Friday, December 27, 2013

The Hoop and the Teapot

A vast area of land in the centre of England known as Cone Zero was given over to memorials marking all those one-hit wonders of mankinds music.  We always need to remember in this way that everything in life (or in what seems to be reality as we know it) defaults to music at the end of the day.  And music can be intended as joyful, life-affirming as well as sad, death-embracing.  I am afraid the particular music-memorial Ifear I may remember forever from my brief visit to Cone Zero was one that celebrated probably the darkest dirge that ever had the fortune to become a one-hit wonder.  For the music personally it was counted a fortune to be thus commemorated, but for the many who heard the music it was a misfortune, no doubt.

I was accompanied, that day, by Mitchell Much. He knew all about Cone Zero.  Although he was a friendwhom had known for many years, I assumed that he was also to be an official guide for the steep tapering invert of a mountain or pyramid I envisaged the place to be.  It was simply lucky (coincidental) that I already knew him.  He said Cone Zero was almost impossible to negotiate on foot. I nodded knowingly.  My dream of the place had been one of pumping my legs against the slope just to stand still.  We needed a lop-sided golf buggy of sorts to make any progress towards the stone memorials crammed in the bottom corner of the empty cone.  After shuddering with delight as well as awe at my first sight of Cone Zero, he motioned me to step into the official buggy.  We travelled for days, and my spinning head thought it was back in the earlier dream.  I wouldnt call it dizziness.  A better expression would be disorientation between dream and reality, but, for this disorientation not to be counterproductive, I needed a convinced undercurrent of knowledge(knowledge rather than belief or faith) that there was nothing being dreamed about this at all.  Mitchell had instilled this conviction of knowledge by a whole series of training sessions prior to our visit.  I had watched screenings of Cone Zero being built from the remains of Birminghams spaghetti junction, slowly being carved into the welcoming arms of the earth, as if such a down-towering slot of slants was simply, inevitablynatural.  Like, in a rather trite comparison, a classic sculpture had always lived within the primeval stone from which it was eventually released by the sculptor.  Or, more relevantly perhaps, a piece of music that already crouched within our ears waiting to be sprung by the composer into ordered sound from the random surroundings of noise.

“Are we there?” I had to ask.  It was never certain where you truly had reached when within Cone Zero.  It was as if my question was an announcement that I knew we were there.  I didnt expect Mitchell to answer.  His grey beard was so certain about unspoken matters that he didnt even need to nod.  I could hear the cacophony of the combined music of the memorials. It had already been rising towards me for several hours above the engine noise of the buggy.  It was possible (I knew from my training) to use onesight to focus on a chosen memorial which then served to focus its music alone towards ones ears.  I had already wanted to concentrate on the celebrated hit of darkest despair from the menu of memorials Mitchell had shown meduring training. I believed that any despair was the most efficient path towards hope.  Mitchell had not tried to dissuade me.  The music was a pretty silly British cover version of an American hit novelty record of the sixties.  It was sung by a group that was once famous but now completely unknown (unknown either by having been straightforwardly forgotten or by entering a mental blockage that was stronger than simply forgetting).   As I speak now, its just not there.  I just cant hope to remember the name of the group.  It is possibly irrelevant, anyway.  Mitchell does nothing to help.  He probably suffers the same blockage, but he would never admit this fact, I guess. However, by this time, he was nodding.  Nodding not to indicate communication with me but nodding to the beat of the music.  I feared he might soon start whistling along!  God forbid that he should suddenly stand up in the buggy in some wild unspeakable outburst of karaoke!  Mitchell was in danger of losing all dignity. I put my face in my hands and wept.  The music was so utterly utterly wrong.

Having once focused, I now instinctively knew that I couldnt pluck my ears from the memorials music in favour of another choice.  I was aghast as it dawned on me that Mitchells training had not warned me about any of this.  I cursed him under ... my breath?  No, it was under my own humming-along! As we both joined in the musics chorus in some unholy unison, I pounced upon him, eager to punish my friend-turned-enemy.But it did not stop our harmonising.  Even planting my teeth in his neck could not interrupt the flow of mutualsing-along.  Incredibly, the bubbling blood seemed in tune with the arcane rhythms to which Cone Zero had bought us closer.  A novelty sound-effect that was both laughable and tragic: the ultimate despair.  And Deathgradually shrouded my bodily senses one by one as I yearned lovingly for Deaths silence while remaining utterly terrified by the selfsame silence. 

Mitchell Much shrugged as he drove the buggy back up the open slants of Cone Zero. He pulled the plugs from his ears with a smile. Never trust anyone when its either you or them about to face the ultimate despair.  He knew that fact as well as me, I guess. He looked down as the diminishing tunes studded like tombs on a stave.  He knew that a sixties novelty record could not justly commemorate the Fallen of lifes ultimate war.  The Horror was ever in the mix. Bad taste smothering ones awareness even beyond the toe-tapping of Death.In shame, he poured himself blood-tepidly into the cup of his own open mouth. Meanwhile, I am, finally, at peace, thanks to Mitchell Much, because, gratefully, I feel I no longer exist.  


MISSED OPPORTUNITIES by DF Lewis

Somehow Michael knew a good opportunity was about to arise by chance and that he would inevitably miss it.  Indeed, he never recognised a bandwagon; and he reckoned the only one hed ever board would be the one they loaded him on feet first.  However, until now, hed managed to board other sorts of vehicle disguised as bandwagons (often with invisible folk blowing posthorns from the roof), thinking here was a gravy train on track to paradise … only later to topple off the back of the decrepit lorry which the bandwagon had mysteriously become by dint of Midnights chiming and to be gathered up by crooks eager to palm him off as the real McCoy.  Everybody, including Michael, was invariably disappointed.
    Today, he wandered down his local high street after one such escapade.  Not so much missed an opportunity but had become one.  A muggers joy.  Michael beaten black and blue … and red  and nobody noticed his parlous condition or, if they did, they made conscious efforts of being blinkered Samaritans eager for better lost causes round the next corner.
    The next bandwagon he was due to miss was the ambulance.  The paramedics took one look at his face and zoomed off with blue light slowly pulsing and horn blaring long-drawn-out hoots of derision …as if he were the patient they needed to discard in preference for different more worthwhile less onerous physical emergencies.  Or, indeed, they thought Michael was the emergency itself, one they needed to escape  his appearance causing mayhem: children to scream and mild-mannered passers-by to pass out with the frightening sight of the cruel battered face he wore: stirring up panic in the streets. A victim unvictimised.  
The crime-bait stood accused of the crime. 
Stigmatised by the very pity that was missing.
Not suicide.  But aimless wandering through the streets  laying himself open, thus leading to opportunities for criminals not to miss.  The easy target.  Michael.  The one who tempted crime to the streets.
“Hiya, Michael,” called an onlooker whom Michael recognised as an erstwhile friend by the name of someone he had forgotten before he became a friend.  Michael got confused with faces, especially those battered beyond recognition.  The onlooker recognised Michaels face, it seemed.
“Hiya, how you doing?” Michael responded in his typical drawl of post-traumatic slow motion.
“You ought to get that seen to,” the unknown friend said, pointing at the face Michael couldnt see but felt like a painful suet pudding, as if it had been battered by the combined forces of the Mafia and other various criminal groupings that knew no Godfather let alone a God. The blood on his hands must have come from the faces various abrasions  evidence of a clumsy attempt, when rubbing his cheeks, to cover up the tell-tale tracks of crime as well as the crows feet under his sagging custardy eyes.
Michael felt too old for most things.  Especially for help in the shape of a passer-bys platitudes.
“Ill be OK,” he said.
“OK, but if thats OK, is OK enough?”  
With these words, the unknown friend disappeared into the unknown.  A mist of forgetfulness and fickle futures.  It was like watching an angel disappearing into the arms of God.
Another missed opportunity.  Michael was determined to grab the next one whatever its shape or form.  Grasp the nettle.  Seize the day.  
It was a young lady.  Far too young for Michael to have any hopeful hankerings after.  Probably about 21, give or take a decade. Michael was never one for precision, much to his cost.  He was probably not as old as he felt.  Age always came out in the wash: the mangle of time.  Ten years older or ten years younger didnt seem to matter  and how many opportunities during those missing ten years had he actually missed?
“Hiya, Michael,” called the young lady.  She evidently knew him somewhat.  Probably an assistant at a care home.  Not that he needed any care.  He was just another loose cannon who could fire all sorts of ammunition rather than accept his own shortcomings.
“Hiya, back, Miss,” Michael responded.
“Whats happened to your face?”
“Nothing much.”
“Who did it?”
He nearly said it was not his face but someone elses face that had quite taken offence.  Fear prevented him, however, from saying anything quite so damnably eccentric.  His face had given offence with its frayed edges, there was no doubt.  Confusion was better than silence.  Talking in itself, whatever the talkings topic, was a comfort.
“Some footpad who wanted my wallet,” he eventually replied.
    “How much was there in it?” she asked absentmindedly, as she watched a bus disappear into the distance.
    “I dont know.”  Michael was genuinely puzzled by her concern regarding the contents of his wallet.  Only himself to blame.  He had, after all, down-played his face.
    “Well, look after it better next time.”
    “He didnt get it.”
    “Oh, thats all right then.  Buy me a drink to celebrate.”
    She indicated a local pub.  But that went without saying.
    “OK,” Michael said, as they automatically headed in that direction.
    The inside of the pub was a blur  contrasting with the clear-cut sunlight outside in the street.  Several shapes seemed to scuttle into corners as they entered the stained-glass gloom, each shape an opportunity for conversation that had slipped the net of chance encounter.  The barman stood his ground, though.  A man of few words.  The young lady only lingered long enough for Michael to buy her a drink.  She soon wandered off to join some shadows with her own.  Some lumpen conspiracy concerning crime or politics, he guessed.  Drugs were defunct these days.  So it couldnt be any drug deal.  Drugs had been hallucinated out of existence.  Drugs against drugs.

When Michael got home, he was more or less recovered.  His face was peeled like a mask when he looked at it in front of the mirror sunburn as it were gone acidic to a thin caul, a veneer or veil of flesh scurfing off.  It was soon as new.  It must have been his imagination  the attack.  He washed his hands in the bedroom basin without looking at them first. It seemed the appropriate thing to do.
    The walls were very thin in this tenement block.  He could often hear his neighbours in the next door apartment to the right asthey bickered or binged or made love.  A moving population of tenants, a moto perpetuo of emotions, with Michael as the steady central source of observation.  The tenants above him, meanwhile, sounded out footfalls on the ceiling  footprints of changing identity as opposed to fingerprints.  The tenants on the floor below often thudded in tune to the rock-breaking chain-gangs of blockbuster heavy metal  mercifully at peace tonight or simply out.
    As to those often horizontally challenged folk immediately next door to the left, he could often catch the very words they clumsily articulated.  Tracing the audit trail of such conversations was like following the interacting instruments in an item of modern chamber music  and tonight was to be no exception.  A new pairing of aspirant lovers had seemingly moved in on the left since Michaels mugging escapade in the open air.  Hatching a plot, no doubt, whoever they were, he assumed.  He shrugged.  He might as well listen  so he turned off his tap.  No chance like the present for gathering potentially useful information.  After all, no information could only be wasted.  This may be his one chance to crack the code of Fate, to corner Destiny in its earth, to utilise the feedback from the many one-night stands and fitful marriages of lust and love that these apartments often harboured.  Not missed opportunities so much as missed or missing links…
    You see, the walls were so thin and he could hear every bare word as if it were spoken in his own room.  As for himself, he didnt dare cough or fidget or even finger his nostril.  At night, Michael stayed rawly awake most of the time so as to ensure he didnt snore  catching up later, as he did, on most of his sleep patterns upon the ribs of park benches during daylit hours.  So, tonight, ashe silently stirred his thick pea and ham soup, he snatched an overheard conversation which evidently and astonishingly referred to someone who must have known him.  They referred, you see, to a certain Michael Archer  i.e. him  being  an acquaintance of an acquaintance of a said party.  This party was called Avril Hart, which, in his mind, was spelt h-a-r-t, but he couldnt be certain.  He felt earwigging was as dangerous as not earwigging in these uncertain times.
    “Avril Hart always liked Michael Archer…”  A womans voice.
    “No, she didnt,” rejoined a man with gutturals so ugly Michael wondered if the mans throat were made from tree bark.
    The conversation  if the piecemeal utterances of inconsequentiality could be dignified with that word  meandered on for a while until one of the voices (Michael couldnt tell which) came out with some words that were spoken neutrally but yet with pointed meaning, as if acknowledging the audience of one a wafer thin wall away.  It was as if eavesdropping made itself obvious however silently it was conducted, eavesdropping often calling up, as it did, kinetic supernatural forces of guilt-ridden poltergeists.  The words in question have faded now but Michael recalls them as being something like:
    “A pity Michael had to die in such a horrible fashion.”
    He was stunned out of a doze.  He had indeed collapsed upon his counterpane, neatly self-smothered under a grubby pillow initially gasping for breath but staying, otherwise, as quiet as a church mouse, as he regained some well-earnt hedged bets of sleep.  Whether the words he thought he heard  those deadly words  were part of a dream or not, he was soon wide awake, having been startled by the sound of a key being tried in his apartment door.  He held his breath yet again, listening to the locks tumblers stubbornly refusing to be budged into falling, despite the slow sickening turn back and forth of the key in an attempt to wheedle entry, as opposed to forcing it.
    Michael felt decidedly iffy. Dead sheep had be known to feel livelier, he thought.  Lack of sleep for days on end had culminatedin this sense of unreality or dream.  He was being stalked by one of his erstwhile partners in lust or love. The better half of a misjudged tenement union.  Indeed, having missed her own version of opportunity earlier, through bouts of misunderstanding and a mind lanced through by a foreign substance, Avril Hart had now regrouped, it seemed, since the pub, and become focussed upon her single-minded goal: to exhume the body which these four tenuous walls had boarded up while hour after interminable hour trod their precarious path into a growingly unsteady future.  The cabinet of a grandfather clock often has a key in its side to wind it … or even its very clock-face a key spindle to be turned …and, in some sense, Michaels face was being rewound, rewounded rewakened into a reincarnation of himself, into a new Michael Archer.  Or possibly unwound, unwounded…

The voices continued to drone next door, left and right.  Even up and down. The beat music having finally never started up again.  The words now blurred into each other due to excessive slowness of utterance.  Motion stood still.  Emotion crystallised into a core.  A bandwagon trundled along outside in the shape of a council dustcart.  There was sudden silence and Michael heard voices in the street now, followed by a slump or a thud as an item was thrown into the back of the cart.  Heavy metal gates clanging as they pressed on the raw rags and bones.  
    Other voices,  Other heels clip-clopping along the brittle pavements.  A confusion of sounds that meant something to someone … somewhere.  Then a clump.  A shriek.  Another street mugging.  He felt safe in his cocoon of memory.  A victim uncriminalised.  Adrug hallucinated out of existence.  In the distance, emergencies going in and out of focus like sirens.
    “Hiya, Michael.”
    “Hiya, back, Miss.”  
He could never remember her name by heart.
    He wasnt sure if the voices were next door, upstairs, downstairs, in his ladys chamber … or outside … outside of reality … or, even, in his head.  Clouded issues circling its prey.  He felt his chest desperate to hear a beat.  No wallet there! Humph!  Not someones missed opportunity, after all.  Opportunities that cancelled each other out.  The lessons of life were learned though its many missed opportunities. And perhaps death, too. An opportune mist … an angel disappearing into the arms of God.
    But he had no money…
PICK’S MODEL  by DF Lewis

Self-exorcism was tantamount to suicide, but Pick really had no choice.  Unable to shake off the sounds, he allowed them to ring inside his head.  Echoes garbed in bone.  Meaning beyond what was actually heard - each blown-up ratchet of noise being a relentless ritual he could not escape.  It was as if he were a child castigated for not forgetting the poem which had been learnt too painstakingly.
    One way or another, Pick was determined to proved he existed.  His girl often tried to comfort him by whispering sweet nothings in his ear.  But, lacking the conviction of her actions, she failed to put her mouth where her words were.  To Pick, she was a ghost pulling invisible shrouds around him like hissing silk.  Pick's youth, although never-ending at the time, was now too many years in the past.  He still recalled, however, when he and his mates sneaked into the local flickering Fifties fleapit ... with the assistance of Pick's Uncle Bob which entailed releasing the ratchet bar from inside the emergency exit - to reveal, yes, an X Certificate film!  A film for adults only!  The blood began to race as the body took fire from the horror that stirred the brain.  The forbidden nature of the activity was probably responsible for such excitement, rather than the prospect of the film itself but, whatever the case, Pick felt literally more alive ... as if he were a vampire awaiting a friendly ghoul to release him from the confines of childhood's tomb.
    The mask was identical to the face Pick wore beneath it.
    "Masks are intended to be uglier than your own face.  No point otherwise - especially at a Hallowe'en party."  
    I once said this to Pick with a tongue in my cheek, as I knew he knew I knew his real face was nothing to write home about - and it would probably scare strangers a rather shitty green - particularly those strangers of the gatecrasher persuasion. 
    It wasn’t Hallowe'en, in any event.
    "OK, OK, joke's over," insisted Pick.  "You'll be laughing the other side of your own face before the evening's finished."
    If I hadn't known Pick better, I'd've suspected something sinister in that loosely veiled threat.  I could've even believed he wasn't joking.  
    The garden shed leant towards the house.  Pick’s weekend guests had departed, leaving him nothing but time ... and a large rambling edifice of a house that he could not ever hope to fill with merely his own meagre existence.  
    The newspapers were still delivered, each too much to read.  One organ boasted a headline too tasteless for belief: "FOOTBALL FANS RECALL THEIR DEAD."  Pick had crazy, unforgiveable visions of corpses between those still alive, hanging like filled washing: pitiful puppets jerking amid the swaying chants.
    The older Pick threw the paper into the fireplace, wishing it were not such a sticky spring.
    The actual images on the cinema screen were always a disappointment to the young Pick.  They were unconvincing, blurred, one-dimensional and, above all, not horrible enough.  Mental arithmetic at school was far horribler by half...
    Despite the woodenness of the acting, Pick could live with the disappointment.  After all, he was with his mates (of whom I numbered one), all of us wrapped up in horseplay and bubble gum, chatting through the tedious 'marrying-bits' on the screen, pinching each other's bottoms to see if life was really a dream and, finally, the bursts of raucous laughter threading this Fifties' version of GROSS-OUT and SPLATTER
    We had parties at other places, too.  Pick and I, let it be said, were not gatecrashers, but, admittedly,  it was a friend of afriend of a flatmate thrice removed who was holding the party in King's Langley and was doubtless not expecting us.  We'd heard at least the smidgeon of an echo of a rumour that "everybody" was invited.  So here we were, climbing off the great M25 ringway in Pick's jalopy.  Neither of us had been North of Watford before and we were eager to discover whether there was indeed life up there - as the saying went.  We knew there would be a soupçon of a shred of dubious evidence that there would be life up there, but it didn't stop us chortling on the joke beyond its rather tenuous funniness, whilst the elastic band inside Pick's jalopy finally unwound, bringing us to an unceremonious halt in the car park of the Rose and Crown pub, where many of the guests would be tanking up in readiness for the long night's party ahead.  
    I turned to Pick and kidded him about all the badges he was wearing on his Albanian Flapjacket.  I think he must've belonged to every club and society going, including both the Foxhunters and the anti-Bloodsports association.  
    Well, Pick was once born into a Northern industrial town, from a family whose babies already emerged from the womb with coal-black faces.  He soon learned to fade into the background; the school blackboard was suitable for such self-denial.  The family had so many upturned faces yearning for the food ladle, just one child was never missed: and that one  never missed was Pick.  The teachers, too, could hardly keep control nor count, by rule or under thumb, so one child less was neither wholly here nor there.  
    Although budding child artists drew chalk around Pick's shape upon the blackboard, as if investigating a whodunnit, the teacher soon rubbed it off; thus, the period became double history where all that was important was the fading past...
    Now, "grown-up", Pick is amused and intrigued by memory of the far-off Fifties.  He had been a right pondweed, then.  But, he should remember at least one particular film, from which even Uncle Bob had to run out in sheer fright.  
    The day had started cloudy, with just an inch or two of dawn squirming along the far edge of the sea, like a giant orange tape-worm.  Kites tried to tug kids upwards from the cliff-top.  Pick walked along the promenade, weaving between the crippled deck-chairs, his mates no doubt already congregating around the fleapit's backdoor.
    Amazing how daft the cinema manager must have been.  What was the manager’s name?  Oboff?  
    Pick and I went straight to the party north of Watford, one which started out a rather drab affair.  Even the strobe lighting in the room dedicated to disco dancing was about as limp-wristed as my next door neighbour's dead mother.  
    Pick and I carried out a few desultory jigs together, a preparatory jab of the hindlegs, but the hotel foyer muzak was not exactly conducive to a real shake-out.  On top of this, there were next to no birds.  Even Alfred Hitchcock's film had that Tippi Hedren going for it.  Unless, of course, there was a room upstairs into which any chicks had packed like kids in a Sardines game to escape Pick's ugly mask.
    Every guest at the shindig wore trousers and hugely dated floral kipper-ties.  Not one badge between them.  Not even one backslapping howdyado from a hale and hearty host, eager to make his guests feel less ill at home.  
    Eventually, Pick gave me the nod.  Back along the M25, to see if we could catch up on a bit of real nightlife in more familar territory.  We felt like fish out of water or rats without tails, or at least I did.  Pick, well, he was just Pick, as inscrutable as ever.  We walked off the dance floor and thus from the limelight of the small torch which the DJ was flashing upon us from his console plinth.
    Another day, another world.  There had been a girl staying with Pick in that large house with a shed.  Pick was sure she must have left her spirit behind, to test him with taunts.  He had criticised her enjoyment of modern paintings.  In fact, he must have fancied her, because he felt the uncontrollable need to monopolise her company, even if it were to argue the toss about Mondrian and Klee.  Munch's Shout.  Jackson's Pollock.  And episodes painted in words.
    Her face was blotched with too much sun - the garden here getting it the whole day round, as if on some shuttling equator.  Perhaps, at night, Pick dreamt the vertical sun...
    Pick told her that a blown-up colour photograph of her face would not look out of place on one of the Tate Gallery walls, between a Bacon and a Braque.  Equally, she would have been the ideal model for Picasso in his more cubist period.  Needless to say, she had not relished his chat-up line.
    Pick recalled the face of Mr Oboff quite well, someone who was often to be found playing the amusements in the pier arcade or chatting with the flat-capped man in the booth who sat behind copper-penny towers of loose change.  The amusement machines included "Allwins", where silver ball-bearings rattled round a vertical display in the hope of slotting into the "win" hole rather than those "lose" ones which outnumbered the "wins" - a bit like life, really, Pick mused.  Spindly cranes that, despite all the skilful jiggery-pokery in the world, could never grip the pack of cigarettes with a ten bob note wrapped round it.  The penny slot clockwork ghost-houses where skeletons popped out of various cupboards to scare the pants off you.   
    Suddenly, at that almost forgotten party north of Watford, Pick and I were accosted by a bright young spark who called himself Aretha Franklin.
    "That's a funny name for someone who looks as if he's just walked out of one of Hitler's gas-chambers."  
    In saying that, Pick did not make it clear whether he meant a victim or an usher or even an usherette.
    "Hark who's talking.  With a face like that..." - Aretha pointed at Pick's mask - "I bet your face wouldn't win a beauty contest against my arse."  
    I looked quizzically at Aretha's backside, but could find no clue as to why he (Aretha) had made such an outrageous statement.  Pick’s arse was a sight for sore eyes in its own right.
    Pick was standing no nonsense from the likes of the Northern upstart and he immediately swiped a hefty kick at Aretha's arse.
    "That'll change the odds somewhat - I hear judges don't like bruises on the merchandise."  
    Or that's what Pick would have said, given half the chance, since, in the event, his leg was left stuck up at right angles, the foot sunk to its ankle between Aretha's buttocks where the trouser seat had disappeared with the merest ripping noise, leaving the weltering cheeks literally to munch up towards Pick's calf.  I tried to steady my friend as he hopped precariously on his free leg.
    As the others watched this amazing fandango in which we were participating, I noticed the arrival of the Bad Crowd.  Every bash has got to have one, even those further South have their fair share of Bad Crowds.  But this lot was the worst I'd ever seen.  Plug Uglies to the bone.  Undergrunts to the letter.  Pick's real face was not even in the same league.  They seemed particularly horrendous from the contrast with the the female gender they actually wielded.  Fresh from girl talk, no doubt, in that Ladies Room I'd imagined earlier, they waved red-stained panties as if this were some preliminary to a mating-dance.  
    As soon as Pick was old enough in the tooth to leave his family home, he left a note in the ticking parlour: 'Never coming back - Pick.'  He never questioned the fact.  Nor did those who managed to read it.  How could they mourn the passing of one who had never arrived in the first place?      
    The school closed its gates with a resounding clang.  Not enough teachers.  Not enough pay.  Those who remained, they huddled in the staff room like old dufflecoats.  Some even crawled into the dark mine tunnel at the blackboard's maw.  Absent kids clambered back through the barred windows and marked themselves into the mouldy registers.  Then snuck under the desks, rather than have to watch the black-turning wheels that lowered their fathers and elder brothers to the coal-face: golden sunshafts spinning, slicing slowly between the spokes from the sky's screaming edge.  Coal-mine cranes and pleasure piers were not the closest of bed-fellows.  I wondered if Pick had concocted those tales of his youthful days by the seaside...  
   Meanwhile, dark infant shapes imperceptibly silted into the floorboards as spilt ink would.
    Mr Oboff often chatted to young Pick about Life, the Universe and the future arrival of electronic games to the arcades.  Little did he know that Pick was one of those kids who infiltrated his theatre to watch X films.  Mr Oboff was a big man, with a beer barrel that squatted in his belly and with a beard even bigger than Uncle Bob's tussocky one.  Mr Oboff loved his picture house.  He showed Pick his green worms, which he used in fishing from the pier.  And another worm which he didn't.    
    To come clean, Pick's really my alter ego - despite his face.  And I'm his.  Onanism made manifold.  My jalopy could only carry one person at a time, in any event.  Aretha Franklin wasn't all that bad looking, despite my earlier misgivings - and most of the Bad Crowd eventually skulked off churlishly, a trifle crestfallen, back to the Ladies Room where they could exercise feminine logic and exchange sanitary pads for face-packs.  
    I had a tinge of a fling with Aretha, but I soon trundled South alone, guided by the stars and the M25 lights.   
    Pick found us already mustering at the back door of Oboff's cinema.  I was listening to a wasp I had trapped in a matchbox.  But then the emergency bar slipped and Uncle Bob ushered us in with a finger pressed to his lips.  We scuttled on all fours to the front row and slouched in the tip-down seats so that our heads could not be spotted from the back.  
    The lights dimmed, as if on cue.  Excitement was keeping the bellowing laughter inside.  The wrinkly custard-yellow drapes slid sluggishly aside to reveal a towering off-white screen, still bearing the faint blotch of a thrown ice cream from a generation before.  We were so close to the screen, our necks ached with peering up at the gigantic black and white faces.
    Now she has gone, along with all the other guests, Pick moved from room to room, only to find her spirit had gone to the next room along.  The sounds lived on ... in the cellar ... in the attic ... in the boarded-up rooms ... even in the shed.  It was as if he were his own past.  He could not shake off its fading clutch.  And sounds meant more than words.
    Young Pick was off to the Big Smoke, becoming a silent cog in a vast meaningless machine.  Shining face bobbed behind a new desk, one with screens and buttons, speaking-tubes and filing-clips.  Known as a clerk: inadvertently discovering viral blanks in programmes and enigmas in aborted dreams.  
    Pick speaks to her now, in the same voice as she spoke to him: the timbre raised one notch: the meaning down: the passions dulled.  Her cutting-edge is only to be expected, following his ill-considered remarks about her pointilliste face.  He meant them kindly, however.  But the words come out in cruel order.  He thought she liked modern art.  Its challenge.  Its unstickability.  Its collage of nightmares. Why was she so upset, then, about her face being compared to modern art?  
    Pick looked down at feelers and saw them drip: so much melting flesh and bone.  Pick's father had chipped inside the Earth to pay Pick's keep: simply for this?
    Whether an even younger Pick dozed off in the cinema that day because his mates were unusually down in the dumps, or because the X film was especially lack-lustre, he cannot now recall.  But he woke up with a start, to discover the screen still flickering.  He squinted to make out where the tenuous story-line had led.  Incredibly, he was shocked to decipher the hugefaces of Uncle Bob, of Mr Oboff and of his mates - faces that reached from the littered floorboards to the high angel carvings of the mock-gilt auditorium - faces that were groaning slo-mo orders at him - faces with slimy green worms crawling over them.  But, surely, the film was in black and white.  
    Pick never returned to Oboff's fleapit.  Uncle Bob slid from his life without making it too obvious.  His mates (me included) grew up faster and quickly vanished on ventures that were quite beyond his own ambitions.  And the grown-up version of Pick is hooked on electronic amusements, juddering with the joy-sticks - with most of his skull engulfed by a pure blackness whence not even a lobotomy could free the mind.  He remembered those huge faces on the screen when he saw, many years later, the Bad Crowd and a white-bottomed simian calling itself Aretha Franklin.
    The grey matter of his brain had by now turned a noxious green colour ... with a stench, thankfully, to which the nose was noticeably immune.  Some say Oboff is every filthy creature in every modern splatter film.  Of course, he is now shrunk within televisions and home videos, arcade games and computer screens, these having taken over from street amusements like hopscotch & hide-and-seek ... and taken over, too, from those wondrous black & white days of childhood when fear was delicious and even one's own cinemascopic dreams had X Certificates.  But Pickarso, who was he?
    Pick shrugs.  Reaching the top of the house - or the nearest to the top without removing shutters - he gazes down into the garden where she once prettily sat ... amongst all those others whose names he now forgets.  The garden shed's shadow moves.  The sun stays still, like the moment.
    Underwear he’s hung on the line: it twitches sporadically, as if gathering for some form of life as lift-and-separates.
    Hearing another's fumble at the shutter, he leaves for yet another room.  The sounds are joy, the sounds are pain, and who can hope interpret them?  Like all modern art, the meaning is lost and so, thankfully, purged.  Forgotten like the shapeless world.  
    Pick would force himself back into existence come hell or high water.  He had lost the pretty girl with the sweet way of whispering to herself of ghosts and lost love.  If only she'd had her wits about her at that strange weekend house party, she might have learned why he called her by my name.  Even the address was a blur, although he hoped I'd recognise the leaning shed - if I happened to pass it in the street - or if I felt that peck on the cheek once more - or the brushstroked pubes.
    The screen on my office desk was a pointilliste dream of evil green pixels.  Insurance or accountancy data tracing an electronic audit trail to form the cubist outline of Oboff's face.  I then dashed to the loo to change my mask as well as my pad - a sanitary place where soul musak in the pipes was worse than silent - and always there like white noise.
    North/South and Past/Future are the coordinates of sleep ... but Night has hidden cranes to pick us, pluck us from our beds.  


"Life is a cross of pleasure piers in surrounding black seas..."  Rachel Mildeyes (OF ALTER EGOS AND ALIBIS)    

Friday, December 13, 2013

The God in the Goblet

I arguably coined these words and expressions: ‘zeroism, egnisomicon, egnisism’ in conjunction with PF Jeffery (1967), ‘whofage’ in conjunction with PF Jeffery (1973), ‘agra aska’ (1983), ‘weirdmonger’ (1988), use of ‘brainwright’ in modern times (1990), Salustrade (1992) use of ‘yesterfang’ in modern times (1997), ‘wordhunger’ (1999), ‘nemonymous, ‘nemonymity’, late-labelling, veils-&-piques’ (2001), ‘denemonise’ (2002), ‘megazanthus’, ‘weirdonymous’, ‘chasing the noumenon’ (2003), ‘wordonymous’, ‘wordominous’, ‘the-ominous-imagination’, revelling in vulnerability (2004), ‘a woven fire-wall of words’, ‘the synchronised shards of random truth and fiction’, ‘nemoguity’, ‘vexed texture of text’, ‘fictipathy’, ‘nemotion’, ‘the hawler’, ‘the angel megazanthus’, ‘klaxon city’, ‘horrorism’ when used as a word for the philosophy of horror fiction (2005), ‘publication-on-reading’, ‘antipodal angst’, ‘the tenacity of feathers’, ‘a writer’s mandala’, ‘wordy weird’, ‘nemophilia / nemophobia’, ‘magic fiction’ as the obverse of the more common expression ‘magic realism’, ‘weirdtongue’ as the ‘name’ of a language, ‘Glistenberry’ as an alternative name for ‘Glastonbury’, ‘tonguage’ as a ‘conscious’ language, ‘yester-eggs’ as a term for Proustian ‘selves’, ‘the parthenogenesis of reality from artifice’, ‘all is for the pest in the pest of all worlds’, ‘Baffles’ as fables with muffled morals (2006), ‘fanblade fable’, ‘abutting the if’, ‘word clones / word clowns’, ‘bumps for books’, ‘rite of review’, ‘cone zero’, ‘a basket of coinages’ (2007), ‘small press cover ark(ive), the baser pulps’ ‘orrorfaces’, ‘the wheel culture’, ‘netogenic’, the first fiction about a ‘drogulus’, ‘Innerskull’, ‘meganthus‘ (2008), ‘CERN Zoo’ in literature, ‘Real-Time Reviewing‘, ‘ligottum‘, ‘the pit and the pessimum‘, ‘ligottus‘, ‘fubbcuckle’, ‘extraneity creep’, ‘pillowghost’, ‘intowards’, ‘powderghost’, ‘nightmare’s moat’ (2009), ‘THE TENSES’, ‘scream munch’ as another word for ‘captcha’, ‘skight’ – threepenny bit, ‘invitations from within’, ‘novellatory’, ’Ress’, ‘Venn Dreams’, ‘Tearsheet Doll’, scanbuncle, A Götterdämmerung of Guts , Holistic Horror (2010), SFtopia, Salustraders / Overspacers, Novellarette, Inquel, Gaddafery, Jungian autonymity, sudracide, an impesto novel, trendbaffler, our planet as reliquary, fictionatronics, Lovecraftianisation, “To know the worst is also to know the best“, vignellarette, “Nothing is controlled by logic other than logic itself.”, nightgators, Horror Genreators, dicksplay, roman littoral, ghostalt, poltergeistalt, horrasy, Horrasy: The Horrastic and the Heuristic, srednibution, srednidipity, Lovecraftian indescriptivities, bememorise, alephantiasis, reva-menders, metapomorphic, rarifiction, neoloquism, Was the God Particle born instable? (2011), angelivalent, literal-meaning dreaming, the ‘Higgs boson’ of Horror, The Weirdonomicon, Aickmania, shortcomings harnessed are stronger than strengths unused, privacy-trawler, disarming strangeness in connection with Robert Aickman, Fiction is like currency: belief is everything, oblique concomitant / oblique contaminant, age at the edge, A writer should make clouds shine even if the world’s sun has gone, The Call of the Silly, pastilential, eschairtology, e-born, read-tangler, ghorror, the authorial cloud, grosmance, quixotiose, most placating is playacting, ‘friendly fire’ fiction, dilemmachination, absurface, aeontonomous, HobbYiSt / Hobbit, aeontonomy, Horror Without Victims, fuckerlode, Earkth, Pronoun Horror, The Ives of November, PreMonday-ition, NoV – No Victims, an amid-life crisis, God created Ground in His own image by adding ‘run’ to His name, Old boots are always better than no boots, truth is never brash, End tring, Tendring is Trending, HorNET Nest, The empty future expects our arrival soon, if you fit, wear yourself, The Worldwide Cliff (2012), quantitative kamikaze, The Ohm Resistor of Literature, Only real books can be left anonymously on chairs, The Sibling Thing (as monster), lachrymonics, Cold Sororist, Gangster Gongsters, Cathrian, Cathrianity, Cathrechism, the optimum delusion, dogstone as a form of ‘found sculpture’, iDEATH as a form of internet implosion of self, Judge me on my works, not on my request thus to judge me, dyschronous recurrence, Belarhombus, the Palimp’s Zest, abseil-surdity, paradoxilogically, Devolved Fiction, fratrinity, bock-hide, the Ligottian lurch, denouement or deligottiment, Does a Seraph suffer from Harpes?, AickMANN, RTRcausal, irrealoscopic, a Myth Pitch, Versionary SF, pallianthology, Historation Comedy, Holy Grailtrack, Born Ancient, Bringing the Dead to Book, urbographical, genius tempus, sabbaticess, the life-insider, the God in the Goblet (2013).