translates back to the heart. The fatally formed and flawed
organ from which all other things must flow.
Thursday, 16 February 2012
Free for all
Free for all Electricity: The large sign above
the motorway declared that all lanes were clear and that traffic was
flowing and of course, as ever “electricity is free”. It was a
message that people all across the world had become used to, they
hardly needed reminding, they took it all for granted. So the
electrically powered traffic hummed along, all moving smoothly at an
even and controlled speed, no real running costs, no breakdowns, all
free and easy thanks to the great electrical revolution. It was a
world operating and powered in ways that an old guard scientist like
Tesla could only have dreamed of and it all worked.
People looked back on the historic
moment that everything had changed, it was in 2014, May 16th.
A huge electrical storm had raged across the equator, lightning
strikes were continuous, wild fires ran out of control, systems and
communications failed all over the world. Aeroplanes fell from the
sky, ships sank, building crumbled and satellites tumbled into the
heaving oceans. The storm climaxed at midnight, there was a huge
explosion, almost everybody in the world heard it. Then there was a
long and pregnant silence. People huddled together waiting for the
end, others prayed, others rioted but slowly order was restored and
the damage and the effect of the storm understood, gradually.
It became apparent that the storm had
created a fundamental change in the earth's characteristics. A ring
of power was now hanging in place across the former storm. Ten miles
hight and a hundred miles wide, earth was ringed like Saturn but with
one that has a unique and incredibly powerful impact on the planet.
Over time the ring was explored and understood and, thanks to some
revolutionary processes tapped into and milked. Power was free, power
was infinite and power was global; certainly for all of the countries
on the equator. No more coal, oil or nuclear energy, almost overnight
the power stations shut down as the new source came on line and was
joined to the web of grids that fed the freely harvested power all
across the world.
The freely available power had of
course created instability, the old order had lost it's financial and
negotiating base, minor wars and skirmishes broke out, there were
disputes and political instability. Nothing could however change the
fact that the ring of energy was (with the correct technology) easily
and freely tapped into. The old costs were the harvesting equipment
and cabling and transformer infrastructure. Fortunes were made and
lost, ownerships disputed but inevitably the truth and equalising
impact of free power was realised. Industry and commerce demanded it,
all people welcomed it and the tap was fully turned on.
So it was that Mike bowed his head, he
was allowed a few moments reflection, his eyes were dry, his palms
were wet. His stomach was full from the steak and eggs, the cold beer
had quenched his thirst and those wise worlds and warm ancient spells
echoed around in the emptiness of his head and heart. He looked into
himself and reviewed and archived his memories, turned over
recollections, pondered the mistake, the one big mistake. A man had
died, an innocent man, a man who had simply been at the wrong place
at the wrong time. Mike had killed him, fried him with the flick of a
switch as the power harvester loom had been turned on. The pilot was
on a routine inspection, nothing should have gone wrong and wouldn't
have if Mike had waited just a few seconds before turning on the
harvesting gear. But he hadn't. He'd pulled the lever but he didn't
check, he didn't follow the procedure and the microlight had been hit
by the huge surge of power shooting downwards from the ring into the
holder. Not much remained as evidence but the incident was well
documented and understood.
Now it was Mike's turn, society
demanded it, the power (and the glory) had to be respected, the
power's sanctity had to have prime place in the courts and via the
legislators and lawyers. There was a very fine balance and discipline
to maintain, that had all been part of the settlement, part of the
worldwide agreement. Anything else could and would destroy the dream
and that could not be allowed, it was all too costly, freedom,
however it is described always has a price. Mike would take his
punishment, irreversible, terminal, inhumane, painful but quick.
Those who live by the power die by the power. He sat in the electric
chair and reflected on those events a little more. The Empress prepared to pull the lever.
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