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Sunday, 4 November 2007
Joe
JOE

First published 'Agog' 1989

Joe lived someone else's life. Or so he thought.

He convinced himself that he could not really be such on individual, working in an office factory from 9 to 5: surely he was not that boring. Mind you, he religiously followed the channels of the destiny laid out before him, with glances to neither side. Well, until now...

The wife told him that she loved him but how could anyone love a zombie? It didn't stand up to reason.

One day, he decided to wake up as the real person he felt he truly was. He went to sleep, not before bashing his head seven times on the pillow (a trick that worked better than an alarm clock set for seven in the morning). However, that was the last routine he carried out as the old self.

Waking up had always been a struggle into renewed existence via the bleary regions of brainache, but that particular morning, it was somewhat different. Everything seemed fresh, effervescent, renascent ...

The wife he did not recognize, for she was someone else's. Mind you, she did not recognise him either: and they both made love, as if it were the start of an illicit affair.

Their kisses were searching, their foreplay an extended version of teenage exploration (with the backwash of prurient froth upon the roof of the mouth), ending not with premature ejaculation but in a mutually stunnirrg slowmo orgasm that lasted even beyond the fuel that fed it.

The breakfast she then cooked for both of them was a feast fit for a banquet: jacket potatoes that had been gently simmering in the oven from the evening before, generously knobbed off with butter; rare gammon steaks upon a bed of under-coddled eggs; toasted doorstops smarmed with a marmalade so thickly cut it was tantamount to a whole-orange bob game at the fair; and finally, a breakfast birthday cake where the candle flames seemed to burn upon the seeping fuel of the cake mixture itself, layered jumbo currants, molasses, long- and shortbread and oodles of rum...

He did not understand why there were so many candles on the cake. Surely this was the first day of his life. A ready-born . . . Not tarnished by emerging through the channels of a woman's body ...

But there was something very diminishing about not being able to blow out one's own birthday candles.

He got up and went to work . . . but found his desk occupied by someone called Joe, plugging away at routine tasks, the simplest of which would be beyond him, anyway. He then lost himself in the city, where he would never ever find himself again.

His wife did not even bother to look for him, either, because she did not know he was lost. And never again did she rustle up bumper reward breakfasts for Joe...

Posted by wordonymous at 8:50 AM EDT
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Tuesday, 23 October 2007
Hunger for the Word

HUNGER FOR THE WORD

 

 

In the beginning was the Word.

 

The woman wondered whether this was true.  In the beginning was Nothing – logically.  And at the end, likewise.  She turned her shoulders – leather cracking around the blades – to find her husband had come into the room.  He stood at the door, suds up to his elbows and a dinner plate thrust towards her like a second face.

 

“See!  I’ve got it clean.  OK?”

 

She laughed, having complained most of their life together about the quality of his doing the dishes – claiming that there were supplementary meals to be had if one simply dashed to the draining-board before it was cleared of the crockery he’d just done.

 

She put down her book.  Religious Studies for an Open University course was using up a lot of time.  More than life itself.  No time for real things.  Her children were permanently at some school in the sky … from where her husband had always wanted to fish them down with some hook line and sinker.  Thankfully, the children themselves hadn’t assigned blame to the barrenness that created their non-existence.  Or so she believed.  Nobody could be sure.  Especially nobody.

 

She yearned for a fulfilment that would retrospectively cast some meaning to the previous years of her life.  She scribbled out a few notes from the text book she was studying and she wondered whether her handwriting could subsist beyond the paper’s surface whereon the joined-up letters seemed to reside.  Tangible fashionings that would taste and feel their own meanings as words if they could only be lifted like children’s transfers and popped in the mouth.

 

Her husband had returned to the kitchen, following his joke with the plate.  But was it a joke?  She sensed that every joke was seriousness disguised.  And vice versa.  Especially religion, which, in its way, gave the words birth and death an extended meaning they otherwise lacked.  Lifted their existentialist absurdity into realms where it could be unfathomed, unspooled, unspun, like whipping a top until it paradoxically bore the static colours of mysticism.

 

She licked her lips.  The sight of a famine on the television  faced her from some news event.  She often had the picture on with no sound.  The reception tonight was leathery – with the same matt consistency as her jacket … as she tried to penetrate the dull brown pixels to follow the paths of ghostly skeletons lined up towards the flat screen’s variously moving horizons.

 

She heard a plane crash.  Sorry, cross that out.  She heard a plate crash on to the kitchen lino.  Or was it a wine-glass.  She’d later be ages picking over every splinter.  Her husband never had the knack for such minutiae, nor the gumption.  Then the sound of skidding feet as he evidently walked through the suds he’d scattered in all directions.  She visualised chaos with body-sized meat at its centre – orbitting seeds, then lumbering life itself.  A spinning plate.  Or a series of many spinning plates that used to be an act on variety shows where the artist had to keep them all up in the air by twirling in turn each spindle upon which they spun.  Humming like giant bees.

 

As a child, she was once severely scolded at a school-dinner for licking the remains of gravy from her plate with her tongue..  French-kissing food was not what a well-behaved girl was meant to do.  Indeed, after lifting the plate to her face, she cold see the teacher’s shocked expression – even now.  A bit like a cross God. Or so she thought.  One of those ancient memories that stayed with you all your life, trivial in themselves, but fundamental in retrospect.  She could hardly believe she was herself a child once.  And, before that, a baby dropped down the chimney by a stork.

 

A plate was spinning on the TV screen like a visitant from space.  World Hunger  had been replaced by a black and white Dr. Who episode from the Sixties.  There was a strange mixture of moods as she channel-hopped herself through the eons with the remote.

 

Time for supper.  She felt hungry. Strangely tired.  Her husband had only just finished the washing-up for lunch.  They really must get a proper dish-washer, before it was too late.  In the beginning was the Whirled.  She slumped to the floor and cracked like a leather egg.  No joke.

 

 

 


Posted by wordonymous at 1:53 PM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 23 October 2007 1:55 PM EDT
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Saturday, 13 October 2007
Hands Across The River Of Life

 Published 'Purple Patch' 1992

 

HANDS ACROSS THE RIVER OF LIFE 

 

''Luxury, this morning."

 

The old gent behind the newspaper spoke to me as I took my seat in the Thameslink train.

 

''Luxury is it?" I asked, not understanding even my question.

 

"Yes, it's usually old stock." He paused before saying: "Victoria is it?"

 

"No, London Bridge, I think, then Bedford."

 

''Must be something wrong ... something wrong, but not unusual"

 

"Yes, not unusual," by which I suppose we meant it was usual.

 

The conversation was in itself unusual, but unusual things are always happening to me. Trivial exchanges with complete (and sometimes incomplete) strangers are only part of the ill-fitting jigsaw.

 

The jigsaw piece that represents me is irregularly nodular, always unpromising as the one to be fitted next into the puzzle: further from the straight bits even than the middle of the picture, or so I seem.

 

That old gent who struck up a useless conversation has now left the train (set on changing at East Croydon, he told me).

 

Perhaps he's off to join another puzzle. Indeed, he'll have to change a lot at East Croydon to retrieve the puzzle of his own life. That's because he was the one who chose to speak to me, not the other way about. Thus, he has no option really but to remain a piece in MY crazy jigsaw, whatever he does now. And he'll soon discover that the pieces of my puzzle form a picture which doesn't seem to match the one on my box-lid at all.

 


Posted by wordonymous at 9:36 AM EDT
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Wednesday, 19 September 2007
Spamhead

 Published 'Lost' 1992  

 

The boy sat at the foot of the stairs in the half-light of the late afternoon. He was unable to see to the top where, presumably, the landing lights were off. He could only resort to playing cat’s cradle with his own shadow, until the growing darkness expunged even the shadows.

Quite close was the broom cupboard under the stairs. In fact, the boy leant towards its ill-fitting door, his ear against it like a pressed flower.

He had grown accustomed to the noises from one of the bedrooms which led from the unseen landing. He was not sure which one, but it was his father’s voice speaking in low tones to his guest. The words grew wilder for a time and then gradually tailed off into undertones....drifting on into eventual silence. 

***

 The broom cupboard door suddenly banged violently on its loose hinges, as if a spirit fresh from the slips of hell was hammering from the inside with its head.

“Mummy, mummy,” murmured the boy, a dewdrop welling like a priceless emerald from the end of his nose. The battering forthwith ceased immediately, and a harsh breathing ensued.

 ***

 The boy’s head was literally massive, with a high frontage which bore honest, unfurrowed brows. At birth, his mother had had to strain to force him through to the nest of her loins, the flesh cracking and bones creaking to bear the giant skull.  

His friends, soon to learn how to be deeply cruel without really trying, had called him spamhead....  The house was quiet. The father’s guest had left, stepping over the boy’s pretence of sleep at the foot of the turning stairs, but not without leaving a slight heel-mark in his cheek, like a dimple....  

From the broom cupboard, the boy could hear a low voice, vaguely reminding him of one who had lapped him in rhymes of breaking boughs. The voice was the one who had told him not to worry about the outlandish size of his head, and he had felt safe in her arms, as if all the fu¬ture was preserved in her soul like an irreducible gem...  

But it dripped out, like blood.

And all he could hear now was the same voice in the cupboard addressing him over and over again: “Spamhead.. sssspamhead.... ssssssss......”


Posted by wordonymous at 10:51 AM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 19 September 2007 10:55 AM EDT
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Thursday, 13 September 2007
The Weirdmonger XII

Published 'Peripheral Visions' 1992

 

The hammer sword was spliced to his side-he shambled like a mammoth, with tusky beards, thickened lips, thumper nose and a frown fit enough to irrigate a greater dome even than his head.

 

He grunted from the depth of his chest as if his mouth had nothing to do with it. It was established, however, that he was the Weirdmonger - but, ages ago, someone or something had rudely excised his tongue so that he found it more difficult to wield words as well as weirds. But how could anybody talk with no tongue? So no one believed this part of his tale.

 

That night, the town celebrated his arrival. Come morning, though, all took on a new complexion, as differ­ent as sun from moon. The wild parties had become breakfasts all too easy to sick up.The crazy notions had turned to worries of the clock and the purse. The idle chitchat and pub talk had long since run out or words. The eyeballs ran with yellow wanks of snot.

 

They rose from their beds, made the best of bad jobs and hunched their shoulders at the smallholdings where not even a solitary chicken could scrape together enough provender for the day. They donned sufficient clothes just this side of decency and set off for the swelter­ing town square where they had left the Weirdmonger snoring beneath the dry fountains. Having arrived, with the eyes still glazed over with an ingredient of sleep some call dream, others life, they crouched like school children on the dusty ground, to await what must happen.

 

But nothing did.

  

The town was at the foot of a panhandle. The endemic swirling seasons there run their course without due consideration for each other.

 

Last night, at the height of the festivities, the Weirdmonger had mimed his journey to the town. He had endured a trek ... lengthened out his legs, lowered his head nearer the ground and pretended his feet had be­come only fit to be the root vegetables. His massive lungs had done nothing to cool the body spaces in each of which he had briefly inhabited along the way. The seeping of his eyes had done little to conceal the wild fury that ever danced like a cloud of fireflies he followed.

 

If only he had tongue enough to flicker in pace with his pantomime of passage.

 

He boasted that he was Weirdkeeper, Weird­ster, Weirdmin, Oracle, Swordmaster, Mascot, and Beasthead. But none could even begin to believe him, for nothing continued to happen. The endless vigils merely grew hotter as the summer seasons leapfrogged each other with no winters between.

  

He no longer shambled: he became a mountain of stagnant flesh. Only his hammer sword remained recognizable, untarnished by the sultry air.

 

But, then, came another like him. Or like him, when he had first come.

 

The newcomer dislodged the sword from be­tween the palpitating thews of the tidal monument and sliced joints of it asunder, like chopping away ravenous squealing runts from their mother's steaming udder.

 

The crowd of townspeople crooned in pain, since their own unborn babies were swollen beyond the lips of the wombs.

 

One of the crowd spoke, as if to describe some­thing to one who could not see: "We flock to this baking square every morning in good faith. We kept him here to become a figurehead - we felt he had something to teach us about beauty, about ugliness about faith itself. We asked him. We had a thousand questions to ask. If our enemies came, would he up and fight? If our friends came, would he tell them of the luck he'd dispense to them as he would to us? When he decided to speak more clearly, with all gutturals forsaken, would he teach us of the past and how we're to create a new one for a brighter future? Would he ring the unfaulted brazenness of his bell along the length of our land in clear and certain tones? But without a clapper, as one of us eventually found out for sure when prizing open two loving rows of teeth in his massive jaw, to ease the pain in the rotted, rutted gums... Yes, it was his throat that indeed ran up and ran down the scales of utterance, but all we heard were boasts and more boasts, since whilst chests are boastful, mouths can only simper ... but if had ideas, if he had solutions or benedictions for our troubles, they were never trans­ferred by the gutted cords of his oaken neck. So, he turned out as effective as the tongue of land he crossed to come here: in short, he was little better than a god!"

 

The deeper voice of the newcomer rang out in reply: "But I am the true Weirdmonger ... one who can speak out as loud and clear and fluent as the best of you ... give me your questions, poor folk, your hopes, your desires, your unanswered prayers - for each word or weird even in a whisper I utter becomes a truth as I utter it."

 

The townspeople shouted at once, all in a babble of tongues racing to communicate at last with a chosen one. Some even rose from their haunches, but such had been the length of time in crouching, they left their feet behind like carrots.         

 

            The second Weirdmonger collapsed upon the first. His words jammed up at the tip of his tongue, lungs ballooning even from his ears. 

 

            Thank goodness the townspeople never realised that their uproar had stoned the second Weirdmonger deaf as a doorpost. Or maybe they did realise, for some of them wandered off muttering, in evident horror, that unheard prayers are even worse than unanswered ones. 

 

If the townspeople had been bright enough, they would have foisted a course in reading and writing upon their gods.

 

            Better still telepathy!    

 

For, you see, there is at least one god holding court in the universe somewhere whose whole basis of worship and prayer depends on this dubious branch of the paranormal called telepathy.

 

In the main, however, sad to report, gods and those who pray to them are pretty insensitive and un­imaginative beings (which is perhaps the biggest paradox of all.)

 

The townspeople had a party that night which despite the hammering heat, was wilder than ever: plenty of young meat baked in wrap-arounds of old, together with a rhythmic stumping dance till dawn.

 

Not many stayed at home - but those who did prayed against the further encroachment of weirdities. A few even prayed that the need for prayer be lifted from their shoulders ... so that they could spend their time farming the panhandle.

 


Posted by wordonymous at 9:10 AM EDT
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Wednesday, 22 August 2007
ARITHMETIC

 

When the saviour was due to conduct a sermon on the Mount, he had been warned in advance by the almighty that this was going to be the most important one of all. THE sermon on the Mount, in fact, so he'd better have something pretty good up his sleeve to deliver.

 

Imagine the saviour's consternation, then, when he arrived on the Mount (via Woodmansterne's station of the cross) only to find just a bedraggled mob waiting for him which you could hardly call a tete-a-tete, let alone a crowd.

 

Although he had the beatitudes up his sleeve, he produced a rabbit instead.

 

"Go forth and multiply!" he commanded the mob.

 

And in the circumstances that was a very wise thing to have said.

Published 'Purple Patch' 1991 

 


Posted by wordonymous at 7:36 AM EDT
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We Won't Keep You Long

WE WON'T KEEP YOU LONG  

The room was empty when I arrived. This was unusual because waiting in National Health hospitals had long been a communal activity, if not a particularly sociable one. Perhaps I'd mixed up the time of my appointment. Instead of 9.30, it should have been 3.09.  

No, the lady behind the glass at the reception desk, surrounded by many varieties of potted plant, as in an Henri Rousseau painting, certainly had my name in the appointments register, even if someone had cack-handedly written my name as Lewis Desmond instead of Desmond Lewis.  

"We won't keep you long," said the lady in the jungle. "Take a seat and we'll call you."  I knew I should take what she said with a pinch of salt.

  Well, it didn't seem to matter what name she eventually called out, since I was still the only one in the waiting-room. I was bound to know it was me, by the process of elimination.  

published 'Purple Patch' 1991


Posted by wordonymous at 7:20 AM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 22 August 2007 7:25 AM EDT
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Tuesday, 24 July 2007
Conjugal Spice

The bedroom was quiet, with the thunderstorm abating. No rain rushing along the gutters. No wind whining through the chinks in floor and roof.

Time to catch up on sleep. Husband and wife snored soundly, giving a wide berth to each other's shape, which was easy because the old-fashioned bed was possibly big enough for three.

Then, unlike the erstwhile weather, came a pinpoint of noise. Quiet at first, like the gentle nose-nose of mice or, at the most, rats, coming from under the floorboards.

Maude sat bolt upright, her every faculty primed. "Wake up, George," she whispered loudly.

George grunted. .

"Wake up, I said," she softly squealed.

The noise was now free-flowing rather than the initial separate sound of tentative snuffling. George eventually sat up and said: "What's up, Gorgeous?"

"Listen to that noise - whatever is it?"

His ears pricked. The moonlight, filtering through the slight gap in the print curtains, picked out the tiny glistening beads of sweat on his upper lip. "Nope - can't hear a damn thing, Gorgeous."

"You must be deaf, George. Just be quiet for once..."

The quietness was fast filling with another sound as if bare bones were rattling inside the chimney breast.

By now, Maude had switched on the bedside lamp with a click that always seemed louder at this time of night (especially with the moon on the wane.) "Look!" she screeched from underbreaths.

And they immediately clicked the light off, since what they thought they saw noodling from the cracks between floorborads were bloated worms, fangs denoting where snouts should have been if they did not simultaneously liquefy.

Maude and George long continued to sit bolt upright, fearful that a resumption light would attract further incursions.

"Gorgeous..." "Yes, George?" "The noise has gone, if I'm not too much mistaken." "Oh, George, I'm shaking fit to break and my titties are freezing, and I've got a splitting headache. Rub my feet for me, George." "Okky Doke, Duchess."

He tunnelled inside the bed, but there was a fleshy jelly with a spicy stench which slightly reminded him of Maude's night soil in the old days, before she had taken to wearing stiff underwear designed for those little incontinent moments.

Moonlight later saw fit to well back from the darkest hour before dawn. Still, nothing could be seen except the outer margins of varying consistencies of shadow moving about across the ancient king-sized bed. There were belching snorts as body rubbed against body, the air being sucked from between the red raspberries of skin.

And so much later in the night, it must have been morning. Something seeped into the print curtains like light, bleeding through rose-weft filters and willowy patterns of melting rhubarb.

Laid out across the huge bed were the flesh-sucked husks of two identical human bodies that had, at long last, shared the conjugal bed with a third party. And another storm could be heard grumbling in the distance amid jagged moonlight.


(Published 'The Night Side' 1991)


Posted by wordonymous at 7:38 AM EDT
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Conjugal Spice

The bedroom was quiet, with the thunderstorm abating. No rain rushing along the gutters. No wind whining through the chinks in floor and roof.

Time to catch up on sleep. Husband and wife snored soundly, giving a wide berth to each other's shape, which was easy because the old-fashioned bed was possibly big enough for three.

Then, unlike the erstwhile weather, came a pinpoint of noise. Quiet at first, like the gentle nose-nose of mice or, at the most, rats, coming from under the floorboards.

Maude sat bolt upright, her every faculty primed. "Wake up, George," she whispered loudly.

George grunted. .

"Wake up, I said," she softly squealed.

The noise was now free-flowing rather than the initial separate sound of tentative snuffling. George eventually sat up and said: "What's up, Gorgeous?"

"Listen to that noise - whatever is it?"

His ears pricked. The moonlight, filtering through the slight gap in the print curtains, picked out the tiny glistening beads of sweat on his upper lip. "Nope - can't hear a damn thing, Gorgeous."

"You must be deaf, George. Just be quiet for once..."

The quietness was fast filling with another sound as if bare bones were rattling inside the chimney breast.

By now, Maude had switched on the bedside lamp with a click that always seemed louder at this time of night (especially with the moon on the wane.) "Look!" she screeched from underbreaths.

And they immediately clicked the light off, since what they thought they saw noodling from the cracks between floorborads were bloated worms, fangs denoting where snouts should have been if they did not simultaneously liquefy.

Maude and George long continued to sit bolt upright, fearful that a resumption light would attract further incursions.

"Gorgeous..." "Yes, George?" "The noise has gone, if I'm not too much mistaken." "Oh, George, I'm shaking fit to break and my titties are freezing, and I've got a splitting headache. Rub my feet for me, George." "Okky Doke, Duchess."

He tunnelled inside the bed, but there was a fleshy jelly with a spicy stench which slightly reminded him of Maude's night soil in the old days, before she had taken to wearing stiff underwear designed for those little incontinent moments.

Moonlight later saw fit to well back from the darkest hour before dawn. Still, nothing could be seen except the outer margins of varying consistencies of shadow moving about across the ancient king-sized bed. There were belching snorts as body rubbed against body, the air being sucked from between the red raspberries of skin.

And so much later in the night, it must have been morning. Something seeped into the print curtains like light, bleeding through rose-weft filters and willowy patterns of melting rhubarb.

Laid out across the huge bed were the flesh-sucked husks of two identical human bodies that had, at long last, shared the conjugal bed with a third party. And another storm could be heard grumbling in the distance amid jagged moonlight.


(Published 'The Night Side' 1991)


Posted by wordonymous at 7:36 AM EDT
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SPAM

Baron Harch wanted to keep the principality of Harchwee clean and wholesome, but the docks let him down, since they represented little more than blasphemous effigies of bloated rats tucked up in a baby's frilly cradles. The parks and espalier trails were indeed litter-free, the courtyards and promenades neatly white-washed. Outside the cafes, elderly gentry played chess under the near endless summer skies, flasks of ice-green water ready to hand.

Le Pei left this inner sanctum of the Baronry, where castle turrets poked rocketship imitations at the tireless full moon of a hushed expectant night, and passed through the city gate, where late stragglers mouched and chatted in starry-eyed demeanour. The only sound was the squeaking of his shoes. He would soon hit the alleyways which revealed the beginning hair-line cracks of darker paths beyond. He cast a careless glance at the sky and shivered, for were they clouds reaching out for the yellowing moon? Was there a tinge of dampness in the air? After all, did he *really* want to proceed? At dawn, upon imagining the drone of bombers leaving alternate worlds with their bellies empty, he neared the river's edge, where the buildings became Monopoly Game houses, window- and door-less sheds, each a highly-coloured uniformity. They presented relief from the churchyards and the yew-black dripping shadows of the terraced suburbs and ruined shopping malls. He had yearned then for a friendly wave from a passing cousin, in bright holiday gear, but all he saw were the shifting patterns of dossers fidgetting in their sleep. One dosser in particular died in his arms, whilst stretching pleadingly for a toddy or a tiffin. Le Pei heard him whisper and, later, upon approaching the crazy wharf-side streets beyond the dank, dreary rat-runs of the night, he recalled what else the dosser said: "My head hurts, and I've no use for totin' it further." The soul left the dosser's gaping mouth, surrendering the faintest whine like a tooth-fairy stifling under a little girl's pillow.

The barges bobbed gently. The wharf men hoorayed to those on board, who in turn gave surly response. The Hopper crew, lately arrived, knew that their chief mate had been taken at the depth of dreaming sleep into jankers, and they feared he would never be seen again. The Captain, Tom Hopper, clasped the hand of a rough redneck as he lurched ashore by Big Bollard: "I've got lines of human heads packed like eggs, all with the needful fillings. Some already coloured up for Easter..."

The roughneck did not deign to reply, but merely pointed querulously at the Captain's companion. "'Tis my nephew, Ni-Al, he'll cause you no trouble. He'll bring the cargo of walking heads ashore." Further flat-capped locals grouped around and one of them explained that the cargo would need to be heat-stored in the red- and green-houses. How to get them there, was the query, of course. Captain Tom whistled between his teeth and, slowly, a human head, with sprouts of abortive hair, poked a face over the bows. Then, in a hypnotised gaggle, several others bounced to and fro along the deck, their socketed feet padding like toddlers "up the little wooden hills to Bedfordshire". Eventually, they ventured ashore, by puffing out their cheeks and rolling down the hawsers. Their sibilant gibble-gabble made the dock-men smile - but Tom did not see the joke as he tightened his belt on raw-hide breeches. Hundreds of human heads continued to career from shed to shed, inspecting the best billets available to bivouac for the night. They knew their brains would soon be torn out for the priceless smuggled fluid which they contained, but, as they hustled between the legs of Ni-Al Hopper, it was pain and eventual oblivion for which they actually yearned. As the Great God exacted futures for the several realities in His control, He relished in particular the roasting of such heads of Harchwee. These delicacies welded end to end would stretch from world to world and bridge the gulf between otherwise distant cousins.

Meantime, Baron Harch twitched an eyelid, twitched a second one and wondered if he happened to think less about the seamier side of his domain, it would cease to matter or even to exist at all. "Fitzworth!" he called to his factotum. A leather-aproned, flat-capped man eventually entered, rubbing his greasy hands upon his backside. "Yes, m'Lord?" "Do you believe in philosophy?" "Flossoffy? Blimey, what the heck's that? I don't hold with high-falutin' ideas. It don't pay to fill your head with things like that. I does me job, and that's that. I'm happy enough."

The land of Abrundy Tiddle, neighbouring Harchwee, lay between the two giant waterfalls of Amster-Dam and Surging-Mouth. Through their sheer curtains, the first view was of the terraced villas, where painters, composers and literati met and discussed their new artistic projects. The villas huddled in clutters upon the hills, growing like Siamese Boxes from the woods that weaved the valley's basin. Rudely crafted canals (veining the ruined palace squares of Abrundy Old Town) intermittently branched from the main artery of the Tiddle. It was in fact that mighty frothing river which churned between the banks of the Straddling Church, where ordinary worshippers populated the pews on either side, sometimes glancing up at the great episcopal bridge (on which priests and arch-vicars wended their monkish courses amongst the richer church-goers). Those were the days when Amster-Dam and Surging-Mouth were subject to conflicting geo-centric forces, the Tiddle often bursting its hesitant margins, creating large curds of salt-white to bleach the kneeling choirs of the Straddling Church. Even the altar-piece faced the rogue splatters of the ill-tempered river.

Legend said that the Straddling Church was merely an irritating reincarnation of the City of London's mythick domed cathedral of St.Paul - emerging as a vision from the mists and torrents and earthquakes. The Thames had split it asunder, the Abrundy writers had speculated. Some even believed that their collective imaginary world of Early England was more likely to exist than the real province of Harchwee which neighboured Abrundy Tiddle to the west. Religions were like that.

Abrundy pubs were full of loose talk. The kegs were tapped into the Tiddle itself. The Landlords were rich as a result of the many mouths sucking upon all the pumps. The bars were gorgeously decorated with nap-waterfalls and three-dimensional tags and pieces. The ash-trays and spittoons were cross-hatched with designer pus. But the talk was loose - words flying heedlessly hither and thither, with no sense of reponsibility nor even meaning. Four men sat carelessly around that night - lolled loudly in mock carven coracles and shot their mouths off about non-existent scandals, about unsubstantiated news reports and incoherent jokes, about false literary allusions, with ridiculous puns and unworkable plans of campaign, and about inland black seagulls with squeaky wings. To church and waterfalls, the conversation suddenly turned. "You know of the tales our writers tell?" "About the Great Head of Steam old Amster will fling off come Judgement Day?" "No, but another great quake could see us all dead, with both Amster and Mouth fighting each other like spitting wildcats - it won't be safe even in the villas - I've a good mind to join my cousin Feemy Fitzworth in Harchwee." "Harchwee will suffer floods, too, you know." One rose to go - the others too took his lead - and went to create smaller waterfalls of their own against the back wall of the pub.

Later, their conversation tailed off as they lay beside the bar, each with a drip-feed from the kegs and a brown fizzy liquid gurgling up to the lips from their stomachs. That same night, one of them had a vision of the real St Paul's. But he put it down to the drunken cavortings of his obstreperous noddle. The Head of Steam that old Amster then spat was a precursor of the mammoth cascade that would drown all of them one day, only to trickle out of existence itself down the brain drains of time. Baron Harch knew the legend of Abrundy-Tiddle as a disposable tear-off slip of history, but the Baron's favourite resort was Meadowport. Whilst neighbouring Abrundy Tiddle was unique in its situation between the two mighty waterfalls, in its many back-to-back, two-up-two-down villas huddling to the hills above the ruined palace squares of Abrundy Old Town and its famed church a-spawder the Tiddle, Meadowport was different.

The Baron, the summer before each Lady-Day in Harvest, spent the idle days of his calendar beside Meadowport's painted ocean; merely patchwork pastures in sculptured disguise - cows grazing among the so-called waves and giant model ships; wild geese packing between the mock beach-heads and garlanded dry-dock piers; and simple folk nodding in time to the rhythm of the weather jingles. The Baron's toady, Blasphemy Fitzworth, adjusted the tartan covers of his master's near-crippled wicker deckchair and said: "How's your napper? Cold? Want your hat, sirrah?" "No, thank you, Fitzworth, just start the gulls up, please." The problem was that the wings squeaked, but the Baron dozed off and had a nightmare. The field was planted with heads - stretching to every horizon, thousand upon thousand of human heads, socketed into the soil by every vein and membrane. They nodded; turned widdershins, and back again; they squawked hideous words; some had beaks and umbrella boils; others blew their cheeks into bubble gum shapes; a few even bore smaller heads, black and yellow, that mimicked their host heads; and, finally, there was one as big as a barrage balloon that called itself Moon. And Moon often dreamed about floating over a domed cathedral amidst the flak of some future blitz. The Baron was affrighted, but not without remorse. That panorama of rippling skull crop was pitiful indeed. But what was that noise? A coughing, spluttering engine broke the silence of the nightmare and, wide and lurching, it careered and harvested through the great red sea. At once, Moon, the natural leader of the planted pack, quacked a warning to his flock: "Whatever you do, don't lose your heads!"

The Baron woke abruptly. The wind had come up from across the canvas wastes and whined insidiously around him. The engine noise that had broken his dream had turned up in his waking and juddered from beyond the candy-floss stall. "Fitzworth! Fitzworth!" There was no answer from the toady - he had skedaddled already to his cunny-berry. Dwarfy ear-droppers gathered round the Baron's cot town and began to flawter the skin from his bone, with paring-knives, and entertissued it with erfkin spew.

He awoke again, this time from a nightmare within a nightmare, only to return to the engine noise and saw the mountainous paddle-wheels of the all-American thumper-momster. "Don't lose your heads," shouted Moon, "Keep low and it'll only curl your hair." "Sirrah, wake up!" shouted Feemy Fitzworth. "They say the Straddling Church has collapsed and killed thousands of worshippers!" Dazed, but purposeful, the Baron, in mock of some legendary film star President, stammered: "We must go to Abrundy, to aid our cousins..." Feemy continued: "The Falls have fallen. Amster-dam has lifted its lid and let a steam-critter out as big as the sky above. Surging-Mouth fought back with an endless tunnel of sucking-water ... and ..." The Baron motioned him to let up. "I must stand tall ... give them something to hang on to ... they need to look up and forget..."

Feemy was sad. His friends and cousins would have been at church that day: the list would be endless, all struggling within the dark screecher chasms of an upturned world, mouthing desperate futures they knew in their hearts as well as heads did not exist, fruitlessly undergoing the labour pains of death. The painted ocean of Meadowport twitched, humped its back and settled like a collapsed marquee. The end of the pier show sang on, and the joke got even worse: "I say, I say, I say, they say death is like sicking up all your innards in one go ... me wife made me eat her tumblefruit pie tonight, a special recipe, she said ... it feels as if I'm going to die many times over, I'd better stick me head down me throat, or deep down into the earth, to stop its terrible, terrible heaving..." The joke never reached its punchline, just tailed off. The Baron Harch? Well, he could be on the moon, looking down. Or that story's good as any.

Le Pei surveyed the wild thunderous torrents of Amster-Dam and Surging-Mouth. He knew, as if instinctively, that there was a story here: one that, even if already told, could do with some re-telling. He shrugged, as he stopped day-dreaming. It was really London, the river the Thames and the cathedral St Paul's. But, to Le Pei, it would always be Abrundy Tiddle, with its gothic-turned church straddling the river on colossal pillar-legs. Amster-Dam and Surging-Mouth fell straight as dies from the bluest sky, betokening further worlds up there from which these waterfalls stemmed. Le Pei knitted his brows - science was no longer anything in which to have faith: religion was the only real alternative. The dual torrents fed the Tiddle, but when does torrent end and full-blooded flood begin? That parahistoric day held perhaps the true and provoking answer. The World War had been over for as many days as it takes to mix a family Christmas cake, cook it and eat it. The War had lasted longer than anyone could remember, and the Blitz still echoed in Le Pei's ears. Remnant mortals were even now cowering within makeshift shelters in the shadow of the great cathedral. It seemed as if the mighty St Paul's could no longer grow into the future for fear of crushing the clumsily fashioned terraced Wendy Houses that had been set leaning beneath the north and south facing transoms. Le Pei peered into one such structure and could not make out where the mother ended and the child began. The news of the end of the War, if it had reached them at all, was not easily believed and, even if believed, not acted upon.

In those days, the river passed further from the very portals of our St Paul's than it was healthy to acknowledge. The history books stated, unarguably, that the cathedral had been built on the banks of the river; and a little birdie had also said that they were destined to become closer still. Le Pei sat next to a dosser who looked as if he had been tramping the Underground Lines for most of his life. "What's the reckoning?" asked Le Pei, desperate for even the smallest reaction to the news still filtering through from the fronts. The dosser, of course, made no reply, for he had eaten his own tongue, in preference to spam. Le Pei looked down at his own patent leather shoes. As he waggled his feet in them, they looked as if they were in an ugly face competition, speaking pitifully on behalf of those unable to speak for themselves. They spoke of days to come when everybody would stare at a thing called "Snooker" for days on end from a glowing square of colour in the corner of the parlour, in apparent enjoyment. This could be nothing but science for, if it were religion, it would at least be tangible and understandable. The shoes spoke of this and that, of beginnings and endings, of the hopes that would end in nothing except more unquenchable hopes. Le Pei turned to the dosser who had silentlly left him to his own thoughts. He had obviously disappeared off to plumb the extent of the Circle Line underground. He would report back on the rumours of life between High Street Kensington and Aldgate breaking out fitfully from the air raid Wendy Houses. Then, water started to trickle around Le Pei's shoes. In dribs and drabs, more ebb than flow but, later, in more noticeable coughs and splutters. It drove before it the ill-constructed coracles that had once been Wendies. The dewllers therein would no doubt scream if they had not already stuffed their mouths with spam, in an attempt to use it up - the War having ended too early.

The surging torrents penetrated to the point where a little birdie said it would; and out of the resultant standing waters, there stepped a drenched, doom-dreary figure who mumbled of coming to Abrundy Tiddle. Fears of not knowing whether he were coming or going set in. And he stepped back into the now swirling waters to find the London City he knew must exist. Le Pei watched himself go...

Who upturned the world, only the Great God knows. But at a point between then and now, things started to go badly awry. And the torrential rain fell down upon the sky. The snooker balls bounced off each other, as some are potted, some not. But nobody can hear their ricochet: for all have died and gone away, even the players. Was it boredom or plain despair, or the unbearable stench of cancered tongues in the coloured rolling heads? And having retold it all, Le Pei freshened up his newly barbered body beneath the hosing shafts of Amster-Dam against Surging-Mouth. Later, he walked down to the straddling cathedral, for the morning service was about to begin. There, Cardinal Hopper XXIII would signal this and that, of the shrivelling ends of beginnings, of the seeping fulfilment of hopes feeding upon hopes. A little birdie settled upon the Prayer Duct, fresh from pretending to be a plastic sea-gull in Meadowport, and squeaked another message for all to hear. Le Pei's shoes squeaked, too, and squelched as they entered the mighty portals - but the swollen tide between the pews had found its place at last; and the squeaks were never heard above the waves' wild career between sacramental shores. "If the Great God is so bleeding sane and sensible, how can He ever expect us to believe in Him?" was his last drowning thought.


(Published 'Weirdmonger's Tales' 1994)


Posted by wordonymous at 7:29 AM EDT
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