Nothing... just nothing.
Sunday, 19 August 2012
Lay me down to sleep
Sometimes in life you're the last one,
last in line, last person to know, that sort of thing that just
happens to you, strange really. So now there's never quite enough coffee in the pot to keep
me going, to keep me writing. Here I am, the great so-called diarist,
the watcher of the skies, the final man on earth documenting the
thoughts, needs, movements and observations of that final, lonely
human being on earth. I look out across these land, sea and town
scapes, devoid of any human or animal life, empty sky with no birds,
no insects, nothing moves unless the wind blows it over, or the water
cracks it or some of the spindly weird vegetation gets to it. Rain
falls once in a while, I gather the water in cups and drums, to
filter for later. The rain when it comes is thin and dirty, it
catches the dust and particles and feebly tries to clean the air, the
air that did such damage, the air we traded for time. The time that
we had an squandered before we understood the consequences.
A while ago I passed the points of
madness and philosophy, I spurned religious and other fantasy
answers, there were no answers for anybody. I read some science
fiction looking for a familiar plot that matched our bleak reality.
Of course there were plenty of dystopian destroyed worlds, people and
horrors, things eating themselves, tyranny and mutation and the
structural decay I was now witnessing. But fiction is fiction no
matter how well written and apparently influential or bent to shape
it is to match the current perception of reality, still the whispers
of fiction's memory persist. Nothing to worry about any more now. I
couldn't hear the final whisper.
I couldn't read, I couldn't listen I
could only write. I was thankful that the power reserves were holding
up, the laptops and building systems still hummed. I'd never expected
there to be power available in the last days but it was still there,
crackling and sparking out from time to time. Once in a while a
tremor would crack a cable and there would be a sound and a flash,
I'd look up and maybe see the smoke drift away, maybe notice the
light has gone out but maybe I'd not. Things went on.
I was in Ibiza, a white hot island in a
warm blue sea. I had arrived there early in the rumblings, looking
for a refuge. Everybody else was leaving, running home or away or
into the sunset. Some people stayed, they were like me, stoical,
determined, unattached, lazy. We worked and went about business, we
watched the disasters play out on TV, we saw the webcasts, heard the
radio and the messages. The final days were strange, we sat in the
sun, in a bubble of sunshine as the bad air bit across the world, as
the slow sleeping and choking and unconsciousness happened. There was
this slow motion panic as the bits and pieces fell down. Sometimes a
camera would be broadcasting, then the dialogue would cease and it
would sit, pointing to the horizon or a blue screen, vacant. After a
while it would time out and then just disappear, a blank new
correspondent. The Chinese Channels went first, they had the worst
air and the worst strategy. Slowly it moved West. Our satellite disk
tracked the changes.
Aeroplanes and vehicles stopped quite
quickly, the wrong mix or air in the intakes, limited adjustment, no
internal combustion, movements and escapes were thwarted. There were
tales of desperate battles over sail boats, here in Ibiza most had
already sailed. We considered those left in the harbour, where would
we take them anyway? They still sit at their moorings. The anecdotes
about escaping rogue boats slowly stopped arriving as the air moved
across. Short wars and pointless riots. Broadcasts became rationed,
time was precious and human energy weak, too weak to bother with
blame. Then after some short and uninformative official messages in
English and Spanish the media shut itself down. We were alone.
Spinning still.
For some of those on the island the
realisation and acceptance of “alone” wasn't easy. There were
fights, suicides, people disappeared, a little looting went on. After
about a month we believed that there were about a hundred people left
in circulation, sometimes I heard gun shots in the distance . We
discussed the future in local groups, we agreed to agree, we tried to
honestly list our resources and holdings, there was sharing but there
was fear and mistrust. A strange new society stayed stillborn. Then a
second wave of sickness came upon us. It was all over quite quickly.
I went to bed, I woke up the next day, nobody else did. I took and
bicycle, some water and a gun. I traveled along the coast, nothing
nobody. Inland, nothing, nobody alive, not north not south. I took
about a week to cover the island, there was only white noise on the
radio. I returned to to my house, I sat on the veranda, I blocked the
thoughts of the dead in their homes, the eerie stillness, too many
people to check or bury. The dead animals, the vegetation creeping
back, the crippled air that I alone could still breath. Why that was
still possible I didn't know, science doesn’t have an answer for
everything. Everyday I expected not to wake, as it had been for the
others, but I was always waking up and breathing. Crazy.
I had an idea. I propped up a mirror on
the nightstand, I took out some paper and charcoals, put on a collar and tie, I sat for
myself. I started to draw myself, as a caricature in profile. I spent some time,
I wasn't a quick worker, crayons broke and were sharpened. I took
time and tried to get a likeness. It seemed appropriate, a silly,
jokey, maybe cruel representation, a picture of the end, the last
man. I shook it out and sprayed it with Spray-Mount so the crayon
would stick. I posted it on the pin board and looked at it. I had a
glass of wine and toasted the drawing with a silent speech. I was
somewhere, sad and happy, my mark made on the paper. Me, on my own, a
self portrait. It seemed to mean more than a web cam shot or anything
techy, this had a final, human hand made connection.
So I stay on the veranda and write,
eating out of cans, slowly drinking up the remains of the wine
cellar. The sea comes and goes, she still obeys the moon, the sun
circles us in 24 hours as always. Sometimes a cloud comes and I mark
the calendar and take more notes. When the sky turns dark and the
Mediterranean night falls you cant light a candle, I feel my
breathing getting harder, the chest gets tight. The power back up
might be squeezed for a last little light and a buzz but I let it go
out, I close my eyes and sleep that blank sleep of resignation filled
with hollow dreams I cannot recall. There may be more to come, this
may be the end. I hit the save button on the document software,
descending to 55% says the graphic at the top. Now I lay me down to
sleep...
Dangerous individuals
The evening had
followed the usual pattern. A pleasant if minimalistic meal, a few
glasses of wine, a recount of the day so far and then, as the alcohol
and tiredness kicked in. “You have to grow out of it sooner or
later, you can't spend the rest of your life taking offence if
somebody passes a thoughtless remark or looks at you the wrong way,
not everything in life is there to be taken on board. The world is
not stacked up against you alone, not every day, just take it, walk
away, suck it up.” Denise never took Henry's response to her
problems very well. She was now a little more upset, firstly at
recalling this afternoon’s incident and trotting it out and then,
as ever, at Henry's reply.
“You never, ever see my side! Do you
think I'm unable to take a mature view of things? You think
I'm an emotional retard? Her voice had
risen an octave and she was wagging her finger. The pointed red nail
on her index finger seemed to add inches to the digit and confirm the
ferocity of her comeback. Henry had heard it all before and
recognised the proximity of the tipping point. Denise saw the same
thing and rather than mount a rescue mission pushed further across
the line. A series of familiar, emotional and insulting terms left
both of their lips, their bodies arched and held poses like cats
strutting and battling for territory. They closed up, circled one
another, scored imaginary hits and points, then moved back.
The temperature in the room seemed to
rise, Henry loosened his collar, Denise removed her cardigan and
angrily tossed it across the couch. Both were equally animated to the
point that a mushroom cloud of pouting, hissing steam was almost
discernible between them. As a critical mass was reached the pair
paused and each slugged a glass of wine as if it was both ammunition
and lubrication. Each took a few moments to process the liquid and
then the action resumed, roughly in the same place they'd left it. Of
course it was beyond any structured or rational argument and as if to
underline the stupidity of the situation.It was a routine bust up
over something neither one was quite clear about.
DRRIINGG! The doorbell's shrill tone
interrupted. Without a word Henry broken off from the proceedings and
headed for the door, Denise was in his wake acting as if she didn't
quite trust him to answer the door properly. Ready for just about
anything Henry unlocked the door and opened it up in a rather
dramatic fashion and lunged out towards the door bell ringer. There
on the doorstep stood a bearded man in a grey tunic, he had a serious
look on his face. The look stopped Henry and Denise in their tracks,
mouths open they said nothing and held a frozen pose awaiting the
stranger's words.
“Henry, Denise.” Said the man in a
heavy, brown, foreign sounding accent. “Please allow me to
introduce myself, I am the Lord Jesus, the Saviour of the World.”
Henry laughed immediately and almost
spat out his response, “Go away!” Denise marvelled at Henry's
restraint but found her own words, ready in her head had frozen and
she couldn't quite speak. Henry was lowering his voice, responding to
the lack of any response from Jesus. “OK sir,” said Henry, “what
is the cause or the charity, I'm always happy help.”
“Henry, Denise.” Jesus looked at
both of them, he held out his two hands, palms open. “I bring my
peace to you and your household, I bring a blessing.” “OK sir,”
said Henry attempting a second turn around, “I... err we appreciate the
visit but please excuse us...” Jesus seemed to ignore Henry's words
gazed at them both and was suddenly beside them in the hallway.
Denise thought he seemed to be floating, she thought of her wine, now her
head was fuzzy. Jesus was moving around the hallway, like Jesus
would. Henry and Denise were moving also but unsure what to do and both
strangely unable to counter or redirect the divine interloper.
Ten o’clock the next morning, first
Henry's mobile phone rang then a few seconds later it was Denise's.
Henry listened as a colleague asked why he was not with his clients
at the meeting and was everything OK. Denise's assistant was
wondering why she hadn't shown up for the pre-audit briefing. Henry
was calm, serene almost, he was sitting on the carpet, legs crossed
and beaming. Denise was also sitting on the floor, her back straight
against the lounge wall, her hands were in her lap and she seemed to
be staring at her toes. They were still in yesterday’s clothing and
oblivious to both time and location. Their return phone conversations
were perfectly synchronised, the words being almost identical and
both delivered in a slightly toneless and unemotional manner.
“Everything is fine, I'm fine, don't worry but it's unlikely that
I'll be a work today. I'm busy, in fact I'm at home, at peace,
sitting at the feet of the Lord Jesus.”
“Denise, I really do love you.”
“Henry, I really do love you too and now that we both have Jesus in our
lives...”
In the kitchen the radio was on a local
channel burbling away at the tail end of a news bulletin, neither
Henry or Denise were in earshot. “Valley residents are warned to
beware of a con-man rumoured to be working the area. He may well use
a hypnotic technique, a disguise or a costume to fool the public and
so gain entry to your house and possibly rob or assault you. This man
is a very dangerous individual wanted on a number of incidents, if
you any information please contact the local police department
immediately. Repeat...”
Thursday, 16 August 2012
Penelope Fortyfour
“Hello” she said, “my name is
Penelope Fortyfour, I'm your new boss.” I knew my new boss was a
lady, I knew that she was starting work today, I didn't know that she
owned the rather peculiar name of Fortyfour. I smiled and shook her
hand and allowed that thought to pass for a moment. She was a very
pretty, crisply dressed for the office, hair up, perfume discernible
and not overpowering, eyes bright and clearly sizing me up. I put up
with a contrived little pause and introduced myself. “Gavin Slaven,
Senior Consultant.” My job title sounded grand and I liked saying
it but I knew she was Head of Division and probably unimpressed with
my meteoric rise to the middle of nowhere in particular. She cleared
her throat with a gentle cough. “Here we go,” I thought, “her
opening gambit, firm but fair, open door policy, people are our
greatest asset.” She may have said some of those words but I missed
them, missed them all, my jaw slowly dropping open as she spoke.
“Gavin, whilst I am you're new Head
of Division there is something you should know about me first of all.
You see I'm different from you and everybody else in this building,
I'm quite different and I'm not about to apologise for that, I'm
going to explain. Gavin, I'm going to be open and tell you that I'm
not a woman, not a person, not even human being at all, well not as
you understand the term. I, Penelope Fortyfour started my career as a
Flikr Account set up by a lady called Geraldine Carrick, she's big in
research, digitisation and cryogenics. Quite why she chose the
Penelope44 name I don't know, anyway she began to upload images and
texts and created me back in 2007, it was the golden time of web
development. My fictitious life was built up, pixel by pixel, jpeg by
jpeg. I went on holidays, tried on clothes and hairdos, had nights
out, had friends, boyfriends, family, pets and cars, she put all the
pieces together and gave me a life and adventures. As my account grew
I became friends with other users, I moved onto Linked In, Facebook,
Twitter and I developed a regular blog site. I was all over the
place, well read and connected, my statistics were high, hit after
hit and like after like landed on my images, words, emails and
tweets. I was very active on all fronts.”
She paused and I was conscious of my
open mouth, my inability to speak, my desire to laugh and the very
real flesh and blood person that I was seeing before me, talking
bollocks, as I thought.
I looked up and met her eyes, her very
real looking, brown, sparkling and soulful eyes. “As I was saying,
I had become very active and rather well connected, in fact I was
connected much more than I realised.” I gulped and swallowed. “You
see Gavin,” her hand brushed against mine, soft and warm and I
inhaled a little more of the perfume as she drew nearer. “ I was so
well connected that they decided, as an experiment to synthesise me.
They captured my essence, all the blocks, the colours and textures,
all the pixels and digits and they processed them and...here I am. A
successful experiment. Penelope Fortyfour. And now, to prove their
systems, processes and theorys they've sent me out here, out into the
big bad world, to work for a living and to be...your boss.”
She stood up, I stood up, we faced one
another. There was nobody else in the office, no sounds or movement
in the corridor. I was alone with her, with it, this virtual pixel
maid, this robot or whatever. Without thinking I spoke, “Penelope,
as you are who you are, not human you say, do you have free will or
are you under control?” She looked at me strangely, I was listening
for muffled mechanical noises or for the sound of giggling behind a
door or curtain as the wind up reached it's climax. “Your asking if
I'm being operated remotely? Like a puppet?” I was playing this
straight, no fun, no messages just obvious questions. “It's a very
reasonable thing for me to ask you considering what you just told me
about yourself.” Her eyes stayed on me as she stooped down and
rummaged in her handbag. She searched for a few seconds and produced
what looked like a TV remote control. She handed it to me. “Go on,”
she said, “press the blue button and see what happens next!”
Tuesday, 7 August 2012
Tidy up
She felt dim, stupid, her words had
fallen wide of the mark, missed by miles and now she was alone with
her thoughts. The way it always seemed to end. She looked across the
room and found herself hidden in the mirror, there, tortured and
weak. She stared into her own eyes and tried to recognise herself in
the shapes and in the dull sparkle. That was always the hardest part,
looking in and facing that thing that was neither a lie nor a truth
but a wraith and fogy piece of existence that sat undefined and
unlabelled looking back. Looking back for all the world like some
rare animal caught on camera in the jungle, captured by the intrusive
lens, frozen in that moment and then hidden away in the black box
until the shining image was released, days later at some more
civilized spot where the animals were held at safe distances. So she
tried to out stare herself, watching and concentrating, freezing and
goading herself not to blink, or dip or look away. Just to stay, ride
in the equilibrium of the moment and be that wonderful, tragic, ghost
of a person for seconds longer, for as long as time counts and makes
time a real thing. She held the look until exhausted and madly
hungry, till the pain took hold and then she allowed the excitement,
the shame and the remorse to roll over her like a great troubled sea
with all it's uncontrollable waves and currents. She fell back as if
accepting the impact of a bullet or the recoil of a weapon, backwards
she fell, into sleep and the swimming world of the unconscious, her
body's moves making no sense, so out of control and wounded she
slumped and began to just hang somewhere. Suspended in the suspense.
It grew dark and time passed, she was aware of other things now,
“time to tidy up”, she thought.
Gravity sends you out
“Gravity sends you out”. Said
Wayne, “And in your re-entry manoeuvre gravity will send you back,
there is absolutely nothing to worry about, in fact you are our one
thousandth traveller, welcome to the future and your future!” Tom
steadied himself and held on tightly to the travel belt, at the same
time he heard the countdown in his ear piece, 10, 9...he heard white
noise intruding and closed his eyes. The countdown continued, his
eyes still shut tight but now behind the visor that had descended to
cover and protect his face and shoulders. It was a funny feeling, at
one moment there was a floor beneath his feet, then it was gone but
there was no sensation of falling, more like floating, standing on a
mountain top, or even walking on water. The kind of thing the Young
Gods had done back in the other seasons, when it was safe, or so he'd
heard.
A long time passed but Tom was stoical,
stuck, obeying the last orders and waiting for the next, for
clearance, for the re-entry. Finally it came, the accent was foreign
and hard to make out. “Traveller One Thousand, you are he, the
Mister Tom from the past. Welcome to your new future. Please keep you
visor on until the sanitisation process is complete, please remember
and recall your briefing material. Do not be anxious, be steady, you
have arrived safely but we must complete our processes.”
Tom waited, alert, ready to see. It was
warm and there was a strange humming sound that surrounded him. From
some place Tom could not perceive a long silver needle emerged. For a
spilt second he panicked, he saw it coming but there was no time to
think. As the visor unlocked and rose mechanically the needle twirled
and entered the middle of Tom's temple killing him instantly.
“That is another milestone for us.”
Said Wayne over the coms link, “a thousand products safely
delivered, ready to be harvested. Useful organs and spare parts for
retail and the rest tastes just like chicken.”
Sunday, 5 August 2012
Cougar 4 Sale
Life is a constant struggle between
conflicting appetites and needs. The bright shiny things, the
practical requirements, the voices of good sense, stewardship and
reason. Things I don't want to say, things I don't want to listen to,
ideas I'd just rather not have. But they are there and they exist and
you can stumble across them as you casually search, thumb pages,
click and peer into the electric gloom and see beyond the dull image
and find a life and a passion that goes beyond, that transcends
something, that is not ordinary because it's formed from the dreams
of others as they meet the dream and aspirations you now own in all
your weak, simple and fragile essence. I am of course referring to
that pure and painful moment when you stumble across a fine looking
and well maintained low milage Cougar hidden within the deep recesses
of Autotrader and on sale tantalisingly close by but unfortunately in
Glasgow. I think of my credit card, my balance and my numerous other
issues and commitments and walk slowly away. “Best left where it
is” says a still small voice that may well be either God or the
Devil himself.
Shadow of the smoothie
It was an inspirational moment, he was
caught up in that great white beam of madness and genius as the
impact and wonder of this creative process washed over him,
overwhelming and rendering him senseless. Everything was adrift and
moving, there was traction but no friction, the experience was like
gliding on ice over fire under water in space into a clear glowing
sun that was all giving and and all consuming. Heaven or as close as
it comes. It was of course vanilla, cream, banana and passion fruit.
He had now invented and tasted and been transported and nourished by
the world's greatest ever smoothie experience. It can happen, it
should happen and it probably will happen, one day, but maybe not to
you.
Saturday, 4 August 2012
Drifting
We were watching sea, watching from our
open boat, we floated with no direction. A journey made of imaginary
circles, we copied the sun and the planets, we shaped ourselves on
orbits and arcs but without taking aim or having ant sense of where
we were. Bobbing like a thrown away champagne cork on the deepest and
blues sea, caught between skies and water in a huge peaceful sandwich
in lazy currents and waves generated far away and now lost without a
destination. How strange to be lost a sea, of all places. No
reference in the day other than the sun tracking across the top of
the blue mirror. At night we saw the shapes of things and the
glinting star light of the lost planets and Milky Ways. Shooting
stars missed us by thousands of miles as they burned bright for on
last time. We listened for their splashes or ricochets but they were
already over another continent. When the sun rose we watched the sea
some more looking for signs, hoping for wonders.
I closed my eyes and imagine people
ashore, noisy pubs, endless talk and chatter, the roar of traffic and
background music. The pull of the moon and shadows of some big city,
brighter lights that shut out the stars. Maybe conversation, walking
home alone, the smells and sounds and the grip of claustrophobia,
hectic lives and pursuits, passion and petty crime and all going
about their business. I can't really imagine any of this, the effort
is exhausting, we are afloat, too far away for things to be real, in
too deep. Too much water under us, too much sky above us and land is
a distorted memory. One day we shall drown, all of us, lungs full and
choking before the black honesty falls upon us and our names leave
us, until that day comes we will dip our fingers in the water, enjoy
the cool splash and just drift away.
Thursday, 2 August 2012
Labyrinth
Rory leaned back onto the wall, he was
alone in the room, the room that was no longer steady, no longer a
room attached to a building attached to the ground attached to the
earth. The room was no a trampoline, on a gyro, slowly turning,
groaning almost with the effort of a new movement and carrying Rory
around with it. Rory felt the room move, the spin speed increase
slowly. He tried to focus on a spot on the wall, on the water cooler,
on a PC screen, on the carpet tile, but they all wee spinning, a
fluid and unstuck, all at odds with each other, defying gravity and
other natural laws.
Rory was going with the flow, standing
still but now moving, transported like a leaf or a feather or a Pooh
Sticks stick stuck in the currents. Rory held his ears, as if
pressing on them would fix the problem, then he held his chest, as if
breathing regularly would calm the spin. Then he held his tummy, his
crotch. He bent over and held his knees. Then he stood straight, tall
and gripped the wall with his palms, eyes closed, eyes peeking, eyes
open. He was on the wall, like a fly on flypaper, stuck to the
spinning wall. Like a wall of death without the bike or speed or
centrifugal force. Travelling still but getting nowhere, that's
Labyrinthitis for you. A chronic condition, a force of nature, Rory
was caught.
He closed his eyes, he sucked up the
dark, time was passing, time was travelling around him, here he was
wherever, here he was going, deeper into himself. Deeper into the
illness, further into the condition, into the lair of that dark
insect bite itself where sleep is stolen, peace is shredded and pain
and discomfort settle on each shoulder and hold a conversation across
the top of your head. He heard a snort, he felt the animal sweat, he
opened his eyes slowly, the disease gripped him, all over. Chronic
and putrid, the fear came and manifested itself, here comes the
night, here comes the beast. There are the yellow eyes, hungry as the
ancient beasts and the wolves of the forrest. Half bull, half man,
all wild exposed and real. Here is the Minotaur, here in the
Labyrinth.
Rory awoke the next morning, he was
hurting and his nose was twitching. “What's that smell?” he
thought, “bullshit I guess.”
Monday, 16 July 2012
Priscilla
A thought in a box, in a nod, in a moment. A journey in red and blue with many miles on the broken clock. A long and pleasant journey I should say, whisked away by myself over hill and highway from the bottom to the top. I put myself under some scrutiny, some pressure, apply a little fear, here and there. Poisoned and sweet. That's what you get when you become that person driven by a fear. It made me wonder, as I reflected, whatever happened to Priscilla Presley?
Sunday, 1 July 2012
Driving backwards
The journey back to the city was uneventful, I wandered why I'd come this far. Banner had promised information, he was gone, I had to dig a little deeper. The fact that no police were (as far as I could see) still in pursuit was a perverse worry. They'd been on special orders in coming after us and that, for some reason wasn't known by the HQ core. A split had occurred, teams were disjointed, working on their own lines of investigation, mine having just fractured for the time being anyway.
I abandoned the prowler in a dank alley, wiped down the controls and powered it down. They'd catch it in the morning when the homer came up on the system, by which time I'd be long gone underground, in some rat hole, smoking, eating, drinking, checking out for the next batch of slimy clues. A neon said "Chinese Food", there were symbols, marks - it was a brotherhood joint. I could recuperate in here and blend into the run down decor and faceless interior. Eastern language brokered broke down deals, they were all too busy to notice me. That'll do nicely, I was shaky. It'd been a while since I'd been involved in any kind of fire fight, at least two men had died today. I lit a cigarette and thought of their mortality and pondered my own humanity. I was weak.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)