Category: Blog

  • Christmas in Sam’s Restaurant

    Christmas in Sam’s Restaurant

    “We’ve cleaned, Chef”, she snapped back. She knew what he was feeling because she was feeling it too. Christmas week and she was already planning where to work next.

    My dear reader, it was Christmas week and as usual Carl, the Chef-Patron was in a tumultuously bad mood. The restaurant had been decked with all sorts of Christmas decorations by the front of house staff because, as the manager said, that’s what restaurants did at this time of year. There were pretend gift boxes in shiny, metallic paper, dolled up with bows. There were pastel coloured paperchains and tinsel, elves and snowmen. Even the tight passageway between the 30-seat dining area and the kitchen was made even more claustrophobic by a plastic Santa in his sleigh being led by his reindeer even though they were stuck to the wall.

    Although all of this annoyed Carl, his ire was derived as much from fear and responsibility as it was from seasonal humbuggery. The place was dying. His place. Deep inside himself he knew that this was his fault – and that feeling had been surfacing for months now. But Carl was a stubborn man. That’s how his many years in the business had taught him to be. From his early days as an eager potwash, full to his adolescent brim with dreams of Michelin stars and good reviews in the national newspapers, to this current sad state of anxiety and debt, he had learnt that it was his role to keep the ship of cuisine afloat. 

    A former and formative head chef, a large and bellicose Scottish fellow simply called ‘Chef Mac’ had smashed this idea, this ‘law of the Pros’ into young Carl’s head. 

    “Even if something is wrong, you never show weakness to the brigade, to the front of house and definitely not to the civilians”, he called the paying guests ‘civilians’ for no reason anybody could fathom. By ‘never show weakness’ he meant, ‘never admit it’.

    “Sort it out when you can and never, ever let anybody know that you did so”.

    Last Christmas Sam’s restaurant had been pack-jammed with paying customers. This year, only two tables were seated and those were tourists who had wandered in out of the snow. Of course, they’d ordered the cheapest things from the menu, and when asked if they might like wine to accompany their meal, opted for tap water instead.

    Sam herself had moved on from the place decades before, sliding into a loud retirement on an island in the Adriatic. Carl had been her sous chef, and was the Chef-Patron when this story begins. He was a thin man, classically trained. By this he meant French cuisine, and only French cuisine. He was a good chef, a solid chef, a sad and beaten chef.

    He bossed what he insisted on calling his brigade. This was despite it consisting of two lowly chefs and a kitchen porter called Flo’ who was always dragooned into peeling and chopping the onions, carrots and potatoes before returning to her station. 

    Outside in the bins area, collecting snow on their baseball-capped heads, the two under-chefs were smoking roll-up cigarettes and swapping horse-racing tips.

    Amy dragged on her second roll-up of the session and said nothing. There was nothing to say. The chances were that she’d be looking for another job come the new year.

    Cathal, the slightly more senior chef, butted his fag and stood up from a large drum full of rancid oil. Had Sam’s actually been busy, both the under-chefs would have been heads-down, bums-up with prep and service. Sam’s was not busy. Sam’s had not been busy for months now.

    “It’s the location”, suggested Carl’s non-hospitality friends. They’d seen this on television.

    Carl knew it wasn’t the location. Sam’s was situated on a pretty little side street next door to a shop that sold buttons and threads, and across the road from a beautiful toyshop. The side street, St Odilos St, led through from the Cathedral close to the train and bus stations on Corporation St. Footfall was not the problem. Not even in the Yuletide snow, especially not at this time of year.

    “Maybe you could try and get Gordon Ramsay in for this Kitchen Nightmare programme?” A former friend had suggested this once and only once. Chef-Patron Carl had slammed his vodka and Red Bull onto the pub table and seethed. Gordon bloody Ramsay indeed. Carl was no amateur, no dilettante. Carl was not a civilian. Carl did not want to be a televised freakshow.

    Cathal and Amy returned to the kitchen where the extractor fan’s row competed with Chef’s choice of heavy metal dirges. No Christmas carols this year. He couldn’t bear to hear them in their sugary confected glee. He could not, of course, admit this to anybody.

    The two tables of tourists had departed complaining about having to tip their waitress, a young lass called Katy who had done her best to cater for their every need. The restaurant, despite the decorations, had more the ambience of a waiting area in a hospice than a place of comfort and joy.

    There was an hour to go until the Sam’s closed. The front of house manager, a constantly busy woman in her fifties called Joan, wandered past the flying Santa, up the tight passageway and into the kitchen. 

    “That’s it, Chef. We’re empty. We’ve had three cancellations and four no-shows. I can’t see us getting any walk-ins. What do you want to do?”

    Carl looked up from the pot of beef stock he had been tinkering with for want of anything else to do.

    “Clean!” he snapped back.

    Joan and her team of two had cleaned and cleaned again. Until the restaurant closed, they were unable to clean any more.

    “We’ve cleaned, Chef”, she snapped back. She knew what he was feeling because she was feeling it too. Christmas week and she was already planning where to work next. This would hurt Carl deeply because they loved each other, had done for years, since they had both been callow and ambitious.

    The brigade were back at their stations, shaking off the snow, heads down, watching it melt on the red tiled floor, listening for the most beautiful words in the language of hospitality.

    Those words came from Chef Carl almost in a whisper, “Start cleaning down, you two”. Cathal and Amy, despite the 12 hour shift or maybe because of it, jumped into action. Joan returned to the dining area where her two waitresses looked hopefully at her.

    “Not yet, not yet. Clean what you can for now”, she said.

    Outside a small choir of charitable folk were wandering to the Nag’s Head pub. They were singing, just for the fun of it, for the season. The carol was ‘Once in Royal David’s City’, and they were belting it out while retaining harmony and great good humour.

    Half an hour later with his notes for the day and orders for the next day complete, Carl stood still knowing what his brigade wanted to hear most of all in the world. That was the sound or the lack of it, of the extractors being turned off. The silence of the living.

    Instead a bell rang and the ticket machine buzzed like a boney finger sliding down a metal comb. Carl looked at the order from ten feet away. Three simple mains, no starters. Joan wasn’t going to let three guests go unpaying back into the night. She knew Carl would agree, she just knew him.

    “Check on!” he barked. The two under-chefs got down to it despite wanting to go out there and physically ejecting the heartless bastards who had wandered in solely to wind them up. It wasn’t making the food that was the problem, that was easy, second nature. No, it was cleaning down again.

    Amy – just off her phone – had agreed to meet some other chefs, on their days off, in a scalliwags’ bar called Busters. Cathal was ready for a McDonalds quarter pounder and fries or maybe a Goan fish curry.

    Carl left it to them – he knew this was a sure sign that he was giving up the ghost of a dream. He buttoned his whites and then, for a reason even he couldn’t discern even years afterwards, instead of making his way upstairs to his office, he walked down the passageway of the 300-year-old building to look at the diners.

    There they sat, three of them. From the look of it, a mother, a father and a very young boy. They were, as old Chef Mac would have said, “Arab looking buggers”. Carl sat down on the stool by the bar to watch as their food was delivered and they began to eat.

    “Tap water?”, he whispered to Joan who nodded sadly. Wine was where the money came from.

    The food was delivered and the family, each one of them said thank you to young Katy, their server. Joan and Carl looked on. 

    “There’s something quite dignified, quite peaceful about them, isn’t there?”Joan whispered, touching the chef’s hand lightly as she had done years before.

    Carl tried not to agree with her but couldn’t. There was something quite disarmingly charming, something calming about them as they ate his food and chatted with each other. When their meals were done, instead of finger-snapping at Kate, the mother turned and smiled towards her.

    It was a smile of such genuine warmth and good grace that it forced a cigarette-stained breath each from Joan and the chef. Kate had cleared their plates and the father asked her a question. Armed with the detritus of their table, the young server walked past the bar.

    “Chef?”, she trembled slightly, overawed by her recent encounter more than she was scared of Carl.

    “Yes”, he whispered.

    “They say they’d like to see you”.

    In recent months this request had resulted in either spurious complaints or, worse still, in the one of the diners explaining that they had a suggestion or two to make dishes that Carl had been cooking just fresh from his crib. He shrugged. Why not, how bad could the day get?

    He checked his whites for stains, and made his way over to the table, bowing slightly he said his good evening and waited for the inevitable top tip or moan about the quality of the meat.

    “Thank you Chef for such a delicious meal”, her voice was soft but, again in a way he could never explain, it was transparently honest. Her son, a slight boy with, Carl noticed, only had one hand, one left hand. The young boy’s face was scarred and had been quickly stitched together as if in an ad hoc medical facility.

    “Yes, thank you deeply, Chef. We enjoyed this meal very much”. Father’s accent, like Mother’s was not local, it came from a place Carl felt he knew but did not know. The accent was melodious even as it was just a smidgeon staccato. Their son nodded and smiled up at Carl.

    Young Katy came back with the bill, which she placed in the middle of the table. Mother picked it up and examined it. Katy knew that every single penny counted. Every note helped. 

    “However, I must apologise. We are unable to pay”, said the Mother, calmly and with good grace.

    Carl looked at Joan, “I knew it. I just knew it”. The defeat in his voice smothered any anger. 

    Joan walked to the table. “How could you do this to us?” Any veneer of professionalism had finally departed. Desperation had taken its place.

    The Mother then did something utterly unexpected. Instead of bolting for the door, she beckoned Joan to sit with the family. Carl joined her. The brigade drew closer, certain of an eruption.

    “Dearest Chef, and hardworking colleagues, where we have come from, food, the preparation and serving of food to strangers – even to paying strangers”, his eyes twinkled, “are all precious. The first because it is rare. The second and third because of the skill and the care involved are the marks of great civilisations.”

    Mother said, “Where we come from, no restaurants remain, no bars, no cafes, no homes remain in which such great courtesies, these welcoming talents can be enjoyed. 

    Carl and Joan were as still as artificial ice on artificial holly. Both had given up. 

    Father said, “So, we say thank you and we offer what we have of value to you.” A fake watch? Some terrible old cloth? Carl’s shoulders sank.

    “Sure, why the hell not”, he said. “We’ve got nothing to lose”. The final, inevitable, nail in the coffin of Sam’s Restaurant may as well have come this way as any other.

    The Son pulled a small, battered leather, draw-strung bag from under his lap. He reached into it and pulled out a small book, battered and burnt notebook. He remained silent.

    Mother took his turn to speak, “In lieu of the money we no longer have, we would appreciate it if you would accept this.” She handed the book to the Chef.

    The brigade drew closer still, slightly aghast at the calm that had descended. They watched as Carl opened the book and began to leaf through it. It was full of hand drawn illustrations of dishes and ingredients. Next to the pictures were neatly handwritten instructions.

    “Your recipes?” said Joan.

    The son smiled such a smile that his scars seemed to be dissolved by it. He didn’t speak at first but finally replied in a slight voice, as damaged as his face.

    “These are recipes from our village. From the village that once was but is no longer. Our village of Khirbet Humsa.” He lowered his eyes and his smile failed for the briefest of moments. His mother took the book and handed it to Carl.

    He looked at the very first recipe, a simple dish of chicken and rice that, according to the method neatly inscribed in pen, was cooked ‘upside down’ in a pot. For the first time in many years Carl’s mind was illuminated by the light of understanding. Silence descended throughout the restaurant only warmed by an impromptu crowd of singers rendering ‘Once in Royal David’s City’ like tipsy angels outside in the snow.

    Carl read on. 

    He paused every once in a while to show this page or that to his two under chefs. “This. This one, have you seen this recipe? Look Amy. Look Cathal. Just look”.

    “Is that a tear in his eye?” Chef Amy asked Cathal.

    There was a tear, an elegantly seasoned tear, on Carl’s cheek as the excitement, the eagerness of his younger self flooded in. Hours passed. Blissful hours. Hours in which the restaurant seemed to take on the fragrances of each recipe. No one noticed the passing of time. Although young Katy had noticed something very strange indeed.

    “How is he reading it? It’s not even in English,” Katy asked Joan nervously.

    Carl and the other chefs huddled over or rather into the book. They were oblivious to every and anything else. Joan had never seen any of them as, what was the word? As beatific, that was the word, dear reader. As blissed out, as thoroughly immersed in the sheer beauty of word and image. 

    “It’s like they can taste the words”, said Katy and Joan agreed.

    Indeed, the chefs had ingested, digested and memorised every recipe in the slim volume. Carl turned to where the family had been sitting. “Thank you but we can’t keep this, it is too precious, too valuable.”

    But the Mother and the Father and Son were gone.

    The next day the brigade gathered early in the kitchen and began, all four of them including Flo’ the potwash, and they planned a new menu. Meanwhile Joan and Katy took down to old signs from the front of the restaurant. Within a day a new sign was given pride of place. To honour the mysterious family, Sam’s had become, quite simply, ‘Khirbet Humsa’.

    Every year since these events had transpired, Carl and Joan would clean down and then go and sit in the front of the house. Hand in hand they would wait for the return of the family.

    The End

  • A Christmas Hope

    A Christmas Hope

    Christmas Eve had come at last, and the house was festooned with decorations. Granny Bacon had called it ‘gaudy’ when she came to visit. Sean was fairly sure that this meant it was completely bloody brilliant.

    Part 1

    It was two weeks before Christmas Eve, and there was no Mum to be seen or felt in the house by a seriously minded five-year-old called Sean Baker. He was not at all happy about it. Not at all. That said, the absence of Mum merely added tonnage to the weight of Sean’s worries. He’d not been really happy since Mum and Dad had told him about ‘the baby’ that was coming into his home. His home for bloody God’s bloody sake! A phrase he’d learnt from his uncle Steve.

    “Where’s Mum?” Sean was sitting at the top of the stairs, looking through the bannisters like a small animal in a particularly benign zoo.

    “Mum’s in the pub with auntie Jane and Cloe from the newsagents. She won’t be long, love.” Sean’s dad was making the house look bright but cosy on this day before Christmas Eve.

    Sean thought about this for a moment.

    “Will she bring The Baby back”, he paused and searched himself for something grown-up to add, “finally?”

    The Baby saga had been dragging on and Sean wanted to get it all over with. He wanted to face his enemy in mortal combat if needed. Him a knight in armour, The Baby with whatever weaponry it could muster. Sean felt that would be a lot given the importance The Baby was given by Mum and Dad. They never bloody well stopped talking about it. The Baby this. The Baby that. The Baby’s tests – at a baby’s age! The Baby’s crib. The Baby’s feeding equipment. The Baby even had a car seat like Sean. Bloody The Baby.

    His dad laughed as he dusted the shelves in the family room. 

    “Not from the pub, Seany. That would be a proper Christmas miracle. Anyway, it’s not time yet. Why don’t you go outside and play for a while?”

    Outside the old house it was grey and overcast, threatening rain rather than snow. The drizzly kind of rain that got into your hair and clothes. Sean shook his head and went back into his bedroom to continue drawing. His sketch pad was full of monstrous images, mostly of babies doing unspeakable things like eating his toys, cuddling his mother, going to the park with dad, sleeping in his bed, and worst of all the worse things, kicking Sean out into the savage streets with its huge, clumping baby feet.

    As far as he was concerned the impending arrival of the home-wrecking interloper was – had he known the word – apocalyptic.

    “Bloody baby”, he said.

    “Bloody hell, bloody baby”.

    “Bloody, bloody, bloody”.

    He started to draw again using his favourite red, yellow and black crayons.

    Downstairs, Dad had started to unpack the Christmas tree and all its baubles and variously coloured tinsel built up over the years. The angel to go on top of the tree had been in either Dad or Mum’s families for as long as either of them could remember. She was actually a crowned and jewelled ballet dancer, feet pointed, face beatific. Gingerly he reached into the box and retrieved Sean’s favourite decoration, a rocket ship with Santa astride it, arms in the air, beard spread by the high speed. Dad held it in his hand and remembered when he and Mum had taken Sean to the remaining toyshop in town, Mr and Mrs Khawaja’s, so the four-year-old could choose his own decoration. Sean, serious as usual even at that age, had taken his time before pointing at the rocketship.

    Mum’s pregnancy had not been easy. Tests upon test following a scan that had highlighted an anomaly in the new baby’s head size. 

    The young and overworked doctor had told Mum and Dad that there was “Really nothing to worry about, we just need to check a few things”. After the first few tests, however, a grand gentleman, a Mr not a mere doctor, had stood in the background looking over the paperwork. The grand Mr had confabbed with the younger doctor quietly. She nodded a lot but even Dad could see the barely hidden frown that came over her face every so often like clouds over the sun.

    Mum and Dad hadn’t bored Sean with the continuing tests. But following what they’d called ‘a very big decision’, they had finally told him that he was going to be joined by an awesomely awesome little sister.

    Sean had nodded and muttered, “Bloody hell, not a girl” before returning to his room to readdress his drawing.

    Part 2

    With two months to go until the arrival of The Bloody Baby, Mum and Dad had sat Sean down on the couch in the family room and had explained to him that his new brother or sister was coming home soon but that everybody would have to be very gentle and kind because the baby might not be very well for a little while.

    Sean pondered this and then asked, “Why can’t we get it when it’s bloody better?”

    “Sean!”, Mum had said.

    “Why though?” As if having The Baby invade the house wasn’t bad enough, now it seemed to Sean that everybody had to be extra specially nice to it.

    Dad said, “We’re not going back to the why, why, why stage again, Sean?”

    “Why?” said Sean.

    Dad and Sean laughed.

    Mum, smiling, said, “Seany, the baby is part of our family…”

    Sean interrupted, “That’s what you said about the last one, and that one never came home”. He was right. A year previously Mum and Dad had sat Sean down in the family room and told him about the imminent arrival of a little brother. A few weeks later they had told him that that new playmate would not be coming because he had decided to go straight to the afterlife. They said that the afterlife was a very special place that people usually had to wait to get into. Some people, however, got in early.

    “Why?”

    “Well, Seany, that’s one of those things that we don’t know the answer to yet”, said Mum.

    “Why?”

    “Because we haven’t learnt enough. It’s one of the loads of things that we don’t know a lot about. It’s like how does Santa deliver presents to millions of kids with just a few elves and a slay? Or why does the daft dog Adelaide love to roll in the manure up at the allotments”, said Dad.

    Even Sean had to admit that there were quite a few things he didn’t understand yet. The Santa one particularly irked him. How was that possible? Suitably distracted he went back to his own room and took to imagining solutions.

    Part 3

    Christmas Eve had come at last, and the house was festooned with decorations. Granny Bacon had called it ‘gaudy’ when she came to visit. Sean was fairly sure that this meant it was completely bloody brilliant. He had helped with everything except the lights, he had watched Dad fiddling and untangling and replacing the dead ones. In a most exciting fifteen minutes, he’d watched Dad ‘changing a fuse’ in one of the plugs.  Dad had said a word even worse than ‘bloody’ which Sean had stored for later use.

    Despite what the weathermen and women had said, snow was falling. Sean had sat on his chair in his room looking out of the window at it in wonder. Of course, he had a rough idea what caused snow from one of the books his Granny Murphy had given him for his birthday but it still never failed to slacken his jaw and widen his eyes.

    As a side issue to the quietening of the world by the snow, Dad had gone to get Mum and The Bloody Baby from the hospital. After a while, Sean grew bored with wonderment and felt the need for company. He picked up his last Christmas elf hat and made his way downstairs to where Uncle Steve was playing a video game on Mum’s console. Mum wrote about videogames for a living and was bloody good at it as far as Sean was concerned.

    “Uncle Steve, did you ever have a baby sister?”

    Uncle Steve paused mid-freekick, “Yes, Sean mate, of course I did. That’s your aunties Eve and Sarah”.

    “No, I meant a Baby sister”, seemed obvious to Sean because Aunty Eve was very cool indeed. He’d only met Aunt Sarah once when he was very young. She lived in Australia, which was a long way away.

    “Well, my old mate, they were both babies once. Sarah is my twin in fact, we were both babies at the same time. We came home to Aunty Eve, who was very happy to see us.”

    “How do you know she was? You were just babies. She might have been bloody annoyed.”

    “She told me she was when I was a bit older, mate. About your age in fact.”

    “Oh”, said Sean, a bit nonplussed.

    “Sean, mate, what do you want for Christmas?”

    “Not a bloody baby sister that’s for sure.”

    Sean’s imagination fired up and he was about to ready to list his Christmas needs when he heard the front door opening. 

    “It’s them, mate. All three of them. Ready?”

    Sean was not very much not the slightest bit ready. It seemed like every single bloody day for the last month The Baby things were brought back to the house. Who knew that a baby needed so much stuff. Anyway, Sean sat his ground in the family room waiting for it, for her, to come to him.

    The snow kept falling, all silent and refreshing, as the Christmas lights that Dad had mended flickered and lit up Rocket Santa. Uncle Steve had turned off the video game and beckoned to Sean to meet his new sister. Sean had shaken his head. He wasn’t great with new people at the best of times, this was not even close to those. For the first time in a while, he popped his thumb into his mouth and hoped against hope that The Baby would grow up fast and be more like Aunty Eve, who was great fun, than Granny Bacon, who was stern.

    After a minute or two the door to the family room creaked open and in walked Uncle Steve with Mum and Dad. Dad was holding the car seat. Mum looked tired but was smiling as she made her way to the sofa and gingerly sat down. Dad placed the car seat gently on the old, dented wooden floor. He was smiling too. Smiling fit to burst. Uncle Steve was, would you believe, wiping tears from his eyes.

    “Please go over and see her, Sean,” Mum had never sounded like that, almost desperate but at the same time, underlying that, was a bigger emotion. He couldn’t quite identify it, what with it being the first time, but deep inside him he felt it. He felt that this meeting between him and The Bloody Baby wasn’t just important to her, it was the most important thing. So, of course, he walked to the car seat and stared down. 

    There was his new sister. Her eyes were closed, her hands were encased in mittens, on her head was a warm-looking cap. 

    “Come down to her level, Sean”, Dad said. Not an order, more of a piece of sincere guidance. Sean complied. He knelt by the car seat and breathed in her new smell as it mixed in with the usual Christmas smells of fir trees, dried figs, cakes and, he was sure, the snow.

    The baby opened her eyes and looked back at him. They were brown, deeply so, just like his. He examined her fat little face. Even at her age, it was more like Aunty Eve than Granny Bacon. Quite honestly, he couldn’t see how she was broken at all. In fact, she looked and smelt remarkably bloody brilliant. She reached a little, mittened hand up into the air and seemed to jerk it about before it dropped back to her side. 

    “Go on, Sean mate, you can touch her.”

    Sean reached out his hand and touched the baby’s hand, which jerked again. He knew he had to do something about that because it seemed to him that she couldn’t possibly be enjoying it. He reached in and held both of hands as gently as he could. Even through the material of the mittens he felt that he could feel her pulse, feel her new life, feel his little sister. 

    “What’s she called?” he asked the assembled company.

    Dad looked over to Mum. 

    “Well, love, we thought you might like to choose her name. After all, she’s your sister,” said Mum.

    The baby’s, her, hands jerked and she closed her eyes again, breathing quietly and almost imperceptibly although Sean perceived it.

    He was to name her? Him, Sean, who had never named anything ever, not ever in his life. He didn’t move. He didn’t want to move. He just sat beside his sister thinking of the best name for her he could.

    Outside the snow continued to fall and the world’s new silence enabled Sean to think more deeply about his great honour. Inside the house, Uncle Steve went into the kitchen to make some tea. Mum closed her eyes and leant into the old, overstuffed sofa. Dad knelt to Sean and asked, “Any ideas, Sean?”

    “Bloody hell, not yet Dad”, whispered Sean. “It’s very important. You can’t rush this”.

    Dad hugged him and went to sit down at Mum’s feet.

    The lights continued to flicker, the house to creak, the kettle started steaming, everything seemed the same but was changed. 

    Sean found himself bloody well smiling. He knew what he was going to call his sister.

    “Can we call her Hope”, he said.

    Mum’s eyes opened, “Why Hope, darling?” she said.

    “Mum, we’re not going back to the Why stage are we?” he said.

    Dad laughed, even though he was visibly crying.

    Sean stood up straight, “Because I hope she’ll like being part of the family”.

    “Tea’s ready!” yelled Uncle Steve from the kitchen as the snow fell gently outside.

    Sean walked over to the Christmas tree, plucked Rocket Santa from the tree, walked back to Baby Hope and placed it next to her.

    The End

  • Welcome

    Welcome

    This website is full of my own work. There is absolutely zero A.I..

    Please feel free to nose around the factual work, my short stories and poetry.

    You’ll also find some of my factual writing, which I hope you enjoy.

    Oh, please do get in touch if you’d like to know more.

    All the very best, Tim and Noel.

    Tim and Sydney the cat. Tim is reading a document.
  • McDonald-Sayer turns away from his dream

    McDonald-Sayer turns away from his dream

    Chapter 1

    In which our hero’s history catches up with him. We discover his family. The mob solidifies and a lady of ability is introduced.

    Revolving doors on the 41-storey building. It has revolving doors and this, of course, was a problem for John McDonald-Sayer. He had stipulated when best laying plans that nothing to do with Barleycorn Buildings should revolve. 

    “If I’d wanted revolutions, I would have hired a Cuban,” he had joked, weakly.

    “Yes, sir”, replied the worried architect.

    Not only are the doors revolving, the top of the building is too. Even more annoyingly so are all eight of the elevators that crawl up and down the sides of the tower like beads of water on a turning pole dancer.

     McDonald-Sayer turns away from his broken dream statement of self. The final indignity grazes his rapidly tearing up vision: “Barely Conned Bluidings” declares the back of the 10-metre high sign. The front of the sign is still covered in tarpaulin waiting to be uncovered by Jack Nicholson or Keanu Reeves or Aung San Suu Kyi (depending on commitments) at the cock’s call on Grand Opening Day.

    “Someone”, ponders McDonald-Sayer,“is taking the piss”.

    He is correct but it must be said that it is mostly his fault. The bit that isn’t relates to several million dollars of national lottery winnings that now sits mainly in the bank account of the not really that worried architect. His lucky number had come up shortly before McDonald-Sayer left for a mind expansion trip to South America. He had chosen it based on the telephone number of the gun seller from whom he was going to purchase the gun with which he intended to shoot his master and tormentor down in cold, cold blood. 

     McDonald-Sayer is not aware of this. Such is the mighty power of knowledge.

    “Will it change your life?” asked the architect’s deeply predictable girlfriend who had stuck by him through his studies and early career.

    “Too bloody right it will – but not as much as it’s going to change someone else’s.”

     McDonald-Sayer has never related well to other human beings because he has never needed to, such is the power of money. He’d always been cushioned by several billions of dollars. These had been earned via several hundred dodgy deals, street brawls, arsons, insurance frauds, possibly a murder or five and some excellent legal advice over the preceding centuries. What McDonald-Sayer saw as good humoured banter and ribbing, others saw as arrogant bullying and fear inducing overbearing power plays. He is not aware of this reaction in other people. Such is the power of self-knowledge.

    So, the architect; in fact, the entire team down to the tea ladies who supplied the brickies with tea and thrills, hate his guts. After some judicious sharing of the architect’s lottery money, they’d all agreed that as McDonald-Sayer was flat on his back Peru or Columbia they would not leave the job. Not until it was finished and quite completely fucked-up.

    They proceeded with the kind of vigour and dedication that drew pages of appreciation in related journals and even gasps of awe from passers-by. They finished the project ahead of schedule and massively over budget with no interference from any of McDonald-Sayer’s advisors – who, like them, hated their gunner and had been pleased to jumped ship wrapped in financial lifejackets supplied by the mutinous crew. 

     McDonald-Sayer, leaves the site, possibly forever, and motors his Roller Roycer out to the countryside where he stamps it to a stop on the thickly gravelled drive of the family seat. It skids, it scars, the car hates McDonald-Sayer. His mother, flanked by Cadrew the butler, stands at the open door smiling the smile of a woman who never sees the dark side of anything anywhere ever because she has never actually seen the dark side of anything, anywhere, ever. Cadrew has no expression – the muscles of his face having been cast into the neutral shortly after his sixth birthday at the expense of the McDonald-Sayers.

    John remains in the car, slamming the steering wheel with his fists, tears sparkling from his face; screaming a Buddhist chant of serenity.

    “My little darling is such an expressive spirit, Cadrew, I am often amazed that he never chose theatrical production as a career,” Mrs McDonald-Sayer’s fairy-floss voice wafts past the butler who, nodding, steps forward and opens the driver’s door. 

     McDonald-Sayer falls out of the car, foetal onto the path and yells – serene in his petulance – at Cadrew. 

    Soundless, sprightly and showing some of his years, the butler moves at a hover to the boot of the motor and collects the luggage. 

    Mrs McDonald-Sayer calls wanly, “Darling boy, tea is waiting, we have scones and Mrs Cadrew’s homemade strawberry jam. Your father is coming up from the country to meet you. Maybe you two can smoke a cigar and play at billiards?” 

    She reverses into the foyer, smile affixed, tidies a floral arrangement and steps aboard the magnetically propelled platform to be conveyed, silently to tea. His father is coming to town. The son rolls over onto his back and looks up at the clouds that scud by making shapes that a few miles away a small boy recognises as a submarine and a horse. 

    “Oh good. Oh, perfect. Daddy, oh great”, screams John McDonald-Sayer. No sarcasm here, he means it. He has a scintillating relationship with his Pa. The grand old man of hippiedom who has appeared in the front covers of Time, News Week, Gandalf’s Garden, Oz, and any other publications he’d held a stake in. His quest for enlightenment is as legendary as his fantastic fortune. Whenever he found himself at home with his son, he would play with the boy for hours on end; teaching through play. Endlessly heaping attention, gifts and true love on the lad until the time came to catch the next wave by which he meant, “flight”, by which he meant, “flight on my own plane in my own airline”. 

    “Stay true to yourself at all times, son”, McDonald-Sayer senior would say. “Find your inner strength peace and power, find your oneness. Watch yourself for the rest of today, or tomorrow. Notice your instincts. Surrender to the now and realise that we are all one. We are all God and not-God, we are all each other”. His Pa had explained this to him, on a hill overlooking vineyards – their vineyards – in the Hunter Valley on a warm October evening on John’s fourteenth birthday, shortly after he’d been expelled from Eton for bullying. “Do not seek to change or understand others. Seek only the truth of yourself.” 

    “Yes, father. I understand”, they were both very high indeed on his elder’s home grown grass so it did all make sense to him. For too long, he felt as he chewed through the final morsels of a fascinating chocolate bar, for too long he’d tried to be what he wasn’t. He’d tried to fit in with the morons. He had put way too much effort into “altering the perceptions of self rather than the self’s perceptions”.

    “Son,” his father took the spliff and realigned his kaftan in movement that simultaneously realigned his chakras, “we need to find the courage to say, ‘No’ to the things that are not serving us if we want to rediscover ourselves and live our lives with authenticity”.

    “Yes“, said John, “Whoa.. yes. Not serving us. Thanks Pa.” He took the drugs with a physical effort that lead to a pleasing realisation of this own body was also that of his father.

    As the sun set that evening, the father mediated with the Diamond Sutra: he would allow the true sense of self that would elude his son all his waking life to enveloped him. John laid back on the grass, inhaled deeply, closed his eyes and recalled what his Pa had told him a year previously when he had talked of how seeing New York homeless had confused and disgusted him.

    “Krishnamurti once said: ‘Let us put aside the whole thought of reform, let us wipe it out of our blood. Let us completely forget this idea of wanting to reform the world.’ It was true, of course it was true”, his Pa had said, looking for his passport. 

    With deft rhythm , the older man took back the spliff and began inhaling on the in-breaths of a Sutra taught only to the wisest of men in the most secluded of temples. 

    “The world can look after itself can’t it Pa?”, John took the joint from his father’s hand and drew in its earthiness.

    “That’s right son,” his father, who with the rapid, single movement he’d learnt in Tibet, took the joint back, “the world is you, you are the world, removing the conflicts in yourself with remove them from the world.” 

    Snatching the doobie back in a move he’d learnt at Eton, John revelled in the kind of truths that only a father and son could share, “Skin up, dad”, he breathed.

    “Certainly son, certainly.”

    Now, ten years had passed and his father is returning from the country. Returning despite the light pollution, “electric germs” and “human stress encampments” that usually keep him away from home. He is coming back to see his beloved boy. John McDonald-Sayer stands up, and waits for Cadrew to come and pick him up. The retainer returns and de-gravels his silent master. They enter the family home.

    The house had been moved, brick-by-brick from Somerset in England in 1951. The McDonald-Sayer family had traced a family tree back to 1066 (or at least circa 1066) and the De Kinsey family, and had attached themselves to it. The De Kinseys had, through subterfuge, political wrangling, violence, sycophancy and outright brigandage managed to hold on to the sprawling manse since they’d built it in 1072. For centuries the family had prospered using all the tools at their disposal. But history moved faster than they did.

    With Queen Victoria, and the move to manufacturing, came a change in fortunes and standing. This included an Earldom: the First Earl of Cheddar grunted proudly on meeting the Queen Empress, who shuddered and moved on. The farm labourers moved to the cities. The villages that provided respect and hard cash to the family, were denuded of youth, and filled instead with bitter, cider-soaked geriatrics. Of course the family had contacts in Manchester and London, so a move to trade as well as industry was inevitable, as was occasionally failing to dress for dinner.

    Chapter 2

    Following a disgustingly publicised dalliance with a young fellow in Antibes, the Earl relocated to The Demons Club

    With the end of empire and the start of the War to end all Wars, the McDonald-Sayer boys as they now appeared, grew tired of receiving white feathers in the post, and threats of prison sentences. Conscientious objection was often mistaken for outright cowardice in this new world, and no amount of money could shift that so it appeared. Forced into a decision between being maimed in a local gaol or maimed in foreign field, they opted to go to war in the hope that they could manoeuvre their way to the back and some quiet. 

    All three returned: one, a burbling, shell-shocked innocent incapable of any active function went straight into poetry, dismally and then opened an Art Gallery off the King’s Road in London before taking up the reigns of head of the family on the death of his father by whisky. The second son, syphilitic, blind in one eye, addicted to young boys, had entered the church. The third, and youngest, returned replete with money from deals in Belgium, France and Prussia – family now owned several chemical factories – had relocated North to invest in more factories still. He prospered, greatly, while all around him foundered mysteriously.

    With the Second World War came an unfortunately mistimed dalliance with fascism, but so did most of the English upper aristocracy and commercial upper class, and so it was mostly forgotten. The 2nd Earl spent most of his time in London and the Cote D’azure exploring systems at the gambling tables or practising Magick in the hopes of yet more power.

    However, following a disgustingly publicised dalliance with a young fellow in Antibes, the Earl relocated to The Demons Club in St James where he proceeded to be shot dead in 1956 by his last remaining son – the impatiently titular 3rd Earl. The 17th Earl had escaped becoming the last aristocrat hanged in England.

    There had been rumours at the time that due to a congenital weakeness of the hands, the younger aristocrat would not actually have been able to pull the trigger of the Thompson submachine gun that had splattered his father’s parietal and occipital lobes across the walls of the The Demons Escoffier-designed kitchen. It was also unlikely that he would have been able to simultaneously shoot the old man in the chest with a Luger pistol. 

    Tragically, all the legal advice provided free of charge by the Yorkshire branch of the family, could not save him from the tender mercies of the Wormwood Scrubs nooseman. The Yorkshire branch had sprung from the loins of youngest of the sons to return from the War to end all Wars. The title of Earl, the house and everything else that went with it passed to him because the Bishop was unable to leave Rome, where he’d fled to a few years earlier. 

    So, the house speaks of historical precedents, of grandeurs earned over centuries, of honours bestowed and of achievements yet to come. It is called ‘The Glancings’, no one knows why. Its central courtyard, protected on all sides by high walls each cornered by tall, elegant towers, is home to a Go-Kart track, a permanent marquee and several angry peacocks.

    Those trinkets are nothing, however, when you experience the 15-metre high statue of the Buddha bedecked each day by new petals and neatly polished swastika; you won’t experience it because you will never be allowed near it. It was not the swastika at the 45-degree angle mind you, but the good one, the nice one, the family having divested itself of its Nazi connections on the advice of their spin doctor.

    Mrs McDonald-Sayer spends an hour a day cleaning the Buddha with chamois cloths and warm, soapy water. She whispers even warmer, even soapier entreaties to it, often collapsing onto its lap in fits of desire and giggles. She knows that although the Campbell-Stuarts are a lean stringy clan for the most part, so this statue is as dear to her as the man she truly loved. She calls as “Darling David, dearest Hurst” and loves it as such. He was a boy who she knew when she was a girl. He had disappeared when she went to school in Switzerland. He was somewhere in the world, she prayed.

    John heads to his rooms, red-faced, with puffy eyes and a firm requirement to shoot something soft and alive with a handgun. Cadrew follows.

    “Why the fuck would someone take the piss out of me like this, Cadrew? My mind is as open as my heart to the truth of the now and the holy me inside. I can perceive and experience Real Moments. I relay the life force. What the fuck is going on that these people should do this?” He slams his foot into one of the cushioned pillars provided for that purpose – outwardly expressing his anger rather than repressing it so that it would grow and infect the authenticity of his life experience – as the sign attached the pillar advises him.

    “Maybe sir should call a meeting with the relevant parties in order to ascertain the circumstances under which this, if I may say so, such an outrageous tragedy occurred?” Cadrew speaks slowly as he selects some suitable shootingwear from the sporting wardrobe.

    “I don’t want to experience those kind of anti-authentic vibes for fuck’s sake. All that negative energy in one room! Having to deal with small souls would obviously feedback in a severely unwhole way. I’m over it. Let the fucking building take care of itself.”

    “Then,” Cadrew lays layer after layer of tweed, and a snakeskin holster across the bed, “maybe a cool way to inject some realism to these people would be to send our person at Hardy, Crum and De Angelis to see them right, if you get my meaning, sir?”

    John welcomes a smile into his physical world and casts a nod to his servant. 

    ”Our lady, Cadrew, our woman, our goddess, our Kali. What a bloody marvellous idea, yes invite Ms Belinda Dylan to a meeting with me tomorrow morning at 11:30am.”

    Chapter 3

    “History? fuck it.”

    Left to its own devices, Barleycorn Building slowly fills with the homeless. By the hour it becomes engorged with the wanted, the unwanted, the witless, the weary and the wary. Music thumps from the 21st floor. The walls of the 18th floor are transformed by spray cans, the roof pool fills with the scum of months.

    The security guards watch the TV, read true crime and graphic novels; nod occasionally as the stream of new residents is complimented by one more character. They call the occasional internal number to ask that the fighting should not include the ejection of items from the street-side windows; and they direct the pizza delivery relay crews to the correct locations. 

    The edifice warms, and in its nooks and crannies things are hidden. It echo with stories of both the hard and no luck varieties. Dreams fill its cavities matching themselves to long, secured, comfort-blessed snores and sleep speech. 

    Anthony John Woods (A.K.A Pokie) sits cross-legged on the 15th floor boardroom table drinking schnapps from the drinks cabinet and throwing spitballs at the postmodernism on the walls. His hood is down, his sunglasses are off, he smells horrific even to himself. 

    He’d been sexually abused since aged 11, drunk since 12, on the street since 13. He is now 17. He is 17 today. It is 11:30am and he is partying, full of breakfast for the first time in six months. He flicks at the remote control and called up another music channel. 

    “History? fuck it.” Flick.

    “Sport, fuck it.” Flick, swig, smoke.

    “A total eclipse of the heart” – What? Flick, swig, smoke.

    “Terror alert medium. Campaign continues in the West. Next I speak to Francine Jordan about why banning the writings of Kahlil Gibran in our schools is freedom of speech.” Flick, swig, inhale. 

    “Anthony, stop changing the channels, man, there is nothing to watch, just bang some tunas on the box. Play tunas for your birthday, Tony, play up, man.” 

    Under the table, on his back lays Neil Hendle, AKA“All-in-One-Boy” or “Fireman” compressed into a singlet and camo jeans stolen from somewhere. He’s smoking a spliff and trying to read a book on Japanese management theory that he’d discovered the previous night. 

    “It is my birthday, All-in-One-Boy, my happy to be older day! Pressies and games, bro’.”

    “Yes, I know, man, I am totally and completely upon that. It is all good. But how is a man supposed to consolidate his mind on a subject when box is blasting randomness galore into the air? Happy total birthday to you and all that, but that’s no excuse for pollution of the aural ocean is it?” 

    “Go on then, you choose. I can’t be bothered.” Standing quickly, elegantly from the cross-leg, Anthony John Woods, AKA Pokie, jumps from the table and takes a seat on the floor next to the smaller boy. Handing over the remote he blows a kiss and closes his eyes, “you choose for me. It’s my birthday.”

    “You really do stink. There’s a shower behind the mirror over there. All god cons, seriously, I was in there last night for an hour or more, very nice it was with lots with the hot and the cold and body wash stuff. Why not treat your birthday suit to clarification, Pokie mate? At least for my sake because I have to live with you are not easy to love, love, not right now.” Rolling away from the source of the stench, with remote in hand, All-in-One-Boy lays in hope.

    “There’s a shower behind the mirror? That’s unusual. How did you find that one out then?” Pokie looks nervously at the enormous wall mirror and then back, slightly less nervously, to his friend.

    “I went lurking. Last night, while you were asleep and screeching about rape as usual, I went on a bit of a search and destroy mission. And you should know that when there are mirrors, there is in-aviary something behind them – like magic times.” All-in-One-Boy hopes hard about the shower, his hope is that later on when things got naked and close, he won’t have to hold his nose as well as his dick.

    “Walls, man. You tend to find walls behind mirrors. My foster parents didn’t raise an idiot.” Pokie walks over to the mirror, thinks about smashing it with his already scarred fist, looks back at All-in-One-Boy who shakes his head, and so he presses his nose against the glass until the stink of his breath forces him backwards.

    “Go and have a shower, man, because sometimes I’d like not to notice that you’d come in. You know I love you, Pokes. But, despite what the world wants us to believe, some things can go too far even for love and, frankly, you have done. Now fuck off and stop analysing what’s behind the mirror, it’s a shower, go into it.”

    All-in-One-Boy met Pokie six months previously, so their love was still marching ahead. They had looked at each other and their loneliness had subsided to form a warm, safe place to live just big enough for their cynicism and defences disappear long enough for them to share food. They’d fucked the first night, how ashamed they didn’t feel, how warm and satisfied they did. Then they kept walking together, swapping stories and holding hands, taking what they could from each other, and giving back. They were in love, so the stealing of bags, and the rolling of drunks, the begging and slipping into each others arms in the same Salvation Army bunkbed flew by with the accompaniment of birds and rain. 

    “It’s my bunk, you fack!” 

    “I know, isn’t it great?”

    “Yes, hold my head. My head hurts and acts up.”

    “Why do you fuck around with your words? With the sounds? I always understand what you say, but I don’t get it.”

    “I don’t think I do do, Dodo.”

    “OK.”

    Pokie looks around the place to soak it all up and remember it for when it all goes away on him. This is what he sees:

    It is a big, glass room, carpeted and balmy in its never-think-about-it warmth. Red, Japanese-patterned carpet. Injected warmth from the air, when the climate was acceptable, from the mechanics when it wasn’t. It was brilliantly put together, working well, as perfectly as any design could.

    (Once every 23 minutes and nine seconds, everything slows down, starts clanking here and there, gurgles and bubbles and generally creates a feeling of irritation. At least it would be a feeling of irritation if you were the kind of person who expected superb pieces of design to work superbly every time, all the time.)

    At 11:26am the same day a Jaguar pulls up outside The Glancings. Not one of those flash Jags, spoiler-ladened, bright yellow, modernised and wailing of its owner’s wealth. This was your classic Jaguar. Silver, E-Type. Yelling its owner’s wealth all the same but also taste, great taste, the best taste. Its owner is the company of Hardy, Crum and De Angelis; avenging angels, cleaners, lawyers.

    They also own the soul, or near as makes no difference, of beautiful, sharp faced and even sharper brained Belinda Dylan (28) who steps out of the car, immaculate both. A wonderful spinster in the new-fashioned sense of the word. Wise beyond her years in all matters pertaining to living a life to the most exacting standards of look-after-yourselfishness. She is good to her mother and father – still living, on a farm, somewhere deep in Derbyshire. She Skypes them on a weekly basis, confirming her still childless state with a smile in her voice. She sends birthday cards and anniversary gifts, she even goes home for Christmas Day, but is always back in her city central apartments by Boxing Day.

    There is nothing cheap or tacky about this woman, from her abstractly perfect diction down to her elegantly cropped pubis. She walks in splendour, everything matching save for one, usually small detail, a broach, a belt buckle, a t-shirt, that she uses like beauty spot. Today her shoe buckles are ever so slightly the wrong shade of grey that they set everything else off perfectly.

    Belinda has been the preferred legal aid to John McDonald-Sayer since they met during his very brief attempt to study economics at one of the major Oxford colleges. She was the one who following a particularly heroic sex binge had enquired why somebody who never needed to worry about money should need to study economics. He left the next day, with her card.

    Chapter 4

    You haven’t neutered him, yet darling, he is still awfully attractive. I love the way he stands there imaging me naked and feeling guilty about it

    Emerging from the company car, Belinda straightens her skirt, collects her laptop and mounts the first step at exactly 11:29. Cadrew opens the doors, she plants a warm and deliberately embarrassing smoocher on his cheek, whispers, “What-ho Cadrew, how’s it hanging baby man?” and proceeds up the stairs to her meeting.

    “Come in, come in Belinda, sit down. Father is here, he’s doing his meds (by which he meant ‘meditations’) in the east gardens, he will be with us in twenty minutes. Would you like coffee?” John is clad in a very Cary Grant black worsted suit, open necked shirt and sandals. He is sitting in a desk that once belonged to the Dali Lama, his hair is superbly scruffy (to a tee, to a tee) and his skin glows with a ‘just swam 15 laps’ patina fresh from the bottle. 

    He adores Belinda. Belinda adores John. There is sex tension between them. Their eyes meet like old friends in a Balinese hotel room following an engaging lunch. Their rhythms synchronise as Belinda nods and sits herself down on a chair that once belonged to nobody because it was custom made from Tasmanian old growth forest for her at the behest of John.

    “Did you kiss Cadrew again when you came in? You know he hates it.” He slips off the desk and walks across to where she is crossing her legs. He takes her hand and attempts an admonishing expression.

    “You haven’t neutered him, yet darling, he is still awfully attractive. I love the way he stands there imaging me naked and feeling guilty about it. I can see the way he tortures himself in his imagination. You know that it’s really abut time that you started him breeding. After all, where is the next generation to come from?” She removes her hand from his and unpacks her computer.

    “He’s not getting any younger though. So, we have set in train that he should breed the next Cadrew within the year. We have a fantastic filly picked out for him. One of the Murdoch’s staffers I think. She’s incredibly fit, totally well trained and completely 18. By the time Cadrew is too old for us, we’ll have the new one ready.” He sits on the floor in front of her, lotus-like, looks up and as Cadrew places coffees on the Bauhaus table to his left, McDonald-Sayer begins to relay the necessary details.

    “Nice arse,” she comments, meaning it, as Cadrew does his best to exit face on from the room. He blushes and proceeds to the kitchen lavatory.

    He flirts more admonition at her, sips coffee and waits for her considered opinion. She looks at the laptop, says a few words to it, nods and then grimaces theatrically at him.

    “Oh my dear McDonald-Sayer,” her grimace morphs from the dramatic to the operating theatre, “Oh you have been a silly idiot haven’t you?”

    “S’pose so”, he has no idea what she’s talking about, but that’s why he employs her. 

    “Apparently you decided that you could write your own contracts for this,” she pauses and searches for the correct word, “debacle of a building. Were you sulking with me?”

    “S’pose I was.” He often did. He had asked her to sue the family of farmers who occupied a tiny piece of land within the McDonald-Sayer glebe. She had refused. She explained that simply because they kept pigs was not grounds to sue them. He had sworn at her, threatened to get her dismissed, begged her, implored her, swore some more and then sulked all the way to Bali. He refused to talk to her but Skyped her to berate her on this subject, every day for eight months. They only resumed civilised communication after the farmer accidentally fell backwards into his own Massey Ferguson’s reaping blades or something like that during a party.

    (The party had been thrown for him by a major super market chain – its legal representatives to be quite exact – to celebrate a pork distribution deal. According to the farmer’s wife at the coroner’s enquiry, he had never touched LSD in any quantity let alone the 780mg that had been discovered inside him post mortem. It appeared to be suspended in a litre of old school absinthe, the wormwood variety that wiped out what the French intelligentsia in the 18th century. The farmer’s family moved from the land following a hate campaign – “Acid Farmer’s Froggie Booze Binge Puts Pox on OUR Porkers!!!” in a national newspaper.

    Chapter 5

    “Bastards.” She breathes, clenches her fists and biting her bottom lip, “Mendacious, unethical, turdish bastards…

    During his Bali dummy-spit, McDonald-Sayer had conceived not only two children but also the grand plan for the Barleycorn Bliding that was to dominate the central business district. He’d decided that, in his own words, he “…didn’t need any help from any long-legged, sweet-smelling, over-qualified bint with an major customer relations problem” and had drafted the contracts.

    “Silly man”, Belinda called up the contract from the top secret cloud folder where McDonald-Sayer had stored it secretly.

    “Mad man. Look at this. It’s got more loopholes in it than a the walls of a very large medieval castle.” 

    “Eh?”

    She kicks off her shoes and folds her legs beneath her, rests the laptop next to the coffee tray and begins to read:

    The party of the first part (she sighs, gently but hurtfully in the mode of an office IT person watching a clerk trying to get his printer to print using slightly dated drivers) being John Marshall Garcia Lennon Donavan Maharashtra Che Kennedy McDonald-Sayer asserts the…

    “I have to stop it here. This is disgraceful. I mean, how did you get this passed the other side’s legals?”

    He looks down at this sandals and toys with his cup. He looks out of the window and says, slowly and deliberately, “Cleghorn, Barnstable, Groundling and Hayes”.

    “Bastards.” She breathes, clenches her fists and biting her bottom lip, “Mendacious, unethical, turdish bastards. You really were having a large sulk with me weren’t you?”

    “S’pose so. Soz. Don’t know what came over me. It’s all a bit of a blur. Are you saying that it’s not legal though? That it wouldn’t stand up? Can we get out of it?” He’s up now, on his feet, fighting posture, blood pumping.

    She is icy. Still coiled, a drop of blood drips from her lip, settles on her teeth and is washed away by her emerging smile. She is thinking hard. She knows that this many holes can be filled with many dollars. She knows that it will take time. She knows that, aside from yet another tedious case featuring the Murdochs and some question of titles, natives, libels and drudgey drudgey jetting around, she’s not got that much on. She answers, “Yes, baby, yes, I think we can nail these uppity little sods to the wall. We must throw ourselves onto the mercy of the courts. What kind of mental state were you in when you put this bag of nonsense together?”

    Chapter 6

    In which the police sit back. A party happens and we meet the parent.

    The love that bellows its name from the gutters and back alley bars is rough and ready tonight. It’s all the go. It’s up. It’s the love of getting completely fucked up. 

    “I love this!” yelled Anthony, “I love this booze and shite! I love this music. I love this meat energy!”

    The gym of Barleycorn has been turned into a club. Sound systems compete from each end. The basketball hoops contain buckets full of ice. Dayglo paint is everywhere. The old bums are splayed in one corner. The smack addicts are dancing. The speed freaks are dry humping. The acid and E casualties are hugging and screaming and hugging again. The Care in the Communities are experiencing fun. Happy fun. 

    One sound system is run by an ancient punk whore called Soozie – she’s copping in her head and she’s playing Search And Destroy.

    Another other sound system is run by Pokie since its original master – a booze hound called Stuart – fell beneath the working decks. Pokie’s playing We Built This Love on Pledges by the Mighty Solomon Klepto Orchestra. 

    “This is almost worth it!” yells Pokie.

    “Worth what?” All-in-One-Boy, chugs some absinthe he’d discovered in one of the corporate mini bars. He’s gone through every room, gathering up all the booze – and some of the cocaine too – and bringing it down to the gym. You could say that this was his party. 

    “Worth the police turning up, which they will. Worth a lifetime of degradation and abuse…” he tails of, realises what he’s just said and cues another tune (Tony Touch’s Dimelo Springs Boogie).

    “Oh that. Yeah, I suppose it might be.” All-in-One-Boy really isn’t that interested. Introspection, looking backward, analysing shit really isn’t his thing. Right now he’s considering the best way to get the most stuff out of the place before the police do show up and wreck everything. What with the amount of speed he’s taken in the last 48 hours combining with his natural curiosity and greed he has thoroughly scoped the place out. He’s aware that there are some pretty sweet goods to be sold on. He’s also aware that much of it has already made its way out of those imposing front and back doors and is by now being liquidated. This kind of opportunity doesn’t even come once in a lifetime; somehow it has. 

    “All this chilling and partying is fine and dandy Pokes, but there’s cash to be made here and we’re not making it. Look around you mate, most of these mongrels can’t see what’s in front of their eyes. We’ve got a chance here.”

    Pokie doesn’t need to look, he knows that the love of his life is right. He would love to stay here, in this atmosphere, pretending that everybody in the room is partying together and not in their own worlds of schizophrenia, booze, drugs and hopeless numb disengagement. He knows that very soon they will all be back out on the streets, in the Starlight Hotel, due for a fate like Arthur Burrows (burnt to death by four teenagers) or Tim ‘Ziggy’ Jenkins (soda bombed). 

    All-in-One-Boy’s idea is an obvious one. A good one. Sensible and right. But Pokie wants this idyll to last. He’s not experienced many idylls. Not a single one really. Never.

    “Schrödinger’s Cat”, he says.

    All-in-One-Boy has heard about that Cat so many times that he really wants to rip its tail off, firework its mouth. As for Schringer or Schroder or whoever the fuck she is, take her outside, douse her in petrol and torch her. As for the uncertainty and the rest of the “sit on your arse and do nothing in case some fragile memory gets hurted”, drown it in a sack.

    “Fuck right off, bitch. Fuck you, fuck Schroeder. Fuck the cat. There is stuff here. We can take it. We can make money with it. We can be safe and comfortable.” 

    “We are safe and comfortable. Right here. We are.”

    “We are comfortable, bitch, for now.”

    Chapter 7

    “I happen to have had a red-hot tip – don’t be so rude – that a rather spectacular coke deal is going to occur very close to the Barleycorn Building…

    Now the murk is everywhere and is ready to take everybody unless someone injects an amp or maybe a volt of constancy. Everything in the gym is strangely, Berlin 1920s, disconnected. The scene is a sour one. The space is not creating synergies. Energy is high but negative. 

    There are two sides to this terrible project though. This deliberately terrible building set in the sea of the centre of the capital city. Clad in cheapness, underpinned by hate.

    On one side sit the poor, the dispossessed. Decaying and descendant. Outlines and out of line so we don’t like them and we don’t get them for what they really are. We’ve been with them for a while already, so we’ll leave them. Before we do, you have to know that they do not love each other.

    On the other, are the permanently wealthy, always ascendent. What are they up to?

    Before we go on though, I have an admission to make to you. I am Pokie’s father by the way. His biological daddy. I am dead, of course – on so many levels. So, most of Pokie’s current situation is my fault. But the honest truth, and I’ve talked to the big boss goomba, the head of the house, the Maker, the People Baker, God, is something about love but mostly, so I’m told, is that I can’t tell you the honest truth. By the way, the police are ready to go. They are just about ready anyway. 

    Over at The Glancings, John, loves her, Belinda. She loves him. OK, so the dynamic between them is all sheer (as in stocking) transparent (as in the emotions) pretence. Have pity our lord though, what choice do they have? They’ve been targeted since ever they met. Like Pokie loves All-in-On-Boy, John and Belinda do really love each other. That conquers all, right? 

    “No, Charlie, sweety, hang fire please.” Belinda had been trying to find any mention of security in the drunken contract for the building but she has had no luck. She rushes through pages on the off chance that amidst the paranoid, BBC law court dramatics that masquerades as a contract she can find anything whatsoever, at all, anywhere that would suggest liabilities against the security firm (on a rolling contract), the door or lock or lintel or window manufacturers. She can’t.

    So, she’s Zooming with Charles Drake, friend of uncle George, owner of race horses, and also rather conveniently rather high up in the strong arm of the law of the land. If he can’t help, then her next call is to Francis Moore MP, the Home Secretary, and another former lover. She wants to clear the Barleycorn out. Knock it down. Sell the land on for a profit, and forget the whole sorry saga. 

    “Charlie, aren’t we in a more caring time? We are. We need to build housing for real people. But right now, we can’t winkle out the pestilence in the corrupt high rise we worked so hard on”, she waited, tapping her head as she looked at John who was snorting a line.

     She continues, “I happen to have had a red-hot tip – don’t be so rude – that a rather spectacular coke deal is going to occur very close to the Barleycorn Building at circa quarter to eight this evening”, she didn’t. I didn’t matter. She was passing on a tip. He needed arrests.

    The more she examines the contract, the more she is reminded that John, bless his silken socks, is a child. One could send him in, head-down, tears bared into a fight and he’d do his best. He might even win. But this time, he didn’t quite get that there was no winning at the outset, it was a legal contract. 

    She listens to Charlie waffling on about the this and the that and the complexities and the having a drink later in the week when time did not contend and, ceteris paribus, all would go well. She makes familiar sexual noises and reads and reads and reads. He talks and talks. She stops.

    “What was that Charlie?”

    “It’s this thing you see, Bel, as far as we’re concerned, Barleycorn Building is a perfect right now. It’s attracting all the right sorts, if you get my drift.” 

    “You mean you’re not going in?” She’s confused, she likes to be confused.

    “Well, no. Not right now. Not for at least a month anyway. It’s actually working out quite nicely. I’ve got the Bobbies at the ready but there are”, he pauses, “some issues with pay negotiations you see.”

    “Issues? Pay? These are public servants” she is genuinely appalled. 

    “I know. It’s bloody outrageous. But our lot are a hair’s breadth away from being in the Barelycorn themselves most of them. The bloody whinges of my own mob takes up more time than the actual job. The less I actually make them work, the better at the moment. Tell you what though, I’ll put it about that we are going in? How’s that?”

    “Bless you Charlie. Bless your heart. But what do you mean by putting it about?”

    “Like you don’t know.” He winks, aural like.

    “I’ve already said stop the Benny Hill.”

    “Talk to our media chums.”

    She hangs up. She makes another call.

    “OK” she says. 

    She hangs up.

    It is 4am.

    Chapter 8

    In which music, art, theft, drugs, life disappear out the back door. I dislike All-in-One Boy. And hope starts to grow in The Barleycorn.

    The great, already crumbling building is mooned by the moon. Pokie is asleep. All-in-One-Boy is very much awake and stealing a lamp out of the door to a pile of goodies he’s curating for later selling on Jimmy the Fence in Highgate. He’s piling it on top of the chairs and paintings already there. He wants Pokie awake to nick a van. He can’t drive. He doesn’t want to be burned in a gutter like Burrows. He moves fast, but is slowing visibly. 

    At The Glancings, Belinda is racking her considerable intellect in order find key elements like cooling off periods, descriptions of works, service level agreements. She had discovered something about payments but despaired that it described how they were all to be made in advance, “because I can afford to, yeah!” as the rubric so inelegantly laid out.

    In Belinda’s head is Stoned from Dido’s Life For Rent album.

    John is bedded down, the hookah bubbles away by his vast, 1,001 Nights styled bed, the hookah hose rests on his chest. He is snoring on his back, a very regal, very assured, starfish.

    In John’s head a usual is, Fix You by Coldplay.

    Nothing plays in Pokie’s head. He still stinks to hell or high heaven and he is dreaming about his family. His father died (that’s me) when the boy was 18 and already gone from the family home. Pokie had been fostered at 14. His mother had gone somewhere or other. Dad stayed on at the family home, smoking blow, watching the telly, listening to old Punk Rock albums, betting on the dogs, flogging stuff off and holding onto other stuff for various acquaintances. 

    Pokie is dreaming that he has to drop by his Mum’s. The house is always immaculate – in reality it was always immaculate before she left and died of a broken heart and knives late one night in a park walking back from her second job. 

    He sees his father (me!) there, spliff in hand, Don’t Dictate blasting away, vacuuming the hall carpet. He exchanges some US dollars and moves into the kitchen where the old man is bleaching ashtrays, spliff in mouth, whispering, “Which one of you bastards hurt someone near and dear to us. Come up here and we’ll kick the shit out of you, you bastard!”

    He buys an eighth of hash with the money changed and slips upstairs to the bathroom to skin up. His father is brushing and Ajaxing the lavatory pan, shouting “You’re in a rut! You’ve to get out of it, out of it, out of it!!”

    “Dad, why are you always cleaning up?” he asks dream Me. 

    Chapter 9

    At home in Algiers, the once hesitant architect checks his watch and begins to laugh, and laugh and laugh and laugh until he is sick. Actually sick.

    An amateur band starts to practice in a nearby yard. I continue to scrub and shout. Pokie slips out of the dream and rolls over. 

    All-in-One-Boy, still moving faster than you or I would consider decent at this time of the morning, he is unscrewing art from walls and stacking it in the service elevator. He already has Jimmy the Fence prepared to move the gear. The paintings are amazing, there’s a Jenny Watson, a John Brack; he knows this because every one of the motherfuckers has a little card next to it saying what it is, who its by and what it’s supposed to be about. Albert Namatjiram, Chris Ofili, Caroline Zilinsky, Renoir, Damien Hirst, Chris Pignall. Circles, sheds, dots, more dots, portraits, landscapes, money, money, money. 

    The heating kicks in at 4:30am as the shuts off with an explosive percussion that wakes many of the gym sleepers briefly. The building’s shutters come down as the security cameras black-dot in sequence. All the tapes are wiped and the fire-safe sprinklers shower the kitchens with detergent. Freezers either ice up or start slowly cooking their contents. The building is eating itself, it hates itself, it was made that way. It had shit parents.

    At home in Algiers, the once hesitant architect checks his watch and begins to laugh, and laugh and laugh and laugh until he is sick. Actually sick.

    I’ve realised that I’m looking in on all of these people for a reason. Obviously I keep a weather-eye on Anthony because of our relationship. In so doing I can’t really avoid inclusion in some of the life of the little turd, Hendle. I don’t like him at all. There’s something sneaky about him: All-in-One-Boy? What kind of a name is that? A wanker’s name. 

    The actual fact is that he’s only as waif and stray as he wants to be. Unlike my Anthony who is your actual orphan, that other toerag is living the life predominantly to annoy his parents. That he could leave it at any time, that doesn’t sit well with him or me. The fact that he has no soul is not a good sign either.

    That happens, being born soul-free, it’s not a mistake or anything, it’s due to one of two things: either (a) the soul is already as full as it can get with lessons learnt and experiences earned but the owner of the soul hasn’t realised this and still wants to go around again (often this ends in suicides and at an early age – I mean you would wouldn’t you, once it’s become apparent that you’re just treading water, you’d move on; (b) it’s sealed itself up and in so doing it has withered away to nothing.

    This often results in suicide as well, but more often than not in massive amounts of excess, of pouting and sulks, of getting your own way for the sake of getting your own way. You’re not able to let anything else in to charge up the old karmic (or whatever you like to call it, the big boss is quite free with terminology so don’t worry about it over much) so it’s all out-out-out. The whole soul thing is, if I’m honest, a bit out my league at the moment. I’m still floating about a lot trying to get a handle on the general after-life concept. It’s not as straightforward as you’d like to think. But that’s my story and you’re not here for that.

    As for John and Belinda, I’m damned if I know why I’ve got an oversight on their goings-on. I opted out of the whole, “seeing the future” thing on advice that it would be a bit of a culture shock. Tried it once, and the advice was spot-on, it made me incredibly nauseous, all time mixed together, choices required as to exactly which future I wanted to be able to see. I’m not good with choices.

    Now, the curious architect. I can see him right now in an apartment in Algiers reading the paper and drinking a daiquiri, he’s got remorse in his veins and it will not let him go. All the laughter in the world is not going to rid him of his natural good nature. He’s even started sending what he thinks are anonymous cash donations back to his ex-girlfriend bless his little heart. For now, however, he’s avoiding the remorse as it makes its way remorselessly (as it were) to his spirit and hence to his soul. He’s pretending that it’s not remorse at all, its power. He’s got the power now to brighten up or tarnish other people’s lives. His decision all backed-up with the almighty buck. 

    So, why do I have oversight? My guess is that the law will come into play, probably around that fucking abysmal contract and that Anthony will have to fight the good fight. As I am attached to my boy, it looks as if he’s getting attached to these others. He’s getting quite attached to the place as well. He can see in some of the folks around him that they are too. 

    Chapter 10

    Two bums are having a real go in the kitchen as well, cooking up a storm.

    Right now, there are 423 people in the tower. Well, 439.5 if you deal it in the pregnancies, and no I am not going near that one, I’ll leave that to the powers that be. 423 people in less than two days. That’s some serious pulling power this building has. “Indian burial ground?” you think? Take another guess, for a start this is not the United States. “Ley lines?”, possibly, there are so many of the fucking things who can tell? No, I really can’t tell you, just be satisfied that it’s happening, that the people are coming in all of their colours and shades. 

    I can see them, I move relatively freely within the limits laid down for me and at my request, and I can observe them. But I can’t see into them, not unless they make a connection with the one I should really love. 

    The artist colony on the 21st floor is really starting to make a go of it – there’s already a performance in planning. OK so a number of them are fellow-travellers, wankers and the usual kinds of wannabes that mistake splashing some gloss around on a wall for communicating a vision. But there are some good sorts up there.

    Two bums are having a real go in the kitchen as well, cooking up a storm. They are going to be well pissed off when they go back there later today. But they’re developing a stick-at-it-ness. 

    There are students in the penthouse, nurses on the fifth floor, asylum seekers in the basement (natch), divorced, middle-aged men in the games rooms on the 17t floor, divorced, middle-aged women all over the ninth, tenth and eleventh floors, and there are ghosts all over the shop – seriously, the newsagent on the mezzanine is overflowing with spirits.

    It’s a bit of shame that so many ghettos should happen, but that’s people for you. It’s 5:30am in your earth time (I love saying that) now and the heat (in your earth therms, OK I’ll stop) is pretty unbearable, so people are waking up and wandering around, bumping into each other because it’s dark what with there being no light and all the shutters having been closed. Everything is compressing and over-heating.

    Chapter 11

    In which we discover choices can create inauthentic moments. And smell can override all other senses.

    A month has passed. My Anthony is dead. Still not here though. 

    The wealthy cowardly architect is on the telephone. He’s been called up by Cleghorn, Barnstable, Groundling and Hayes, solicitors at law to attend the inquest. They are advising him of sticky situations, of possible wrinkles and potential liabilities that could not have been foreseen. The architect is listening, vaguely. His brother, the accountant has already salted away the lottery win and the payments received for Barleycorn. 

    “We may need you to return within the next month in order to help out in the courts.” Junior lawyer, Sam Wells, makes it all sound so blasé but he’s got his finger inside his collar and is pulling for fresh air, needing it to hit his inflaming razor burn. 

    “I don’t think that’s going to be possible really. I’m planning to go to Verbier for some skiing prior to Christmas. I’ve really got nothing to say anyway. I’ve given up architecture. I’m writing a novel.” He gazes out of the window at the sky.

    Junior Wells wants to say, “Oh go on!” but knows he mustn’t. He’s also concerned that the architect hasn’t asked to speak to someone higher up. Clients always ask to speak to someone higher up. Wells is not comfortable with actually speaking with these people for more than a few seconds. He’s certainly not good at convincing them to do something they patently do not want to do. He consults the script given to him by Mr Groundling.

    “Let me assure you, sir, that returning as requested by one of our very senior partners, will certainly be of immense benefit not only to yourself but to the cause of justice. Sir, you will be contributing greatly to the overall wellness of the world in which you are living. Making the sacrifice you are going to make to”, he consults the notes again, “not go to, to miss out on going to skiing, sir…” off he trails, unable to keep it up. He waits.

    The architect is aghast. He’s just seen two planes seemingly missing each other by a whisker out of his window. Or he thinks he has, the total and complete lack of stress he feels about everything has been making him hallucinate a little recently so he can’t be sure.

    “What was that you said. Something about making the world a better place by going skiing?”

    “No, sir. I said that you could make the world a better place by not going skiing. By coming back to contribute to the cause of justice that is. Sir?”

    The architect looks down at his espadrilles and thinks for a while. As soon as the sound of Junior Well’s rabid pen tapping stops he knows what decision he has to make.

    “OK, I’ll come back.”

    “Pardon?” Briefly, Wells waits for the inevitable caveat.

    “I’ll come back if you represent me.”

    “I don’t think that will eventuate, sir. I think that a client of your import will be handed up, sir.”

    “Then I won’t come back.”

    “Can I consult for a moment please, sir?”

    “No.”

    A fix. A right fix. Time to make a decision that could result in either a great deal of responsibility or a great deal of lost revenue. Either way, Wells reckons, it’s going to result in a great deal of unwanted pain. He closes his eyes, tries not to think, tries to let the words comes come from him. This is the kind of chance that comes along once. He’s been told this on numerous occasions by numerous bloody people who won’t let him alone to get on with his reading and his music. He has to let his true self make the call. He breathes out, calmly.

    “I’m afraid, sir, that I’m not in a position to make that call. Do you want me to hand you up to a person of more authority?”

    The telephone goes dead. The architect sits back and reviews the sky. Not much more has happened. He starts to count his cash-counting pile, this time organising it into notes that are less damaged on a sliding scale beginning with the top, right corner and excluding graffiti has a parameter.

    Junior Wells stands up from his desk and walks towards the door marked, “Mr Groundling Sr”. He knocks, enters and observes Mr Groundling removing his earpiece.

    Chapter 12

    He is smiling displaying wonderful teeth – the kind that should belong to somebody at least fifty years younger than his seventy years (they do).

    Groundling is a fat man with an enormous head and fingertips the colour of old scrolls. He is dressed in black with a collarless shirt open at the neck. His suit is the thickness of cartridge paper, it is flecked with white flakes. He sits in a modified and extremely high-backed, Charles Rennie Mackintosh Monk’s chair with no upholstered seat. He is not scowling.

    He is smiling displaying wonderful teeth – the kind that should belong to somebody at least fifty years younger than his seventy years (they do). His desk is embedded with three 17-inch plasma screens – big desk. The telephone that feeds the earpiece is hidden. His legs never move. He is entirely stable.

    “Other people are laughing at you.” Groundling bends towards the desk, slams both fists down. Leans back and shrieks, “Other people are laughing!”

    Wells turns around and leaves the room, leaves the office, leaves the street. He heads towards the the remains of Barleycorn Building. Five minutes into his departure he realises that he’s left his sandwiches in his desk drawer. He turns, returns, enters the offices and experiences the feeling he used to get when he’d pop in on a Saturday to use the computer. It must be the same feeling, he now realises that refugees get when they go home after an absence of 10 years; you know the place, some of it is familiar, but you’d really have to want to be part of it again, because it’s got a life of its own without you, and you’ve had a life external to it. He takes his sandwiches, places his mobile phone on his desk (now only the desk) breaths out and rejoins his previous route.

    As he walks he finds that he is terrified and happy. He notices the street signs, the cracks in the pavement; he starts to jump to avoid them, to avoid the devil breaking his mother’s back. He can see The Barleycorn. He is approaching from its south side. He can see some banners but he can’t read them. He can smell coffee and garlic. He looks a pretty girl in the eyes as she approaches to walk by him, she smiles at him confidently and continues. He smiles back. He realises that she’s smiling because he is jumping cracks. He is nineteen years old. He’s actually quite alive and very poor. The coffee and garlic are delicious.

    He reaches the place where the the doors of The Barleycorn used to be, the revolving doors that would accelerate and send people spinning into the atrium are no longer there, he steps over the threshold. Despite the residual tropical Singapore-in-summer humid hea, he feels very much at home. He sits on a crate near the shell of the vacant front desk, he leans down and puts his hands on the blackened and cracked marble floor. A hand covers his hands.

    He looks up and sees a girl in a tracksuit. She’s asking him for money for a dance group that are going to travel to Australia. He says no for the first time ever. She moves away to two old fellas sitting by the Westside entrance eating a porridge of some kind. He waves at them all and replaces his hands on the marble floor. They begin to play a song on two battered guitars. He has no idea what the song is but he lifts his head up to look at them. The girl is singing now, so slowly that it could be Billy Holiday rendering Strange Fruit to God himself or it could be your ideal mother singing a lament for the death of your ideal self.

    People come down the stairs, there are not spinning elevators left, they are silent. The evening comes in as the heating moderates.

    “Want some gear bro?” All-in-One-Boy is there. Emaciated, a bit charred but keen as mustard, “Want some gear?” he asks Junior Wells.

    “Gear? Drugs? No thanks.” It’s been a day of No for Junior Wells and he’s getting a bit over it by now and he really does not want to start the slow descent into the hell that is drugs. 

    “Oh, go on” for All-in-One-Boy, “no” is water and he’s one enormous duck’s back, “It’s nice. Don’t believe the hype and all that, the only reason you’re saying no is because you think you should. Why not try to experience something for yourself, eh bro? Or maybe,” he says, moving his feet like a billion-dollar sports star, “you’re not ready for it.”

    “No he’s not ready for it.” I say, but he can’t hear me, obviously.

    “Do you want to get high?” Hendle asks Wells. 

    “No. I don’t know.”

    “Fuck you, mate. This is fucking business. Fuck off, man.”

    “Are you talking to me?”, I ask.

    “Yes, of course. Fuck off”, I am stunned.

    Now, from where I’m sitting, his has all the makings of a fight. So, I’m going to lean into this little turd and tell him to walk away. The little All-in-One-Boy-turd will be nasty – and not in a good way – out of sheer desire for power. Anthony has been stabbed or burnt or crushed or something.

    Chapter 13

    Selfish? Me? Of course I bloody well am.

    I can’t deal with him face to face, mano-a-mano right now. OK, I’d be able to let him into a whole bunch of perspective about the eternal this and the interacting life forces of that, reincarnation on demand, all that stuff, but he’d ask me some hard questions that I honestly do not have the answers for yet. He’ll ask me why he never had a chance and why I left, why his mother left Sure, I could send him off to a deity or saint who could lay it all out for him, but where would that leave me? Anyway, I’ve not seen him.

    Selfish? Me? Of course I bloody well am. So are you. So let’s not fuck around with that particular area of debate shall we? It won’t get either of us anywhere. I want to make my son’s afterlife a happy one. Just not right now. If it isn’t obvious by now that I stuff things up. So, now just give me time. Can you hide in heaven? Yes. Is this heaven? I don’t know, do I.

    All-in-One-Boy looks at me, looks back at the marble-clutching junior lawyer, thinks about just how much he misses making love to Pokie and he backs away. He goes to cry. He misses the boy, I’m hiding from. Ironic that.

    Chapter 14

    In which there is a death in the family.

    John McDonald-Sayer is getting out of a Mercedes. He is taking the air. There are olive and orange trees around the front of his father’s house. There are mangroves to the east and west. Each has its own eco-specific system, never the twain shall meet.

    His father lives alone save for the all the house staff who he keeps on as long as they meditate with him in the mornings and evenings. He supports them, six of them and their family. He ensures that they are home-schooled, clean, well-fed and above all else, he ensures that they are centred. He never asks them to do anything he hasn’t already done, from chopping wood to making paella. He pays them well and is prepared for them to leave at any time. He is self sufficient in all things.

    He is in bed right now. He has had three strokes in two weeks and he wants to stay alive for his child or someone. He talks to another child, one he killed. It is a private conversation that he is taping on his Chilton 100s reel-to-reel tape machine for later inclusion in the “Archive of Authentic Time”.

    It is a private conversation.

    John marches into the house and sits on one of the beanbags that is close to a landline telephone. He’s come to ask his dad for some advice. John’s used to waiting for his old man to appear. He’s had occasion to wait for a week before, but this man is the only man he is prepared to wait for. Anyway, Belinda is due to arrive in seven minutes and she is always on time so John won’t have to be alone for very much longer.

    He needs to know whether to bother with the Byzantine complications that Belinda has presented him with or just to own up, blame the architect and push through. On the one hand, John, he’s got enough everything not to have to bother with anything. On the other, he is angry, someone has taken the piss. Someone has interfered with his balance and that could mean that he has a chink in his armour that could somehow impede his progress. No matter how much stuff he’s got going on: spiritual, temporal and material, he seriously doesn’t want to repeat himself in this life or in any other.

    Having reviewed his life constantly in trips, hypnotisms, hash acid meditations, sensory deprivations, sensory overloads, fasting, Blakeian excesses, trances, transcendentals, Endentals, cold, heat, sadism, masochism, primal therapy, and driving fast with chicks on his dick, he is aware that repetition without the correct underlying vibe is the deadend of universal truth. His dad has told him so too.

    He meditates until Belinda arrives, which she does in seven minutes later. 

    She has been working hard, taking the dog – Carol, after Carol King – out for walks since 6:30am. She got in her car at 8:30. It’s Saturday and she’s arrived at 2:30pm. She is in a foul mood, having had once again to review notes on land leases provided to her by a senior – wrong, again.

    She wants a drink, a movie, a swim and not much else until at least this evening. She knows, however, that she has to draft a last will and testament, and that is always wearing for everyone concerned. She also knows that Barleycorn Building is going to cost a great deal of compensation money even though the dead and injured were all homeless, mad or both, and consequently of no real value as even they would admit.

    She enters the house, kisses John on the head, “He’s asked me to go straight up, read this and remember as much of it as you can”, she says as she heads upstairs.

    “Eh? I didn’t even know he was here yet?” He drops the thing she’s given him to read. 

    “Did you bother to go and see,” she asks from the top of the stairs. “He’s not well. He’s dying.” She goes into the bedroom.

    John is wondering whether or not his father dying is a good or bad thing. After all, the old man has been banging on about moving on to the next stage for as long as John can remember. 

    It’s going to mean quite a large gap in his life. Probably going to be bigger than when nanny passed or when the grandparents ploughed into the mountainside on the way to the Buddy Holly convention. You’d have to assume so. John isn’t entirely certain. I’m sure. It will and he will make the most of it until the day he too dies, and that’s not telling the future, it’s common sense.

    On the one hand,  no more Pa to talk to. 

    On the other, there are the additional funds to consider, unless Pa’s gone and made one of those “give it all to good causes”, which is unlikely. The will! Belinda’s got to be here to sort out the will. John moves rapidly to the kitchen where gets a servant to sets out ginseng tea things and arrowroot biscuits as the kettle boils.

    He selects a suitable face from the armoury, not too sad (he might not be supposed to know) but not too much levity either (he might have been supposed to know). He gets the servant, Ming-Ming or Pan-Pan or some other panda bear like name, and makes his way sadly but not too sadly, to his father’s futon which is placed out on the wide, wooden, west-facing balcony. 

    Chapter 15

    Belinda at the foot of the futon can’t help herself and makes a derisory eyebrow raise. 

    Pandit Vasant Rao Kadnekar is vocalising on some old vinyl in the background as the Jasmine and Jacaranda blur the air. The old man is sitting up on a pile of comfortable cushions on his futon. His eyes are closed and he looks very old. He has been tearing the hair from his beard and head because he can no longer speak and this is frustrating him. He is tapping out messages on a Stephen Hawking voice machine.

    “Mumma must be looked after at all costs. She can’t look after herself. We must make sure that Cadrew and offspring Cadrews are supplied with everything they needs to maintain the house and her.” It sounds like an adding machine making sure that compensation payments are ordered for its family of calculators. 

    John stands in the doorway. He is shaking. His father’s calming voice gone, which sort of answers his earlier conundrum. 

    “Look after the animals. Make payments to petting zoos as mentioned in earlier correspondence. Make provision for house staff. Make provision for schools in Calcutta, Dhaka, Darwin, Birmingham and somewhere in Vanuatu. Maximum class size is 20 pupils. Curriculum as previously outlined. Only the poorest need apply.

    Make provision for LSD research. Make provision for cannabis and hemp lobbying. Increase security in Tasmania. Increase security in Arkansas. Submit all rock, Beat and trek memorabilia to Powerhouse Museum, Sydney. Submit all the Burroughs crap to British Library (that should annoy them).” He tries to laugh but the stroke has paralysed his left side so all that happens is a lop-sided leer. 

    John moves forward rapidly and, placing the tray on the low side-table designed by George Nakashima for Pa McDonald-Sayer personally, he sits at his father’s right hand side. 

    “What about the me, Pa? I have a court case to fight”, he pauses and looks to Belinda for advice, she frowns, he understands. He continues, “Don’t die, dad.” He says. This is the moment of truth. Ask the question.

    “Don’t be concerned about the material things, John”, rasps his father’s voice-box. 

    Belinda at the foot of the futon can’t help herself and makes a derisory eyebrow raise. 

    “I won’t Pa. I’ll be fine, really. I’ll look after mumma.” John’s in tears. Real, whole tears are coming from him and he has no control over them. He’s noticed the scars on his dad’s head and face. The man has shrunk and now appears to be the short man he actually is. He’s wearing an extra large t-shirt with a mandala printed white on a dark green background and the neck ring is somewhere near his nipples. His neck itself is all vein and sinew connecting with his shoulders like the root system of an ancient tree connects to the ground. 

    John honestly can’t stop himself from sobbing. He’s trying to catch his breath and at the same time he’s realised that he’s cradling his father’s head in his arms and stroking the old man’s hair. Pa’s breath stinks to high heaven. It reeks of garlic, coriander and rot. Sliced up, harsh groans come from inside his mouth and John thinks that he hears words that he can’t translate but can understand. Long sentences packed tight. 

    “Of the peace of the peace of the peace of the peace…” he thinks he hears. But he doesn’t, I’m telling you.

    Belinda walks to the edge of the balcony, looks into the trees, the canopy constructed for the birds and monkeys. She’s never liked the old man; too full of shit. All this maudlin crap is wearing her down. No more than a sentimental attempt to draw some particular closure to a life that has basically been thrown away on a search for life. She’s seen the books, and the old man has contributed nothing to the family capital that already existed. OK, most of the time he’s lived on the interest, give him that, but as for providing more value, it’s not been that sort of a quest. She doesn’t trust quests. They tend to be open ended and more about the journey than the goal. Goals are what make the world turn. Journeys are time wasted on views of passing things. 

    All she can hear is crying and gurgling. Whoever said it was right, we do go out the way we came in. Babies in and babies out. She also wishes that the annoying, whining, music would stop. She breathes gently and snatches a look at messages that have appeared in her silenced phone. She texts back responses to dry cleaners, the garage, her new literary agent and the caterer. The sounds from behind her have quietened. She turns around and sees John, foetal – as is his wont – with his father’s right hand on his son’s ankle. The left hand is slate. His face is flat and grey. His eyes are milky. He moans.

    She returns to her position at the foot of the bed, opens the laptop once again, and he continues to relate his last will and testament. The sun is setting as a fight, a monkey fight, breaks out in the trees. They are fighting over food or sex or territory or something that can’t fight back.

    The music stops.

    She looks through the record collection wishing that someone had ripped the lot to a decent format instead of this aged nonsense and finds an LP at random. She puts the stylus on down and as the noise begins she enters her own escapist state.

    She don’t like the music, she doesn’t like the words, she doesn’t like the sentiments,

    Well, money certainly can buy you love, she thinks.

    The old man has sat bolt upright and is typing, “Ha ha ha ha ha ha COME HERE hah hah haha” incessantly on this keyboard. Belinda stays exactly where she is. Deathbed scene or no, she has no inclination to find out what’s he’s on about outside of the business at hand. For all she knows another tiny but massive explosion has occurred inside his brain and he’s turned into some spastic sex attacker. Or maybe he wants to impart yet another truism.

    John is silent, foetal. She looks the old man in the working eye and spits at him, full in the face. He can’t move to wipe it away. 

    “You never really did anything much did you, Stephen? You just soft-cocked your way around the world visiting all the places that you figured were The Places. You’re a spiritual tourist aren’t you? A godless dilettante. As for your family! Your wife fucks a monumental Buddha in your own front yard and your son, well, he’s the spitting image of you.” 

    He waggles a finger and begins to type once again. “Please turn the music off.”

    She doesn’t.

    He continues, “You’re one hundred percent correct and at the same time wrong. Stop raising your eyebrows like that. I didn’t…”

    “Want to be born into wealth and privilege.” I’ve heard that one. You said that one in Montreal, in your house in Montreal, or was it Mont Blanc or Monte Casino, I forget, there are so many of them, one of the ones you fucked me in.

    “No, not that, you stupid girl. I didn’t have to worry, so I didn’t worry”, he machines at her.

    She frowns.

    He backspaces over what he was going to type next. It’s dark outside now. The automatic lighting has come on, all very sombre and slightly golden. Jani, one of the housemaids puts her head into the room and decides that it’s not her place to interrupt such an obviously holy moment. She backs out and goes back to the kitchen to continue watching Punked while reading a gossip magazine. She’s laughing at the pictures of the fat women gone thin, and gasping at the dashing men gone bad, and generally having a lovely time with her sisters. 

    The old man types and his mechanics speak, “As for the family money, well, when it comes down to it there is only so much you can do about it.”

    She frowns again.

    She’s enjoying this. He’s about the die and she’s here to see it.

    Chapter 16

    She finishes a second vodka and pours a third. She puts on another record.

    Belinda gets herself a drink. A vodka. Ice. She looks through the record collection, her back to the old man. She knows that there must be some cocaine in the house somewhere. It’s a comfort to her to know that she hasn’t gone looking for it.

    Her plan is to abstain for a while. See if the brain still functions at a higher level that way. She sips and recalls that the old man had suggested that idea to her. She’d expected him to be a stoner, but he’d quit the lot in 1974: booze, drugs, fags. He kept booze and drugs in the house to challenge himself and, in my opinion, to watch other people do them.

    I’ve seen him, alone, spending long evenings skinning up endless spliffs and placing them around the house, then counting them again the next day, the next week, the next year. Chopping out lines and putting them in custom-made glass tubes. I’ve watched him soaking incredibly beautiful pieces of paper in Owsley’s acid. I’ve seen him decanting bottle after bottle of wine and spirits. He cries his eyes out when he does this. He won’t be doing it again. 

    Over the years she’s had a few conversations with him, usually when John wasn’t there, that lowered her guard to critical levels. He could act the role of really lovely man. She takes a sip. She remembers talking to him about abortion and love. Those two separate conversations got to her in tears and decisions. 

    She finishes a second vodka and pours a third. She puts on another record. Back to the old man. Her back to the old man.

    “Why are you doing this to me?” The lack of an inflection in the voice makes it easier for her to interject her own feelings into the query. She doesn’t answer, there is no possible point to an answer. She hasn’t thought one through. She really does want some coke though. Short burst energy with dangerous history. It would take her mind off the matters in hand as she considers:

    Will it be it any good? 

    Will the rush be depressing?

    What will this rush be like?

    Aren’t all rushes the same?

    How beautiful am I?

    Do I need this cigarette?

    Could I handle crack?

    Do I need to fuck John one last time before I get married?

    Did all those people really die in the building?

    Am I a good person?

    Didn’t Freud recommend coke for therapy?

    Do I look OK?

    Does that matter?

    Do I look good?

    Do I look great?

    What is he saying…

    Introversion at warp speed. She’s trained herself to do that. She doesn’t take any because she asked enough times to know the answers. She’s made a decision to keep at arm’s length those things that limit her. I don’t blame her. I’ve gone back over her catalogue. Believe me she’s got no reason for comfort in a deathbed scene, which between you and me is where she is. 

    Chapter 17

    These people are not to be trusted ever. The only ones worse are the middle classes because they are so incredibly dull. Watch the toffs, Belly-girl, watch them close.

    Family members died on her like a pigeons fed poison bread by crows. Dropped at her feet one of them, an uncle, did. Cracked his head on the fridge as he fell with the aneurysm bursting. She was or is twelve. Pardon my inability to deal with tenses – death does that. 

    The family deaths come as one six-month event when she’s twelve: Grandma Burton, Granddad Burton, Uncle Charlie, Uncle Phil, Aunty Sharon, Uncle Bill, dad, Uncle Bill, David, Grandma Dylan. At Grandma Burton’s lying-in, she curses God, challenged him to a fight she knew she couldn’t win, cries and swears in the church (all in her head).

    At Uncle Bill II’s funeral a reaction was born in her that getting too close to these people would lead to more tears and hurt. She decides to better herself as an act of defiance against the Santa-faced big boy in heaven. 

    I’ve seen a conversation between her and the old man in which she related this story and he’d intersected a question about her distinction between “a reaction being born in her” and her “making a decision”. She got stoned. I would have as well. Way too nit-picky for me.

    Belinda emerges from her reverie. She finds that she’s scared.

    There is this bloody figure – a man who has featured as prominently in her life as her own father dying in front of her, and then what?

    She shakes herself down. A water. Cold. Swift. Back to the old man. Her back the old man. Here’s the situation in her mind: the immobile, foetal son whimpering slightly and then silent. The fighting monkeys screaming at each other as they tear something apart. The sickly yellow ambient light that doesn’t light the room. The inane laughter, or the laughter at the inane, from the depths of the house. 

    She drinks her vodka and pours another. She keeps her back to the old man. No matter what he’s got in mind, she can take him. If he’s genuinely ill and has come up with this, admittedly out of character, arrangement it’ll be even easier to take him down. She works out and has decades on him. He’s weak, always has been.

    She can take John as well. No problem there. She could probably take him with one sharp word to the brain. He has to be ill though. No one would deliberately get themselves into the state he’s in for a gag. That makes things more complicated. That adds levels of unpredictability above those usually exhibited by the spoilt brat brigades. These same brats are deeply unpredictable – after all, they set the standards for behaviour and to be able to set one standard is to be able to dismiss another. Belinda knows not to take anything at face value.

    “These people are not to be trusted ever. The only ones worse are the middle classes because they are so incredibly dull. Watch the toffs, Belly-girl, watch them close. They can go years and years without showing their colours, but one day ‘Pow!’ and you’re forgotten. They’ll break your fucking heart and then ask why you’re not laughing along with them about it.”

    Her elder brother had told her this. From experience. She remembers him. She remembers good people, days and nights but she also remembers when she didn’t feel lucky because the people around her didn’t feel lucky.

    “Why am I doing this to you? Because you’re going to be dead soon and I won’t have the chance to say it so that you can respond. I can’t do denial, there is no point in bargaining, I don’t do despair, so in order to get to acceptance I’m having to do the only one left that’s available to me and that’s anger. As I have no anger at myself for your condition and imminent death and I have no one else to blame, it’s going to be anger at you.” 

    “Good show. Well done”, says the machine. “That’s clear thinking. Always my problem that, no clear thinking. Now can we continue with finishing my will please?”

    John stirs, farts, rolls back over and searches for his dad’s hand, goes deeper into defensive sleep.

    Belinda turns around, laughing at the old man’s pure effrontery, ready to reply

    with a quip. He is dead.

    Chapter 18

    In which two old men speak and two young men don’t.

    “Where the fuck am I? This is not Nirvana!”

    “Calm down mate. As usual, it’s a shock to the system”, I told him.

    I remembered my previous time coming round after death. After that last little spat of the breathing and aching and pain then the confusion, ages of it. But then, bim-bang-bong! Shazaaam! It all comes back doesn’t it? What is the use of that?

    “You’re still on corporeal time, mate”, I’m telling him.

    The one thing that gives any of us stability, the beginning and ending. Knowing they’re there. It’s the middle, like hope, that fuck’s you up. Looking back, I hate all that being alive. But that’s the power of hindsight.

    “Calm down, mate. How many times do we have to do this before at least you can deal with it? You’re on your knees weeping, reacting to the whiplash and unhappy as all hell. Every single time it’s the same thing. We have to spend ages just getting the language sorted out. Do you want to move on to the next stage or what?”

    Every time he dies we go through this. Even if he dies before me, I get here and we do this. Sometimes he’s just rocking backwards and forwards having blasted himself into a state of non-language. When you’re here, language is quite important. Nothing exists so describing it is essential to get round the shock.

    Last time he told me he’d done that by imagining small disabled children throwing themselves off rocks by force of spasticity, crashing into flocks of seagulls and having their bodies pecked to shreds before being impaled on the rocks below.

    He’d cried and cried and then realised that, well, they’d be as dead as him and, well, where’s the big deal there? As ever he’d let rip with a tirade of invective and expletives at “God” who is convinced is responsible for the whole thing. Fortunately, this time I had Anthony to help out. 

    If I could find him.

    The End

    Chapter 1

    In which our hero’s history catches up with him. We discover his family. The mob solidifies and a lady of ability is introduced.

    Revolving doors on the 41-storey building. It has revolving doors and this, of course, is a problem for John McDonald-Sayer. He had stipulated when best laying plans four years previously that nothing to do with Barleycorn Buildings should revolve. 

    “If I’d wanted revolutions, I would have hired a Cuban,” he had joked, weakly.

    “Yes, sir”, replied the worried architect.

    Not only are the doors revolving, the top of the building is too. Even more annoyingly so are all eight of the elevators that crawl up and down the sides of the tower like beads of water on a turning pole dancer.

     McDonald-Sayer turns away from his broken dream statement of self. The final indignity grazes his rapidly tearing up vision: “Barely Conned Bluidings” declares the back of the 10-metre high sign. The front of the sign is still covered in tarpaulin waiting to be uncovered by Jack Nicholson or Keanu Reeves or Aung San Suu Kyi (depending on commitments) at the cock’s call on Grand Opening Day.

    “Someone”, ponders McDonald-Sayer,“is taking the piss”.

    He is correct but it must be said that it is mostly his fault. The bit that isn’t relates to several million dollars of national lottery winnings that now sits mainly in the bank account of the not really that worried architect. His lucky number had come up shortly before McDonald-Sayer left for a mind expansion trip to South America. He had chosen it based on the telephone number of the gun seller from whom he was going to purchase the gun with which he intended to shoot his master and tormentor down in cold, cold blood. 

     McDonald-Sayer is not aware of this. Such is the mighty power of knowledge.

    “Will it change your life?” asked the architect’s deeply predictable girlfriend who had stuck by him through his studies and early career.

    “Too bloody right it will – but not as much as it’s going to change someone else’s.”

     McDonald-Sayer has never related well to other human beings because he has never needed to, such is the power of money. He’d always been cushioned by several billions of dollars. These had been earned via several hundred dodgy deals, street brawls, arsons, insurance frauds, possibly a murder or five and some excellent legal advice over the preceding centuries. What McDonald-Sayer saw as good humoured banter and ribbing, others saw as arrogant bullying and fear inducing overbearing power plays. He is not aware of this reaction in other people. Such is the power of self-knowledge.

    So, the architect; in fact, the entire team down to the tea ladies who supplied the brickies with tea and thrills, hate his guts. After some judicious sharing of the architect’s lottery money, they’d all agreed that as McDonald-Sayer was flat on his back Peru or Columbia they would not leave the job. Not until it was finished and quite completely fucked-up.

    They proceeded with the kind of vigour and dedication that drew pages of appreciation in related journals and even gasps of awe from passers-by. They finished the project ahead of schedule and massively over budget with no interference from any of McDonald-Sayer’s advisors – who, like them, hated their gunner and had been pleased to jumped ship wrapped in financial lifejackets supplied by the mutinous crew. 

     McDonald-Sayer, leaves the site, possibly forever, and motors his Roller Roycer out to the countryside where he stamps it to a stop on the thickly gravelled drive of the family seat. It skids, it scars, the car hates McDonald-Sayer. His mother, flanked by Cadrew the butler, stands at the open door smiling the smile of a woman who never sees the dark side of anything anywhere ever because she has never actually seen the dark side of anything, anywhere, ever. Cadrew has no expression – the muscles of his face having been cast into the neutral shortly after his sixth birthday at the expense of the McDonald-Sayers.

    John remains in the car, slamming the steering wheel with his fists, tears sparkling from his face; screaming a Buddhist chant of serenity.

    “My little darling is such an expressive spirit, Cadrew, I am often amazed that he never chose theatrical production as a career,” Mrs McDonald-Sayer’s fairy-floss voice wafts past the butler who, nodding, steps forward and opens the driver’s door. 

     McDonald-Sayer falls out of the car, foetal onto the path and yells – serene in his petulance – at Cadrew. 

    Soundless, sprightly and showing some of his years, the butler moves at a hover to the boot of the motor and collects the luggage. 

    Mrs McDonald-Sayer calls wanly, “Darling boy, tea is waiting, we have scones and Mrs Cadrew’s homemade strawberry jam. Your father is coming up from the country to meet you. Maybe you two can smoke a cigar and play at billiards?” 

    She reverses into the foyer, smile affixed, tidies a floral arrangement and steps aboard the magnetically propelled platform to be conveyed, silently to tea. His father is coming to town. The son rolls over onto his back and looks up at the clouds that scud by making shapes that a few miles away a small boy recognises as a submarine and a horse. 

    “Oh good. Oh, perfect. Daddy, oh great”, screams John McDonald-Sayer. No sarcasm here, he means it. He has a scintillating relationship with his Pa. The grand old man of hippiedom who has appeared in the front covers of Time, News Week, Gandalf’s Garden, Oz, and any other publications he’d held a stake in. His quest for enlightenment is as legendary as his fantastic fortune. Whenever he found himself at home with his son, he would play with the boy for hours on end; teaching through play. Endlessly heaping attention, gifts and true love on the lad until the time came to catch the next wave by which he meant, “flight”, by which he meant, “flight on my own plane in my own airline”. 

    “Stay true to yourself at all times, son”, McDonald-Sayer senior would say. “Find your inner strength peace and power, find your oneness. Watch yourself for the rest of today, or tomorrow. Notice your instincts. Surrender to the now and realise that we are all one. We are all God and not-God, we are all each other”. His Pa had explained this to him, on a hill overlooking vineyards – their vineyards – in the Hunter Valley on a warm October evening on John’s fourteenth birthday, shortly after he’d been expelled from Eton for bullying. “Do not seek to change or understand others. Seek only the truth of yourself.” 

    “Yes, father. I understand”, they were both very high indeed on his elder’s home grown grass so it did all make sense to him. For too long, he felt as he chewed through the final morsels of a fascinating chocolate bar, for too long he’d tried to be what he wasn’t. He’d tried to fit in with the morons. He had put way too much effort into “altering the perceptions of self rather than the self’s perceptions”.

    “Son,” his father took the spliff and realigned his kaftan in movement that simultaneously realigned his chakras, “we need to find the courage to say, ‘No’ to the things that are not serving us if we want to rediscover ourselves and live our lives with authenticity”.

    “Yes“, said John, “Whoa.. yes. Not serving us. Thanks Pa.” He took the drugs with a physical effort that lead to a pleasing realisation of this own body was also that of his father.

    As the sun set that evening, the father mediated with the Diamond Sutra: he would allow the true sense of self that would elude his son all his waking life to enveloped him. John laid back on the grass, inhaled deeply, closed his eyes and recalled what his Pa had told him a year previously when he had talked of how seeing New York homeless had confused and disgusted him.

    “Krishnamurti once said: ‘Let us put aside the whole thought of reform, let us wipe it out of our blood. Let us completely forget this idea of wanting to reform the world.’ It was true, of course it was true”, his Pa had said, looking for his passport. 

    With deft rhythm , the older man took back the spliff and began inhaling on the in-breaths of a Sutra taught only to the wisest of men in the most secluded of temples. 

    “The world can look after itself can’t it Pa?”, John took the joint from his father’s hand and drew in its earthiness.

    “That’s right son,” his father, who with the rapid, single movement he’d learnt in Tibet, took the joint back, “the world is you, you are the world, removing the conflicts in yourself with remove them from the world.” 

    Snatching the doobie back in a move he’d learnt at Eton, John revelled in the kind of truths that only a father and son could share, “Skin up, dad”, he breathed.

    “Certainly son, certainly.”

    Now, ten years had passed and his father is returning from the country. Returning despite the light pollution, “electric germs” and “human stress encampments” that usually keep him away from home. He is coming back to see his beloved boy. John McDonald-Sayer stands up, and waits for Cadrew to come and pick him up. The retainer returns and de-gravels his silent master. They enter the family home.

    The house had been moved, brick-by-brick from Somerset in England in 1951. The McDonald-Sayer family had traced a family tree back to 1066 (or at least circa 1066) and the De Kinsey family, and had attached themselves to it. The De Kinseys had, through subterfuge, political wrangling, violence, sycophancy and outright brigandage managed to hold on to the sprawling manse since they’d built it in 1072. For centuries the family had prospered using all the tools at their disposal. But history moved faster than they did.

    With Queen Victoria, and the move to manufacturing, came a change in fortunes and standing. This included an Earldom: the First Earl of Cheddar grunted proudly on meeting the Queen Empress, who shuddered and moved on. The farm labourers moved to the cities. The villages that provided respect and hard cash to the family, were denuded of youth, and filled instead with bitter, cider-soaked geriatrics. Of course the family had contacts in Manchester and London, so a move to trade as well as industry was inevitable, as was occasionally failing to dress for dinner.

    Chapter 2

    Following a disgustingly publicised dalliance with a young fellow in Antibes, the Earl relocated to The Demons Club

    With the end of empire and the start of the War to end all Wars, the McDonald-Sayer boys as they now appeared, grew tired of receiving white feathers in the post, and threats of prison sentences. Conscientious objection was often mistaken for outright cowardice in this new world, and no amount of money could shift that so it appeared. Forced into a decision between being maimed in a local gaol or maimed in foreign field, they opted to go to war in the hope that they could manoeuvre their way to the back and some quiet. 

    All three returned: one, a burbling, shell-shocked innocent incapable of any active function went straight into poetry, dismally and then opened an Art Gallery off the King’s Road in London before taking up the reigns of head of the family on the death of his father by whisky. The second son, syphilitic, blind in one eye, addicted to young boys, had entered the church. The third, and youngest, returned replete with money from deals in Belgium, France and Prussia – family now owned several chemical factories – had relocated North to invest in more factories still. He prospered, greatly, while all around him foundered mysteriously.

    With the Second World War came an unfortunately mistimed dalliance with fascism, but so did most of the English upper aristocracy and commercial upper class, and so it was mostly forgotten. The 2nd Earl spent most of his time in London and the Cote D’azure exploring systems at the gambling tables or practising Magick in the hopes of yet more power.

    However, following a disgustingly publicised dalliance with a young fellow in Antibes, the Earl relocated to The Demons Club in St James where he proceeded to be shot dead in 1956 by his last remaining son – the impatiently titular 3rd Earl. The 17th Earl had escaped becoming the last aristocrat hanged in England.

    There had been rumours at the time that due to a congenital weakeness of the hands, the younger aristocrat would not actually have been able to pull the trigger of the Thompson submachine gun that had splattered his father’s parietal and occipital lobes across the walls of the The Demons Escoffier-designed kitchen. It was also unlikely that he would have been able to simultaneously shoot the old man in the chest with a Luger pistol. 

    Tragically, all the legal advice provided free of charge by the Yorkshire branch of the family, could not save him from the tender mercies of the Wormwood Scrubs nooseman. The Yorkshire branch had sprung from the loins of youngest of the sons to return from the War to end all Wars. The title of Earl, the house and everything else that went with it passed to him because the Bishop was unable to leave Rome, where he’d fled to a few years earlier. 

    So, the house speaks of historical precedents, of grandeurs earned over centuries, of honours bestowed and of achievements yet to come. It is called ‘The Glancings’, no one knows why. Its central courtyard, protected on all sides by high walls each cornered by tall, elegant towers, is home to a Go-Kart track, a permanent marquee and several angry peacocks.

    Those trinkets are nothing, however, when you experience the 15-metre high statue of the Buddha bedecked each day by new petals and neatly polished swastika; you won’t experience it because you will never be allowed near it. It was not the swastika at the 45-degree angle mind you, but the good one, the nice one, the family having divested itself of its Nazi connections on the advice of their spin doctor.

    Mrs McDonald-Sayer spends an hour a day cleaning the Buddha with chamois cloths and warm, soapy water. She whispers even warmer, even soapier entreaties to it, often collapsing onto its lap in fits of desire and giggles. She knows that although the Campbell-Stuarts are a lean stringy clan for the most part, so this statue is as dear to her as the man she truly loved. She calls as “Darling David, dearest Hurst” and loves it as such. He was a boy who she knew when she was a girl. He had disappeared when she went to school in Switzerland. He was somewhere in the world, she prayed.

    John heads to his rooms, red-faced, with puffy eyes and a firm requirement to shoot something soft and alive with a handgun. Cadrew follows.

    “Why the fuck would someone take the piss out of me like this, Cadrew? My mind is as open as my heart to the truth of the now and the holy me inside. I can perceive and experience Real Moments. I relay the life force. What the fuck is going on that these people should do this?” He slams his foot into one of the cushioned pillars provided for that purpose – outwardly expressing his anger rather than repressing it so that it would grow and infect the authenticity of his life experience – as the sign attached the pillar advises him.

    “Maybe sir should call a meeting with the relevant parties in order to ascertain the circumstances under which this, if I may say so, such an outrageous tragedy occurred?” Cadrew speaks slowly as he selects some suitable shootingwear from the sporting wardrobe.

    “I don’t want to experience those kind of anti-authentic vibes for fuck’s sake. All that negative energy in one room! Having to deal with small souls would obviously feedback in a severely unwhole way. I’m over it. Let the fucking building take care of itself.”

    “Then,” Cadrew lays layer after layer of tweed, and a snakeskin holster across the bed, “maybe a cool way to inject some realism to these people would be to send our person at Hardy, Crum and De Angelis to see them right, if you get my meaning, sir?”

    John welcomes a smile into his physical world and casts a nod to his servant. 

    ”Our lady, Cadrew, our woman, our goddess, our Kali. What a bloody marvellous idea, yes invite Ms Belinda Dylan to a meeting with me tomorrow morning at 11:30am.”

    Chapter 3

    “History? fuck it.”

    Left to its own devices, Barleycorn Building slowly fills with the homeless. By the hour it becomes engorged with the wanted, the unwanted, the witless, the weary and the wary. Music thumps from the 21st floor. The walls of the 18th floor are transformed by spray cans, the roof pool fills with the scum of months.

    The security guards watch the TV, read true crime and graphic novels; nod occasionally as the stream of new residents is complimented by one more character. They call the occasional internal number to ask that the fighting should not include the ejection of items from the street-side windows; and they direct the pizza delivery relay crews to the correct locations. 

    The edifice warms, and in its nooks and crannies things are hidden. It echo with stories of both the hard and no luck varieties. Dreams fill its cavities matching themselves to long, secured, comfort-blessed snores and sleep speech. 

    Anthony John Woods (A.K.A Pokie) sits cross-legged on the 15th floor boardroom table drinking schnapps from the drinks cabinet and throwing spitballs at the postmodernism on the walls. His hood is down, his sunglasses are off, he smells horrific even to himself. 

    He’d been sexually abused since aged 11, drunk since 12, on the street since 13. He is now 17. He is 17 today. It is 11:30am and he is partying, full of breakfast for the first time in six months. He flicks at the remote control and called up another music channel. 

    “History? fuck it.” Flick.

    “Sport, fuck it.” Flick, swig, smoke.

    “A total eclipse of the heart” – What? Flick, swig, smoke.

    “Terror alert medium. Campaign continues in the West. Next I speak to Francine Jordan about why banning the writings of Kahlil Gibran in our schools is freedom of speech.” Flick, swig, inhale. 

    “Anthony, stop changing the channels, man, there is nothing to watch, just bang some tunas on the box. Play tunas for your birthday, Tony, play up, man.” 

    Under the table, on his back lays Neil Hendle, AKA“All-in-One-Boy” or “Fireman” compressed into a singlet and camo jeans stolen from somewhere. He’s smoking a spliff and trying to read a book on Japanese management theory that he’d discovered the previous night. 

    “It is my birthday, All-in-One-Boy, my happy to be older day! Pressies and games, bro’.”

    “Yes, I know, man, I am totally and completely upon that. It is all good. But how is a man supposed to consolidate his mind on a subject when box is blasting randomness galore into the air? Happy total birthday to you and all that, but that’s no excuse for pollution of the aural ocean is it?” 

    “Go on then, you choose. I can’t be bothered.” Standing quickly, elegantly from the cross-leg, Anthony John Woods, AKA Pokie, jumps from the table and takes a seat on the floor next to the smaller boy. Handing over the remote he blows a kiss and closes his eyes, “you choose for me. It’s my birthday.”

    “You really do stink. There’s a shower behind the mirror over there. All god cons, seriously, I was in there last night for an hour or more, very nice it was with lots with the hot and the cold and body wash stuff. Why not treat your birthday suit to clarification, Pokie mate? At least for my sake because I have to live with you are not easy to love, love, not right now.” Rolling away from the source of the stench, with remote in hand, All-in-One-Boy lays in hope.

    “There’s a shower behind the mirror? That’s unusual. How did you find that one out then?” Pokie looks nervously at the enormous wall mirror and then back, slightly less nervously, to his friend.

    “I went lurking. Last night, while you were asleep and screeching about rape as usual, I went on a bit of a search and destroy mission. And you should know that when there are mirrors, there is in-aviary something behind them – like magic times.” All-in-One-Boy hopes hard about the shower, his hope is that later on when things got naked and close, he won’t have to hold his nose as well as his dick.

    “Walls, man. You tend to find walls behind mirrors. My foster parents didn’t raise an idiot.” Pokie walks over to the mirror, thinks about smashing it with his already scarred fist, looks back at All-in-One-Boy who shakes his head, and so he presses his nose against the glass until the stink of his breath forces him backwards.

    “Go and have a shower, man, because sometimes I’d like not to notice that you’d come in. You know I love you, Pokes. But, despite what the world wants us to believe, some things can go too far even for love and, frankly, you have done. Now fuck off and stop analysing what’s behind the mirror, it’s a shower, go into it.”

    All-in-One-Boy met Pokie six months previously, so their love was still marching ahead. They had looked at each other and their loneliness had subsided to form a warm, safe place to live just big enough for their cynicism and defences disappear long enough for them to share food. They’d fucked the first night, how ashamed they didn’t feel, how warm and satisfied they did. Then they kept walking together, swapping stories and holding hands, taking what they could from each other, and giving back. They were in love, so the stealing of bags, and the rolling of drunks, the begging and slipping into each others arms in the same Salvation Army bunkbed flew by with the accompaniment of birds and rain. 

    “It’s my bunk, you fack!” 

    “I know, isn’t it great?”

    “Yes, hold my head. My head hurts and acts up.”

    “Why do you fuck around with your words? With the sounds? I always understand what you say, but I don’t get it.”

    “I don’t think I do do, Dodo.”

    “OK.”

    Pokie looks around the place to soak it all up and remember it for when it all goes away on him. This is what he sees:

    It is a big, glass room, carpeted and balmy in its never-think-about-it warmth. Red, Japanese-patterned carpet. Injected warmth from the air, when the climate was acceptable, from the mechanics when it wasn’t. It was brilliantly put together, working well, as perfectly as any design could.

    (Once every 23 minutes and nine seconds, everything slows down, starts clanking here and there, gurgles and bubbles and generally creates a feeling of irritation. At least it would be a feeling of irritation if you were the kind of person who expected superb pieces of design to work superbly every time, all the time.)

    At 11:26am the same day a Jaguar pulls up outside The Glancings. Not one of those flash Jags, spoiler-ladened, bright yellow, modernised and wailing of its owner’s wealth. This was your classic Jaguar. Silver, E-Type. Yelling its owner’s wealth all the same but also taste, great taste, the best taste. Its owner is the company of Hardy, Crum and De Angelis; avenging angels, cleaners, lawyers.

    They also own the soul, or near as makes no difference, of beautiful, sharp faced and even sharper brained Belinda Dylan (28) who steps out of the car, immaculate both. A wonderful spinster in the new-fashioned sense of the word. Wise beyond her years in all matters pertaining to living a life to the most exacting standards of look-after-yourselfishness. She is good to her mother and father – still living, on a farm, somewhere deep in Derbyshire. She Skypes them on a weekly basis, confirming her still childless state with a smile in her voice. She sends birthday cards and anniversary gifts, she even goes home for Christmas Day, but is always back in her city central apartments by Boxing Day.

    There is nothing cheap or tacky about this woman, from her abstractly perfect diction down to her elegantly cropped pubis. She walks in splendour, everything matching save for one, usually small detail, a broach, a belt buckle, a t-shirt, that she uses like beauty spot. Today her shoe buckles are ever so slightly the wrong shade of grey that they set everything else off perfectly.

    Belinda has been the preferred legal aid to John McDonald-Sayer since they met during his very brief attempt to study economics at one of the major Oxford colleges. She was the one who following a particularly heroic sex binge had enquired why somebody who never needed to worry about money should need to study economics. He left the next day, with her card.

    Chapter 4

    You haven’t neutered him, yet darling, he is still awfully attractive. I love the way he stands there imaging me naked and feeling guilty about it

    Emerging from the company car, Belinda straightens her skirt, collects her laptop and mounts the first step at exactly 11:29. Cadrew opens the doors, she plants a warm and deliberately embarrassing smoocher on his cheek, whispers, “What-ho Cadrew, how’s it hanging baby man?” and proceeds up the stairs to her meeting.

    “Come in, come in Belinda, sit down. Father is here, he’s doing his meds (by which he meant ‘meditations’) in the east gardens, he will be with us in twenty minutes. Would you like coffee?” John is clad in a very Cary Grant black worsted suit, open necked shirt and sandals. He is sitting in a desk that once belonged to the Dali Lama, his hair is superbly scruffy (to a tee, to a tee) and his skin glows with a ‘just swam 15 laps’ patina fresh from the bottle. 

    He adores Belinda. Belinda adores John. There is sex tension between them. Their eyes meet like old friends in a Balinese hotel room following an engaging lunch. Their rhythms synchronise as Belinda nods and sits herself down on a chair that once belonged to nobody because it was custom made from Tasmanian old growth forest for her at the behest of John.

    “Did you kiss Cadrew again when you came in? You know he hates it.” He slips off the desk and walks across to where she is crossing her legs. He takes her hand and attempts an admonishing expression.

    “You haven’t neutered him, yet darling, he is still awfully attractive. I love the way he stands there imaging me naked and feeling guilty about it. I can see the way he tortures himself in his imagination. You know that it’s really abut time that you started him breeding. After all, where is the next generation to come from?” She removes her hand from his and unpacks her computer.

    “He’s not getting any younger though. So, we have set in train that he should breed the next Cadrew within the year. We have a fantastic filly picked out for him. One of the Murdoch’s staffers I think. She’s incredibly fit, totally well trained and completely 18. By the time Cadrew is too old for us, we’ll have the new one ready.” He sits on the floor in front of her, lotus-like, looks up and as Cadrew places coffees on the Bauhaus table to his left, McDonald-Sayer begins to relay the necessary details.

    “Nice arse,” she comments, meaning it, as Cadrew does his best to exit face on from the room. He blushes and proceeds to the kitchen lavatory.

    He flirts more admonition at her, sips coffee and waits for her considered opinion. She looks at the laptop, says a few words to it, nods and then grimaces theatrically at him.

    “Oh my dear McDonald-Sayer,” her grimace morphs from the dramatic to the operating theatre, “Oh you have been a silly idiot haven’t you?”

    “S’pose so”, he has no idea what she’s talking about, but that’s why he employs her. 

    “Apparently you decided that you could write your own contracts for this,” she pauses and searches for the correct word, “debacle of a building. Were you sulking with me?”

    “S’pose I was.” He often did. He had asked her to sue the family of farmers who occupied a tiny piece of land within the McDonald-Sayer glebe. She had refused. She explained that simply because they kept pigs was not grounds to sue them. He had sworn at her, threatened to get her dismissed, begged her, implored her, swore some more and then sulked all the way to Bali. He refused to talk to her but Skyped her to berate her on this subject, every day for eight months. They only resumed civilised communication after the farmer accidentally fell backwards into his own Massey Ferguson’s reaping blades or something like that during a party.

    (The party had been thrown for him by a major super market chain – its legal representatives to be quite exact – to celebrate a pork distribution deal. According to the farmer’s wife at the coroner’s enquiry, he had never touched LSD in any quantity let alone the 780mg that had been discovered inside him post mortem. It appeared to be suspended in a litre of old school absinthe, the wormwood variety that wiped out what the French intelligentsia in the 18th century. The farmer’s family moved from the land following a hate campaign – “Acid Farmer’s Froggie Booze Binge Puts Pox on OUR Porkers!!!” in a national newspaper.

    Chapter 5

    “Bastards.” She breathes, clenches her fists and biting her bottom lip, “Mendacious, unethical, turdish bastards…

    During his Bali dummy-spit, McDonald-Sayer had conceived not only two children but also the grand plan for the Barleycorn Bliding that was to dominate the central business district. He’d decided that, in his own words, he “…didn’t need any help from any long-legged, sweet-smelling, over-qualified bint with an major customer relations problem” and had drafted the contracts.

    “Silly man”, Belinda called up the contract from the top secret cloud folder where McDonald-Sayer had stored it secretly.

    “Mad man. Look at this. It’s got more loopholes in it than a the walls of a very large medieval castle.” 

    “Eh?”

    She kicks off her shoes and folds her legs beneath her, rests the laptop next to the coffee tray and begins to read:

    The party of the first part (she sighs, gently but hurtfully in the mode of an office IT person watching a clerk trying to get his printer to print using slightly dated drivers) being John Marshall Garcia Lennon Donavan Maharashtra Che Kennedy McDonald-Sayer asserts the…

    “I have to stop it here. This is disgraceful. I mean, how did you get this passed the other side’s legals?”

    He looks down at this sandals and toys with his cup. He looks out of the window and says, slowly and deliberately, “Cleghorn, Barnstable, Groundling and Hayes”.

    “Bastards.” She breathes, clenches her fists and biting her bottom lip, “Mendacious, unethical, turdish bastards. You really were having a large sulk with me weren’t you?”

    “S’pose so. Soz. Don’t know what came over me. It’s all a bit of a blur. Are you saying that it’s not legal though? That it wouldn’t stand up? Can we get out of it?” He’s up now, on his feet, fighting posture, blood pumping.

    She is icy. Still coiled, a drop of blood drips from her lip, settles on her teeth and is washed away by her emerging smile. She is thinking hard. She knows that this many holes can be filled with many dollars. She knows that it will take time. She knows that, aside from yet another tedious case featuring the Murdochs and some question of titles, natives, libels and drudgey drudgey jetting around, she’s not got that much on. She answers, “Yes, baby, yes, I think we can nail these uppity little sods to the wall. We must throw ourselves onto the mercy of the courts. What kind of mental state were you in when you put this bag of nonsense together?”

    Chapter 6

    In which the police sit back. A party happens and we meet the parent.

    The love that bellows its name from the gutters and back alley bars is rough and ready tonight. It’s all the go. It’s up. It’s the love of getting completely fucked up. 

    “I love this!” yelled Anthony, “I love this booze and shite! I love this music. I love this meat energy!”

    The gym of Barleycorn has been turned into a club. Sound systems compete from each end. The basketball hoops contain buckets full of ice. Dayglo paint is everywhere. The old bums are splayed in one corner. The smack addicts are dancing. The speed freaks are dry humping. The acid and E casualties are hugging and screaming and hugging again. The Care in the Communities are experiencing fun. Happy fun. 

    One sound system is run by an ancient punk whore called Soozie – she’s copping in her head and she’s playing Search And Destroy.

    Another other sound system is run by Pokie since its original master – a booze hound called Stuart – fell beneath the working decks. Pokie’s playing We Built This Love on Pledges by the Mighty Solomon Klepto Orchestra. 

    “This is almost worth it!” yells Pokie.

    “Worth what?” All-in-One-Boy, chugs some absinthe he’d discovered in one of the corporate mini bars. He’s gone through every room, gathering up all the booze – and some of the cocaine too – and bringing it down to the gym. You could say that this was his party. 

    “Worth the police turning up, which they will. Worth a lifetime of degradation and abuse…” he tails of, realises what he’s just said and cues another tune (Tony Touch’s Dimelo Springs Boogie).

    “Oh that. Yeah, I suppose it might be.” All-in-One-Boy really isn’t that interested. Introspection, looking backward, analysing shit really isn’t his thing. Right now he’s considering the best way to get the most stuff out of the place before the police do show up and wreck everything. What with the amount of speed he’s taken in the last 48 hours combining with his natural curiosity and greed he has thoroughly scoped the place out. He’s aware that there are some pretty sweet goods to be sold on. He’s also aware that much of it has already made its way out of those imposing front and back doors and is by now being liquidated. This kind of opportunity doesn’t even come once in a lifetime; somehow it has. 

    “All this chilling and partying is fine and dandy Pokes, but there’s cash to be made here and we’re not making it. Look around you mate, most of these mongrels can’t see what’s in front of their eyes. We’ve got a chance here.”

    Pokie doesn’t need to look, he knows that the love of his life is right. He would love to stay here, in this atmosphere, pretending that everybody in the room is partying together and not in their own worlds of schizophrenia, booze, drugs and hopeless numb disengagement. He knows that very soon they will all be back out on the streets, in the Starlight Hotel, due for a fate like Arthur Burrows (burnt to death by four teenagers) or Tim ‘Ziggy’ Jenkins (soda bombed). 

    All-in-One-Boy’s idea is an obvious one. A good one. Sensible and right. But Pokie wants this idyll to last. He’s not experienced many idylls. Not a single one really. Never.

    “Schrödinger’s Cat”, he says.

    All-in-One-Boy has heard about that Cat so many times that he really wants to rip its tail off, firework its mouth. As for Schringer or Schroder or whoever the fuck she is, take her outside, douse her in petrol and torch her. As for the uncertainty and the rest of the “sit on your arse and do nothing in case some fragile memory gets hurted”, drown it in a sack.

    “Fuck right off, bitch. Fuck you, fuck Schroeder. Fuck the cat. There is stuff here. We can take it. We can make money with it. We can be safe and comfortable.” 

    “We are safe and comfortable. Right here. We are.”

    “We are comfortable, bitch, for now.”

    Chapter 7

    “I happen to have had a red-hot tip – don’t be so rude – that a rather spectacular coke deal is going to occur very close to the Barleycorn Building…

    Now the murk is everywhere and is ready to take everybody unless someone injects an amp or maybe a volt of constancy. Everything in the gym is strangely, Berlin 1920s, disconnected. The scene is a sour one. The space is not creating synergies. Energy is high but negative. 

    There are two sides to this terrible project though. This deliberately terrible building set in the sea of the centre of the capital city. Clad in cheapness, underpinned by hate.

    On one side sit the poor, the dispossessed. Decaying and descendant. Outlines and out of line so we don’t like them and we don’t get them for what they really are. We’ve been with them for a while already, so we’ll leave them. Before we do, you have to know that they do not love each other.

    On the other, are the permanently wealthy, always ascendent. What are they up to?

    Before we go on though, I have an admission to make to you. I am Pokie’s father by the way. His biological daddy. I am dead, of course – on so many levels. So, most of Pokie’s current situation is my fault. But the honest truth, and I’ve talked to the big boss goomba, the head of the house, the Maker, the People Baker, God, is something about love but mostly, so I’m told, is that I can’t tell you the honest truth. By the way, the police are ready to go. They are just about ready anyway. 

    Over at The Glancings, John, loves her, Belinda. She loves him. OK, so the dynamic between them is all sheer (as in stocking) transparent (as in the emotions) pretence. Have pity our lord though, what choice do they have? They’ve been targeted since ever they met. Like Pokie loves All-in-On-Boy, John and Belinda do really love each other. That conquers all, right? 

    “No, Charlie, sweety, hang fire please.” Belinda had been trying to find any mention of security in the drunken contract for the building but she has had no luck. She rushes through pages on the off chance that amidst the paranoid, BBC law court dramatics that masquerades as a contract she can find anything whatsoever, at all, anywhere that would suggest liabilities against the security firm (on a rolling contract), the door or lock or lintel or window manufacturers. She can’t.

    So, she’s Zooming with Charles Drake, friend of uncle George, owner of race horses, and also rather conveniently rather high up in the strong arm of the law of the land. If he can’t help, then her next call is to Francis Moore MP, the Home Secretary, and another former lover. She wants to clear the Barleycorn out. Knock it down. Sell the land on for a profit, and forget the whole sorry saga. 

    “Charlie, aren’t we in a more caring time? We are. We need to build housing for real people. But right now, we can’t winkle out the pestilence in the corrupt high rise we worked so hard on”, she waited, tapping her head as she looked at John who was snorting a line.

     She continues, “I happen to have had a red-hot tip – don’t be so rude – that a rather spectacular coke deal is going to occur very close to the Barleycorn Building at circa quarter to eight this evening”, she didn’t. I didn’t matter. She was passing on a tip. He needed arrests.

    The more she examines the contract, the more she is reminded that John, bless his silken socks, is a child. One could send him in, head-down, tears bared into a fight and he’d do his best. He might even win. But this time, he didn’t quite get that there was no winning at the outset, it was a legal contract. 

    She listens to Charlie waffling on about the this and the that and the complexities and the having a drink later in the week when time did not contend and, ceteris paribus, all would go well. She makes familiar sexual noises and reads and reads and reads. He talks and talks. She stops.

    “What was that Charlie?”

    “It’s this thing you see, Bel, as far as we’re concerned, Barleycorn Building is a perfect right now. It’s attracting all the right sorts, if you get my drift.” 

    “You mean you’re not going in?” She’s confused, she likes to be confused.

    “Well, no. Not right now. Not for at least a month anyway. It’s actually working out quite nicely. I’ve got the Bobbies at the ready but there are”, he pauses, “some issues with pay negotiations you see.”

    “Issues? Pay? These are public servants” she is genuinely appalled. 

    “I know. It’s bloody outrageous. But our lot are a hair’s breadth away from being in the Barelycorn themselves most of them. The bloody whinges of my own mob takes up more time than the actual job. The less I actually make them work, the better at the moment. Tell you what though, I’ll put it about that we are going in? How’s that?”

    “Bless you Charlie. Bless your heart. But what do you mean by putting it about?”

    “Like you don’t know.” He winks, aural like.

    “I’ve already said stop the Benny Hill.”

    “Talk to our media chums.”

    She hangs up. She makes another call.

    “OK” she says. 

    She hangs up.

    It is 4am.

    Chapter 8

    In which music, art, theft, drugs, life disappear out the back door. I dislike All-in-One Boy. And hope starts to grow in The Barleycorn.

    The great, already crumbling building is mooned by the moon. Pokie is asleep. All-in-One-Boy is very much awake and stealing a lamp out of the door to a pile of goodies he’s curating for later selling on Jimmy the Fence in Highgate. He’s piling it on top of the chairs and paintings already there. He wants Pokie awake to nick a van. He can’t drive. He doesn’t want to be burned in a gutter like Burrows. He moves fast, but is slowing visibly. 

    At The Glancings, Belinda is racking her considerable intellect in order find key elements like cooling off periods, descriptions of works, service level agreements. She had discovered something about payments but despaired that it described how they were all to be made in advance, “because I can afford to, yeah!” as the rubric so inelegantly laid out.

    In Belinda’s head is Stoned from Dido’s Life For Rent album.

    John is bedded down, the hookah bubbles away by his vast, 1,001 Nights styled bed, the hookah hose rests on his chest. He is snoring on his back, a very regal, very assured, starfish.

    In John’s head a usual is, Fix You by Coldplay.

    Nothing plays in Pokie’s head. He still stinks to hell or high heaven and he is dreaming about his family. His father died (that’s me) when the boy was 18 and already gone from the family home. Pokie had been fostered at 14. His mother had gone somewhere or other. Dad stayed on at the family home, smoking blow, watching the telly, listening to old Punk Rock albums, betting on the dogs, flogging stuff off and holding onto other stuff for various acquaintances. 

    Pokie is dreaming that he has to drop by his Mum’s. The house is always immaculate – in reality it was always immaculate before she left and died of a broken heart and knives late one night in a park walking back from her second job. 

    He sees his father (me!) there, spliff in hand, Don’t Dictate blasting away, vacuuming the hall carpet. He exchanges some US dollars and moves into the kitchen where the old man is bleaching ashtrays, spliff in mouth, whispering, “Which one of you bastards hurt someone near and dear to us. Come up here and we’ll kick the shit out of you, you bastard!”

    He buys an eighth of hash with the money changed and slips upstairs to the bathroom to skin up. His father is brushing and Ajaxing the lavatory pan, shouting “You’re in a rut! You’ve to get out of it, out of it, out of it!!”

    “Dad, why are you always cleaning up?” he asks dream Me. 

    Chapter 9

    At home in Algiers, the once hesitant architect checks his watch and begins to laugh, and laugh and laugh and laugh until he is sick. Actually sick.

    An amateur band starts to practice in a nearby yard. I continue to scrub and shout. Pokie slips out of the dream and rolls over. 

    All-in-One-Boy, still moving faster than you or I would consider decent at this time of the morning, he is unscrewing art from walls and stacking it in the service elevator. He already has Jimmy the Fence prepared to move the gear. The paintings are amazing, there’s a Jenny Watson, a John Brack; he knows this because every one of the motherfuckers has a little card next to it saying what it is, who its by and what it’s supposed to be about. Albert Namatjiram, Chris Ofili, Caroline Zilinsky, Renoir, Damien Hirst, Chris Pignall. Circles, sheds, dots, more dots, portraits, landscapes, money, money, money. 

    The heating kicks in at 4:30am as the shuts off with an explosive percussion that wakes many of the gym sleepers briefly. The building’s shutters come down as the security cameras black-dot in sequence. All the tapes are wiped and the fire-safe sprinklers shower the kitchens with detergent. Freezers either ice up or start slowly cooking their contents. The building is eating itself, it hates itself, it was made that way. It had shit parents.

    At home in Algiers, the once hesitant architect checks his watch and begins to laugh, and laugh and laugh and laugh until he is sick. Actually sick.

    I’ve realised that I’m looking in on all of these people for a reason. Obviously I keep a weather-eye on Anthony because of our relationship. In so doing I can’t really avoid inclusion in some of the life of the little turd, Hendle. I don’t like him at all. There’s something sneaky about him: All-in-One-Boy? What kind of a name is that? A wanker’s name. 

    The actual fact is that he’s only as waif and stray as he wants to be. Unlike my Anthony who is your actual orphan, that other toerag is living the life predominantly to annoy his parents. That he could leave it at any time, that doesn’t sit well with him or me. The fact that he has no soul is not a good sign either.

    That happens, being born soul-free, it’s not a mistake or anything, it’s due to one of two things: either (a) the soul is already as full as it can get with lessons learnt and experiences earned but the owner of the soul hasn’t realised this and still wants to go around again (often this ends in suicides and at an early age – I mean you would wouldn’t you, once it’s become apparent that you’re just treading water, you’d move on; (b) it’s sealed itself up and in so doing it has withered away to nothing.

    This often results in suicide as well, but more often than not in massive amounts of excess, of pouting and sulks, of getting your own way for the sake of getting your own way. You’re not able to let anything else in to charge up the old karmic (or whatever you like to call it, the big boss is quite free with terminology so don’t worry about it over much) so it’s all out-out-out. The whole soul thing is, if I’m honest, a bit out my league at the moment. I’m still floating about a lot trying to get a handle on the general after-life concept. It’s not as straightforward as you’d like to think. But that’s my story and you’re not here for that.

    As for John and Belinda, I’m damned if I know why I’ve got an oversight on their goings-on. I opted out of the whole, “seeing the future” thing on advice that it would be a bit of a culture shock. Tried it once, and the advice was spot-on, it made me incredibly nauseous, all time mixed together, choices required as to exactly which future I wanted to be able to see. I’m not good with choices.

    Now, the curious architect. I can see him right now in an apartment in Algiers reading the paper and drinking a daiquiri, he’s got remorse in his veins and it will not let him go. All the laughter in the world is not going to rid him of his natural good nature. He’s even started sending what he thinks are anonymous cash donations back to his ex-girlfriend bless his little heart. For now, however, he’s avoiding the remorse as it makes its way remorselessly (as it were) to his spirit and hence to his soul. He’s pretending that it’s not remorse at all, its power. He’s got the power now to brighten up or tarnish other people’s lives. His decision all backed-up with the almighty buck. 

    So, why do I have oversight? My guess is that the law will come into play, probably around that fucking abysmal contract and that Anthony will have to fight the good fight. As I am attached to my boy, it looks as if he’s getting attached to these others. He’s getting quite attached to the place as well. He can see in some of the folks around him that they are too. 

    Chapter 10

    Two bums are having a real go in the kitchen as well, cooking up a storm.

    Right now, there are 423 people in the tower. Well, 439.5 if you deal it in the pregnancies, and no I am not going near that one, I’ll leave that to the powers that be. 423 people in less than two days. That’s some serious pulling power this building has. “Indian burial ground?” you think? Take another guess, for a start this is not the United States. “Ley lines?”, possibly, there are so many of the fucking things who can tell? No, I really can’t tell you, just be satisfied that it’s happening, that the people are coming in all of their colours and shades. 

    I can see them, I move relatively freely within the limits laid down for me and at my request, and I can observe them. But I can’t see into them, not unless they make a connection with the one I should really love. 

    The artist colony on the 21st floor is really starting to make a go of it – there’s already a performance in planning. OK so a number of them are fellow-travellers, wankers and the usual kinds of wannabes that mistake splashing some gloss around on a wall for communicating a vision. But there are some good sorts up there.

    Two bums are having a real go in the kitchen as well, cooking up a storm. They are going to be well pissed off when they go back there later today. But they’re developing a stick-at-it-ness. 

    There are students in the penthouse, nurses on the fifth floor, asylum seekers in the basement (natch), divorced, middle-aged men in the games rooms on the 17t floor, divorced, middle-aged women all over the ninth, tenth and eleventh floors, and there are ghosts all over the shop – seriously, the newsagent on the mezzanine is overflowing with spirits.

    It’s a bit of shame that so many ghettos should happen, but that’s people for you. It’s 5:30am in your earth time (I love saying that) now and the heat (in your earth therms, OK I’ll stop) is pretty unbearable, so people are waking up and wandering around, bumping into each other because it’s dark what with there being no light and all the shutters having been closed. Everything is compressing and over-heating.

    Chapter 11

    In which we discover choices can create inauthentic moments. And smell can override all other senses.

    A month has passed. My Anthony is dead. Still not here though. 

    The wealthy cowardly architect is on the telephone. He’s been called up by Cleghorn, Barnstable, Groundling and Hayes, solicitors at law to attend the inquest. They are advising him of sticky situations, of possible wrinkles and potential liabilities that could not have been foreseen. The architect is listening, vaguely. His brother, the accountant has already salted away the lottery win and the payments received for Barleycorn. 

    “We may need you to return within the next month in order to help out in the courts.” Junior lawyer, Sam Wells, makes it all sound so blasé but he’s got his finger inside his collar and is pulling for fresh air, needing it to hit his inflaming razor burn. 

    “I don’t think that’s going to be possible really. I’m planning to go to Verbier for some skiing prior to Christmas. I’ve really got nothing to say anyway. I’ve given up architecture. I’m writing a novel.” He gazes out of the window at the sky.

    Junior Wells wants to say, “Oh go on!” but knows he mustn’t. He’s also concerned that the architect hasn’t asked to speak to someone higher up. Clients always ask to speak to someone higher up. Wells is not comfortable with actually speaking with these people for more than a few seconds. He’s certainly not good at convincing them to do something they patently do not want to do. He consults the script given to him by Mr Groundling.

    “Let me assure you, sir, that returning as requested by one of our very senior partners, will certainly be of immense benefit not only to yourself but to the cause of justice. Sir, you will be contributing greatly to the overall wellness of the world in which you are living. Making the sacrifice you are going to make to”, he consults the notes again, “not go to, to miss out on going to skiing, sir…” off he trails, unable to keep it up. He waits.

    The architect is aghast. He’s just seen two planes seemingly missing each other by a whisker out of his window. Or he thinks he has, the total and complete lack of stress he feels about everything has been making him hallucinate a little recently so he can’t be sure.

    “What was that you said. Something about making the world a better place by going skiing?”

    “No, sir. I said that you could make the world a better place by not going skiing. By coming back to contribute to the cause of justice that is. Sir?”

    The architect looks down at his espadrilles and thinks for a while. As soon as the sound of Junior Well’s rabid pen tapping stops he knows what decision he has to make.

    “OK, I’ll come back.”

    “Pardon?” Briefly, Wells waits for the inevitable caveat.

    “I’ll come back if you represent me.”

    “I don’t think that will eventuate, sir. I think that a client of your import will be handed up, sir.”

    “Then I won’t come back.”

    “Can I consult for a moment please, sir?”

    “No.”

    A fix. A right fix. Time to make a decision that could result in either a great deal of responsibility or a great deal of lost revenue. Either way, Wells reckons, it’s going to result in a great deal of unwanted pain. He closes his eyes, tries not to think, tries to let the words comes come from him. This is the kind of chance that comes along once. He’s been told this on numerous occasions by numerous bloody people who won’t let him alone to get on with his reading and his music. He has to let his true self make the call. He breathes out, calmly.

    “I’m afraid, sir, that I’m not in a position to make that call. Do you want me to hand you up to a person of more authority?”

    The telephone goes dead. The architect sits back and reviews the sky. Not much more has happened. He starts to count his cash-counting pile, this time organising it into notes that are less damaged on a sliding scale beginning with the top, right corner and excluding graffiti has a parameter.

    Junior Wells stands up from his desk and walks towards the door marked, “Mr Groundling Sr”. He knocks, enters and observes Mr Groundling removing his earpiece.

    Chapter 12

    He is smiling displaying wonderful teeth – the kind that should belong to somebody at least fifty years younger than his seventy years (they do).

    Groundling is a fat man with an enormous head and fingertips the colour of old scrolls. He is dressed in black with a collarless shirt open at the neck. His suit is the thickness of cartridge paper, it is flecked with white flakes. He sits in a modified and extremely high-backed, Charles Rennie Mackintosh Monk’s chair with no upholstered seat. He is not scowling.

    He is smiling displaying wonderful teeth – the kind that should belong to somebody at least fifty years younger than his seventy years (they do). His desk is embedded with three 17-inch plasma screens – big desk. The telephone that feeds the earpiece is hidden. His legs never move. He is entirely stable.

    “Other people are laughing at you.” Groundling bends towards the desk, slams both fists down. Leans back and shrieks, “Other people are laughing!”

    Wells turns around and leaves the room, leaves the office, leaves the street. He heads towards the the remains of Barleycorn Building. Five minutes into his departure he realises that he’s left his sandwiches in his desk drawer. He turns, returns, enters the offices and experiences the feeling he used to get when he’d pop in on a Saturday to use the computer. It must be the same feeling, he now realises that refugees get when they go home after an absence of 10 years; you know the place, some of it is familiar, but you’d really have to want to be part of it again, because it’s got a life of its own without you, and you’ve had a life external to it. He takes his sandwiches, places his mobile phone on his desk (now only the desk) breaths out and rejoins his previous route.

    As he walks he finds that he is terrified and happy. He notices the street signs, the cracks in the pavement; he starts to jump to avoid them, to avoid the devil breaking his mother’s back. He can see The Barleycorn. He is approaching from its south side. He can see some banners but he can’t read them. He can smell coffee and garlic. He looks a pretty girl in the eyes as she approaches to walk by him, she smiles at him confidently and continues. He smiles back. He realises that she’s smiling because he is jumping cracks. He is nineteen years old. He’s actually quite alive and very poor. The coffee and garlic are delicious.

    He reaches the place where the the doors of The Barleycorn used to be, the revolving doors that would accelerate and send people spinning into the atrium are no longer there, he steps over the threshold. Despite the residual tropical Singapore-in-summer humid hea, he feels very much at home. He sits on a crate near the shell of the vacant front desk, he leans down and puts his hands on the blackened and cracked marble floor. A hand covers his hands.

    He looks up and sees a girl in a tracksuit. She’s asking him for money for a dance group that are going to travel to Australia. He says no for the first time ever. She moves away to two old fellas sitting by the Westside entrance eating a porridge of some kind. He waves at them all and replaces his hands on the marble floor. They begin to play a song on two battered guitars. He has no idea what the song is but he lifts his head up to look at them. The girl is singing now, so slowly that it could be Billy Holiday rendering Strange Fruit to God himself or it could be your ideal mother singing a lament for the death of your ideal self.

    People come down the stairs, there are not spinning elevators left, they are silent. The evening comes in as the heating moderates.

    “Want some gear bro?” All-in-One-Boy is there. Emaciated, a bit charred but keen as mustard, “Want some gear?” he asks Junior Wells.

    “Gear? Drugs? No thanks.” It’s been a day of No for Junior Wells and he’s getting a bit over it by now and he really does not want to start the slow descent into the hell that is drugs. 

    “Oh, go on” for All-in-One-Boy, “no” is water and he’s one enormous duck’s back, “It’s nice. Don’t believe the hype and all that, the only reason you’re saying no is because you think you should. Why not try to experience something for yourself, eh bro? Or maybe,” he says, moving his feet like a billion-dollar sports star, “you’re not ready for it.”

    “No he’s not ready for it.” I say, but he can’t hear me, obviously.

    “Do you want to get high?” Hendle asks Wells. 

    “No. I don’t know.”

    “Fuck you, mate. This is fucking business. Fuck off, man.”

    “Are you talking to me?”, I ask.

    “Yes, of course. Fuck off”, I am stunned.

    Now, from where I’m sitting, his has all the makings of a fight. So, I’m going to lean into this little turd and tell him to walk away. The little All-in-One-Boy-turd will be nasty – and not in a good way – out of sheer desire for power. Anthony has been stabbed or burnt or crushed or something.

    Chapter 13

    Selfish? Me? Of course I bloody well am.

    I can’t deal with him face to face, mano-a-mano right now. OK, I’d be able to let him into a whole bunch of perspective about the eternal this and the interacting life forces of that, reincarnation on demand, all that stuff, but he’d ask me some hard questions that I honestly do not have the answers for yet. He’ll ask me why he never had a chance and why I left, why his mother left Sure, I could send him off to a deity or saint who could lay it all out for him, but where would that leave me? Anyway, I’ve not seen him.

    Selfish? Me? Of course I bloody well am. So are you. So let’s not fuck around with that particular area of debate shall we? It won’t get either of us anywhere. I want to make my son’s afterlife a happy one. Just not right now. If it isn’t obvious by now that I stuff things up. So, now just give me time. Can you hide in heaven? Yes. Is this heaven? I don’t know, do I.

    All-in-One-Boy looks at me, looks back at the marble-clutching junior lawyer, thinks about just how much he misses making love to Pokie and he backs away. He goes to cry. He misses the boy, I’m hiding from. Ironic that.

    Chapter 14

    In which there is a death in the family.

    John McDonald-Sayer is getting out of a Mercedes. He is taking the air. There are olive and orange trees around the front of his father’s house. There are mangroves to the east and west. Each has its own eco-specific system, never the twain shall meet.

    His father lives alone save for the all the house staff who he keeps on as long as they meditate with him in the mornings and evenings. He supports them, six of them and their family. He ensures that they are home-schooled, clean, well-fed and above all else, he ensures that they are centred. He never asks them to do anything he hasn’t already done, from chopping wood to making paella. He pays them well and is prepared for them to leave at any time. He is self sufficient in all things.

    He is in bed right now. He has had three strokes in two weeks and he wants to stay alive for his child or someone. He talks to another child, one he killed. It is a private conversation that he is taping on his Chilton 100s reel-to-reel tape machine for later inclusion in the “Archive of Authentic Time”.

    It is a private conversation.

    John marches into the house and sits on one of the beanbags that is close to a landline telephone. He’s come to ask his dad for some advice. John’s used to waiting for his old man to appear. He’s had occasion to wait for a week before, but this man is the only man he is prepared to wait for. Anyway, Belinda is due to arrive in seven minutes and she is always on time so John won’t have to be alone for very much longer.

    He needs to know whether to bother with the Byzantine complications that Belinda has presented him with or just to own up, blame the architect and push through. On the one hand, John, he’s got enough everything not to have to bother with anything. On the other, he is angry, someone has taken the piss. Someone has interfered with his balance and that could mean that he has a chink in his armour that could somehow impede his progress. No matter how much stuff he’s got going on: spiritual, temporal and material, he seriously doesn’t want to repeat himself in this life or in any other.

    Having reviewed his life constantly in trips, hypnotisms, hash acid meditations, sensory deprivations, sensory overloads, fasting, Blakeian excesses, trances, transcendentals, Endentals, cold, heat, sadism, masochism, primal therapy, and driving fast with chicks on his dick, he is aware that repetition without the correct underlying vibe is the deadend of universal truth. His dad has told him so too.

    He meditates until Belinda arrives, which she does in seven minutes later. 

    She has been working hard, taking the dog – Carol, after Carol King – out for walks since 6:30am. She got in her car at 8:30. It’s Saturday and she’s arrived at 2:30pm. She is in a foul mood, having had once again to review notes on land leases provided to her by a senior – wrong, again.

    She wants a drink, a movie, a swim and not much else until at least this evening. She knows, however, that she has to draft a last will and testament, and that is always wearing for everyone concerned. She also knows that Barleycorn Building is going to cost a great deal of compensation money even though the dead and injured were all homeless, mad or both, and consequently of no real value as even they would admit.

    She enters the house, kisses John on the head, “He’s asked me to go straight up, read this and remember as much of it as you can”, she says as she heads upstairs.

    “Eh? I didn’t even know he was here yet?” He drops the thing she’s given him to read. 

    “Did you bother to go and see,” she asks from the top of the stairs. “He’s not well. He’s dying.” She goes into the bedroom.

    John is wondering whether or not his father dying is a good or bad thing. After all, the old man has been banging on about moving on to the next stage for as long as John can remember. 

    It’s going to mean quite a large gap in his life. Probably going to be bigger than when nanny passed or when the grandparents ploughed into the mountainside on the way to the Buddy Holly convention. You’d have to assume so. John isn’t entirely certain. I’m sure. It will and he will make the most of it until the day he too dies, and that’s not telling the future, it’s common sense.

    On the one hand,  no more Pa to talk to. 

    On the other, there are the additional funds to consider, unless Pa’s gone and made one of those “give it all to good causes”, which is unlikely. The will! Belinda’s got to be here to sort out the will. John moves rapidly to the kitchen where gets a servant to sets out ginseng tea things and arrowroot biscuits as the kettle boils.

    He selects a suitable face from the armoury, not too sad (he might not be supposed to know) but not too much levity either (he might have been supposed to know). He gets the servant, Ming-Ming or Pan-Pan or some other panda bear like name, and makes his way sadly but not too sadly, to his father’s futon which is placed out on the wide, wooden, west-facing balcony. 

    Chapter 15

    Belinda at the foot of the futon can’t help herself and makes a derisory eyebrow raise. 

    Pandit Vasant Rao Kadnekar is vocalising on some old vinyl in the background as the Jasmine and Jacaranda blur the air. The old man is sitting up on a pile of comfortable cushions on his futon. His eyes are closed and he looks very old. He has been tearing the hair from his beard and head because he can no longer speak and this is frustrating him. He is tapping out messages on a Stephen Hawking voice machine.

    “Mumma must be looked after at all costs. She can’t look after herself. We must make sure that Cadrew and offspring Cadrews are supplied with everything they needs to maintain the house and her.” It sounds like an adding machine making sure that compensation payments are ordered for its family of calculators. 

    John stands in the doorway. He is shaking. His father’s calming voice gone, which sort of answers his earlier conundrum. 

    “Look after the animals. Make payments to petting zoos as mentioned in earlier correspondence. Make provision for house staff. Make provision for schools in Calcutta, Dhaka, Darwin, Birmingham and somewhere in Vanuatu. Maximum class size is 20 pupils. Curriculum as previously outlined. Only the poorest need apply.

    Make provision for LSD research. Make provision for cannabis and hemp lobbying. Increase security in Tasmania. Increase security in Arkansas. Submit all rock, Beat and trek memorabilia to Powerhouse Museum, Sydney. Submit all the Burroughs crap to British Library (that should annoy them).” He tries to laugh but the stroke has paralysed his left side so all that happens is a lop-sided leer. 

    John moves forward rapidly and, placing the tray on the low side-table designed by George Nakashima for Pa McDonald-Sayer personally, he sits at his father’s right hand side. 

    “What about the me, Pa? I have a court case to fight”, he pauses and looks to Belinda for advice, she frowns, he understands. He continues, “Don’t die, dad.” He says. This is the moment of truth. Ask the question.

    “Don’t be concerned about the material things, John”, rasps his father’s voice-box. 

    Belinda at the foot of the futon can’t help herself and makes a derisory eyebrow raise. 

    “I won’t Pa. I’ll be fine, really. I’ll look after mumma.” John’s in tears. Real, whole tears are coming from him and he has no control over them. He’s noticed the scars on his dad’s head and face. The man has shrunk and now appears to be the short man he actually is. He’s wearing an extra large t-shirt with a mandala printed white on a dark green background and the neck ring is somewhere near his nipples. His neck itself is all vein and sinew connecting with his shoulders like the root system of an ancient tree connects to the ground. 

    John honestly can’t stop himself from sobbing. He’s trying to catch his breath and at the same time he’s realised that he’s cradling his father’s head in his arms and stroking the old man’s hair. Pa’s breath stinks to high heaven. It reeks of garlic, coriander and rot. Sliced up, harsh groans come from inside his mouth and John thinks that he hears words that he can’t translate but can understand. Long sentences packed tight. 

    “Of the peace of the peace of the peace of the peace…” he thinks he hears. But he doesn’t, I’m telling you.

    Belinda walks to the edge of the balcony, looks into the trees, the canopy constructed for the birds and monkeys. She’s never liked the old man; too full of shit. All this maudlin crap is wearing her down. No more than a sentimental attempt to draw some particular closure to a life that has basically been thrown away on a search for life. She’s seen the books, and the old man has contributed nothing to the family capital that already existed. OK, most of the time he’s lived on the interest, give him that, but as for providing more value, it’s not been that sort of a quest. She doesn’t trust quests. They tend to be open ended and more about the journey than the goal. Goals are what make the world turn. Journeys are time wasted on views of passing things. 

    All she can hear is crying and gurgling. Whoever said it was right, we do go out the way we came in. Babies in and babies out. She also wishes that the annoying, whining, music would stop. She breathes gently and snatches a look at messages that have appeared in her silenced phone. She texts back responses to dry cleaners, the garage, her new literary agent and the caterer. The sounds from behind her have quietened. She turns around and sees John, foetal – as is his wont – with his father’s right hand on his son’s ankle. The left hand is slate. His face is flat and grey. His eyes are milky. He moans.

    She returns to her position at the foot of the bed, opens the laptop once again, and he continues to relate his last will and testament. The sun is setting as a fight, a monkey fight, breaks out in the trees. They are fighting over food or sex or territory or something that can’t fight back.

    The music stops.

    She looks through the record collection wishing that someone had ripped the lot to a decent format instead of this aged nonsense and finds an LP at random. She puts the stylus on down and as the noise begins she enters her own escapist state.

    She don’t like the music, she doesn’t like the words, she doesn’t like the sentiments,

    Well, money certainly can buy you love, she thinks.

    The old man has sat bolt upright and is typing, “Ha ha ha ha ha ha COME HERE hah hah haha” incessantly on this keyboard. Belinda stays exactly where she is. Deathbed scene or no, she has no inclination to find out what’s he’s on about outside of the business at hand. For all she knows another tiny but massive explosion has occurred inside his brain and he’s turned into some spastic sex attacker. Or maybe he wants to impart yet another truism.

    John is silent, foetal. She looks the old man in the working eye and spits at him, full in the face. He can’t move to wipe it away. 

    “You never really did anything much did you, Stephen? You just soft-cocked your way around the world visiting all the places that you figured were The Places. You’re a spiritual tourist aren’t you? A godless dilettante. As for your family! Your wife fucks a monumental Buddha in your own front yard and your son, well, he’s the spitting image of you.” 

    He waggles a finger and begins to type once again. “Please turn the music off.”

    She doesn’t.

    He continues, “You’re one hundred percent correct and at the same time wrong. Stop raising your eyebrows like that. I didn’t…”

    “Want to be born into wealth and privilege.” I’ve heard that one. You said that one in Montreal, in your house in Montreal, or was it Mont Blanc or Monte Casino, I forget, there are so many of them, one of the ones you fucked me in.

    “No, not that, you stupid girl. I didn’t have to worry, so I didn’t worry”, he machines at her.

    She frowns.

    He backspaces over what he was going to type next. It’s dark outside now. The automatic lighting has come on, all very sombre and slightly golden. Jani, one of the housemaids puts her head into the room and decides that it’s not her place to interrupt such an obviously holy moment. She backs out and goes back to the kitchen to continue watching Punked while reading a gossip magazine. She’s laughing at the pictures of the fat women gone thin, and gasping at the dashing men gone bad, and generally having a lovely time with her sisters. 

    The old man types and his mechanics speak, “As for the family money, well, when it comes down to it there is only so much you can do about it.”

    She frowns again.

    She’s enjoying this. He’s about the die and she’s here to see it.

    Chapter 16

    She finishes a second vodka and pours a third. She puts on another record.

    Belinda gets herself a drink. A vodka. Ice. She looks through the record collection, her back to the old man. She knows that there must be some cocaine in the house somewhere. It’s a comfort to her to know that she hasn’t gone looking for it.

    Her plan is to abstain for a while. See if the brain still functions at a higher level that way. She sips and recalls that the old man had suggested that idea to her. She’d expected him to be a stoner, but he’d quit the lot in 1974: booze, drugs, fags. He kept booze and drugs in the house to challenge himself and, in my opinion, to watch other people do them.

    I’ve seen him, alone, spending long evenings skinning up endless spliffs and placing them around the house, then counting them again the next day, the next week, the next year. Chopping out lines and putting them in custom-made glass tubes. I’ve watched him soaking incredibly beautiful pieces of paper in Owsley’s acid. I’ve seen him decanting bottle after bottle of wine and spirits. He cries his eyes out when he does this. He won’t be doing it again. 

    Over the years she’s had a few conversations with him, usually when John wasn’t there, that lowered her guard to critical levels. He could act the role of really lovely man. She takes a sip. She remembers talking to him about abortion and love. Those two separate conversations got to her in tears and decisions. 

    She finishes a second vodka and pours a third. She puts on another record. Back to the old man. Her back to the old man.

    “Why are you doing this to me?” The lack of an inflection in the voice makes it easier for her to interject her own feelings into the query. She doesn’t answer, there is no possible point to an answer. She hasn’t thought one through. She really does want some coke though. Short burst energy with dangerous history. It would take her mind off the matters in hand as she considers:

    Will it be it any good? 

    Will the rush be depressing?

    What will this rush be like?

    Aren’t all rushes the same?

    How beautiful am I?

    Do I need this cigarette?

    Could I handle crack?

    Do I need to fuck John one last time before I get married?

    Did all those people really die in the building?

    Am I a good person?

    Didn’t Freud recommend coke for therapy?

    Do I look OK?

    Does that matter?

    Do I look good?

    Do I look great?

    What is he saying…

    Introversion at warp speed. She’s trained herself to do that. She doesn’t take any because she asked enough times to know the answers. She’s made a decision to keep at arm’s length those things that limit her. I don’t blame her. I’ve gone back over her catalogue. Believe me she’s got no reason for comfort in a deathbed scene, which between you and me is where she is. 

    Chapter 17

    These people are not to be trusted ever. The only ones worse are the middle classes because they are so incredibly dull. Watch the toffs, Belly-girl, watch them close.

    Family members died on her like a pigeons fed poison bread by crows. Dropped at her feet one of them, an uncle, did. Cracked his head on the fridge as he fell with the aneurysm bursting. She was or is twelve. Pardon my inability to deal with tenses – death does that. 

    The family deaths come as one six-month event when she’s twelve: Grandma Burton, Granddad Burton, Uncle Charlie, Uncle Phil, Aunty Sharon, Uncle Bill, dad, Uncle Bill, David, Grandma Dylan. At Grandma Burton’s lying-in, she curses God, challenged him to a fight she knew she couldn’t win, cries and swears in the church (all in her head).

    At Uncle Bill II’s funeral a reaction was born in her that getting too close to these people would lead to more tears and hurt. She decides to better herself as an act of defiance against the Santa-faced big boy in heaven. 

    I’ve seen a conversation between her and the old man in which she related this story and he’d intersected a question about her distinction between “a reaction being born in her” and her “making a decision”. She got stoned. I would have as well. Way too nit-picky for me.

    Belinda emerges from her reverie. She finds that she’s scared.

    There is this bloody figure – a man who has featured as prominently in her life as her own father dying in front of her, and then what?

    She shakes herself down. A water. Cold. Swift. Back to the old man. Her back the old man. Here’s the situation in her mind: the immobile, foetal son whimpering slightly and then silent. The fighting monkeys screaming at each other as they tear something apart. The sickly yellow ambient light that doesn’t light the room. The inane laughter, or the laughter at the inane, from the depths of the house. 

    She drinks her vodka and pours another. She keeps her back to the old man. No matter what he’s got in mind, she can take him. If he’s genuinely ill and has come up with this, admittedly out of character, arrangement it’ll be even easier to take him down. She works out and has decades on him. He’s weak, always has been.

    She can take John as well. No problem there. She could probably take him with one sharp word to the brain. He has to be ill though. No one would deliberately get themselves into the state he’s in for a gag. That makes things more complicated. That adds levels of unpredictability above those usually exhibited by the spoilt brat brigades. These same brats are deeply unpredictable – after all, they set the standards for behaviour and to be able to set one standard is to be able to dismiss another. Belinda knows not to take anything at face value.

    “These people are not to be trusted ever. The only ones worse are the middle classes because they are so incredibly dull. Watch the toffs, Belly-girl, watch them close. They can go years and years without showing their colours, but one day ‘Pow!’ and you’re forgotten. They’ll break your fucking heart and then ask why you’re not laughing along with them about it.”

    Her elder brother had told her this. From experience. She remembers him. She remembers good people, days and nights but she also remembers when she didn’t feel lucky because the people around her didn’t feel lucky.

    “Why am I doing this to you? Because you’re going to be dead soon and I won’t have the chance to say it so that you can respond. I can’t do denial, there is no point in bargaining, I don’t do despair, so in order to get to acceptance I’m having to do the only one left that’s available to me and that’s anger. As I have no anger at myself for your condition and imminent death and I have no one else to blame, it’s going to be anger at you.” 

    “Good show. Well done”, says the machine. “That’s clear thinking. Always my problem that, no clear thinking. Now can we continue with finishing my will please?”

    John stirs, farts, rolls back over and searches for his dad’s hand, goes deeper into defensive sleep.

    Belinda turns around, laughing at the old man’s pure effrontery, ready to reply

    with a quip. He is dead.

    Chapter 18

    In which two old men speak and two young men don’t.

    “Where the fuck am I? This is not Nirvana!”

    “Calm down mate. As usual, it’s a shock to the system”, I told him.

    I remembered my previous time coming round after death. After that last little spat of the breathing and aching and pain then the confusion, ages of it. But then, bim-bang-bong! Shazaaam! It all comes back doesn’t it? What is the use of that?

    “You’re still on corporeal time, mate”, I’m telling him.

    The one thing that gives any of us stability, the beginning and ending. Knowing they’re there. It’s the middle, like hope, that fuck’s you up. Looking back, I hate all that being alive. But that’s the power of hindsight.

    “Calm down, mate. How many times do we have to do this before at least you can deal with it? You’re on your knees weeping, reacting to the whiplash and unhappy as all hell. Every single time it’s the same thing. We have to spend ages just getting the language sorted out. Do you want to move on to the next stage or what?”

    Every time he dies we go through this. Even if he dies before me, I get here and we do this. Sometimes he’s just rocking backwards and forwards having blasted himself into a state of non-language. When you’re here, language is quite important. Nothing exists so describing it is essential to get round the shock.

    Last time he told me he’d done that by imagining small disabled children throwing themselves off rocks by force of spasticity, crashing into flocks of seagulls and having their bodies pecked to shreds before being impaled on the rocks below.

    He’d cried and cried and then realised that, well, they’d be as dead as him and, well, where’s the big deal there? As ever he’d let rip with a tirade of invective and expletives at “God” who is convinced is responsible for the whole thing. Fortunately, this time I had Anthony to help out. 

    If I could find him.

    The End

    Chapter 1

    In which our hero’s history catches up with him. We discover his family. The mob solidifies and a lady of ability is introduced.

    Revolving doors on the 41-storey building. It has revolving doors and this, of course, is a problem for John McDonald-Sayer. He had stipulated when best laying plans four years previously that nothing to do with Barleycorn Buildings should revolve. 

    “If I’d wanted revolutions, I would have hired a Cuban,” he had joked, weakly.

    “Yes, sir”, replied the worried architect.

    Not only are the doors revolving, the top of the building is too. Even more annoyingly so are all eight of the elevators that crawl up and down the sides of the tower like beads of water on a turning pole dancer.

     McDonald-Sayer turns away from his broken dream statement of self. The final indignity grazes his rapidly tearing up vision: “Barely Conned Bluidings” declares the back of the 10-metre high sign. The front of the sign is still covered in tarpaulin waiting to be uncovered by Jack Nicholson or Keanu Reeves or Aung San Suu Kyi (depending on commitments) at the cock’s call on Grand Opening Day.

    “Someone”, ponders McDonald-Sayer,“is taking the piss”.

    He is correct but it must be said that it is mostly his fault. The bit that isn’t relates to several million dollars of national lottery winnings that now sits mainly in the bank account of the not really that worried architect. His lucky number had come up shortly before McDonald-Sayer left for a mind expansion trip to South America. He had chosen it based on the telephone number of the gun seller from whom he was going to purchase the gun with which he intended to shoot his master and tormentor down in cold, cold blood. 

     McDonald-Sayer is not aware of this. Such is the mighty power of knowledge.

    “Will it change your life?” asked the architect’s deeply predictable girlfriend who had stuck by him through his studies and early career.

    “Too bloody right it will – but not as much as it’s going to change someone else’s.”

     McDonald-Sayer has never related well to other human beings because he has never needed to, such is the power of money. He’d always been cushioned by several billions of dollars. These had been earned via several hundred dodgy deals, street brawls, arsons, insurance frauds, possibly a murder or five and some excellent legal advice over the preceding centuries. What McDonald-Sayer saw as good humoured banter and ribbing, others saw as arrogant bullying and fear inducing overbearing power plays. He is not aware of this reaction in other people. Such is the power of self-knowledge.

    So, the architect; in fact, the entire team down to the tea ladies who supplied the brickies with tea and thrills, hate his guts. After some judicious sharing of the architect’s lottery money, they’d all agreed that as McDonald-Sayer was flat on his back Peru or Columbia they would not leave the job. Not until it was finished and quite completely fucked-up.

    They proceeded with the kind of vigour and dedication that drew pages of appreciation in related journals and even gasps of awe from passers-by. They finished the project ahead of schedule and massively over budget with no interference from any of McDonald-Sayer’s advisors – who, like them, hated their gunner and had been pleased to jumped ship wrapped in financial lifejackets supplied by the mutinous crew. 

     McDonald-Sayer, leaves the site, possibly forever, and motors his Roller Roycer out to the countryside where he stamps it to a stop on the thickly gravelled drive of the family seat. It skids, it scars, the car hates McDonald-Sayer. His mother, flanked by Cadrew the butler, stands at the open door smiling the smile of a woman who never sees the dark side of anything anywhere ever because she has never actually seen the dark side of anything, anywhere, ever. Cadrew has no expression – the muscles of his face having been cast into the neutral shortly after his sixth birthday at the expense of the McDonald-Sayers.

    John remains in the car, slamming the steering wheel with his fists, tears sparkling from his face; screaming a Buddhist chant of serenity.

    “My little darling is such an expressive spirit, Cadrew, I am often amazed that he never chose theatrical production as a career,” Mrs McDonald-Sayer’s fairy-floss voice wafts past the butler who, nodding, steps forward and opens the driver’s door. 

     McDonald-Sayer falls out of the car, foetal onto the path and yells – serene in his petulance – at Cadrew. 

    Soundless, sprightly and showing some of his years, the butler moves at a hover to the boot of the motor and collects the luggage. 

    Mrs McDonald-Sayer calls wanly, “Darling boy, tea is waiting, we have scones and Mrs Cadrew’s homemade strawberry jam. Your father is coming up from the country to meet you. Maybe you two can smoke a cigar and play at billiards?” 

    She reverses into the foyer, smile affixed, tidies a floral arrangement and steps aboard the magnetically propelled platform to be conveyed, silently to tea. His father is coming to town. The son rolls over onto his back and looks up at the clouds that scud by making shapes that a few miles away a small boy recognises as a submarine and a horse. 

    “Oh good. Oh, perfect. Daddy, oh great”, screams John McDonald-Sayer. No sarcasm here, he means it. He has a scintillating relationship with his Pa. The grand old man of hippiedom who has appeared in the front covers of Time, News Week, Gandalf’s Garden, Oz, and any other publications he’d held a stake in. His quest for enlightenment is as legendary as his fantastic fortune. Whenever he found himself at home with his son, he would play with the boy for hours on end; teaching through play. Endlessly heaping attention, gifts and true love on the lad until the time came to catch the next wave by which he meant, “flight”, by which he meant, “flight on my own plane in my own airline”. 

    “Stay true to yourself at all times, son”, McDonald-Sayer senior would say. “Find your inner strength peace and power, find your oneness. Watch yourself for the rest of today, or tomorrow. Notice your instincts. Surrender to the now and realise that we are all one. We are all God and not-God, we are all each other”. His Pa had explained this to him, on a hill overlooking vineyards – their vineyards – in the Hunter Valley on a warm October evening on John’s fourteenth birthday, shortly after he’d been expelled from Eton for bullying. “Do not seek to change or understand others. Seek only the truth of yourself.” 

    “Yes, father. I understand”, they were both very high indeed on his elder’s home grown grass so it did all make sense to him. For too long, he felt as he chewed through the final morsels of a fascinating chocolate bar, for too long he’d tried to be what he wasn’t. He’d tried to fit in with the morons. He had put way too much effort into “altering the perceptions of self rather than the self’s perceptions”.

    “Son,” his father took the spliff and realigned his kaftan in movement that simultaneously realigned his chakras, “we need to find the courage to say, ‘No’ to the things that are not serving us if we want to rediscover ourselves and live our lives with authenticity”.

    “Yes“, said John, “Whoa.. yes. Not serving us. Thanks Pa.” He took the drugs with a physical effort that lead to a pleasing realisation of this own body was also that of his father.

    As the sun set that evening, the father mediated with the Diamond Sutra: he would allow the true sense of self that would elude his son all his waking life to enveloped him. John laid back on the grass, inhaled deeply, closed his eyes and recalled what his Pa had told him a year previously when he had talked of how seeing New York homeless had confused and disgusted him.

    “Krishnamurti once said: ‘Let us put aside the whole thought of reform, let us wipe it out of our blood. Let us completely forget this idea of wanting to reform the world.’ It was true, of course it was true”, his Pa had said, looking for his passport. 

    With deft rhythm , the older man took back the spliff and began inhaling on the in-breaths of a Sutra taught only to the wisest of men in the most secluded of temples. 

    “The world can look after itself can’t it Pa?”, John took the joint from his father’s hand and drew in its earthiness.

    “That’s right son,” his father, who with the rapid, single movement he’d learnt in Tibet, took the joint back, “the world is you, you are the world, removing the conflicts in yourself with remove them from the world.” 

    Snatching the doobie back in a move he’d learnt at Eton, John revelled in the kind of truths that only a father and son could share, “Skin up, dad”, he breathed.

    “Certainly son, certainly.”

    Now, ten years had passed and his father is returning from the country. Returning despite the light pollution, “electric germs” and “human stress encampments” that usually keep him away from home. He is coming back to see his beloved boy. John McDonald-Sayer stands up, and waits for Cadrew to come and pick him up. The retainer returns and de-gravels his silent master. They enter the family home.

    The house had been moved, brick-by-brick from Somerset in England in 1951. The McDonald-Sayer family had traced a family tree back to 1066 (or at least circa 1066) and the De Kinsey family, and had attached themselves to it. The De Kinseys had, through subterfuge, political wrangling, violence, sycophancy and outright brigandage managed to hold on to the sprawling manse since they’d built it in 1072. For centuries the family had prospered using all the tools at their disposal. But history moved faster than they did.

    With Queen Victoria, and the move to manufacturing, came a change in fortunes and standing. This included an Earldom: the First Earl of Cheddar grunted proudly on meeting the Queen Empress, who shuddered and moved on. The farm labourers moved to the cities. The villages that provided respect and hard cash to the family, were denuded of youth, and filled instead with bitter, cider-soaked geriatrics. Of course the family had contacts in Manchester and London, so a move to trade as well as industry was inevitable, as was occasionally failing to dress for dinner.

    Chapter 2

    Following a disgustingly publicised dalliance with a young fellow in Antibes, the Earl relocated to The Demons Club

    With the end of empire and the start of the War to end all Wars, the McDonald-Sayer boys as they now appeared, grew tired of receiving white feathers in the post, and threats of prison sentences. Conscientious objection was often mistaken for outright cowardice in this new world, and no amount of money could shift that so it appeared. Forced into a decision between being maimed in a local gaol or maimed in foreign field, they opted to go to war in the hope that they could manoeuvre their way to the back and some quiet. 

    All three returned: one, a burbling, shell-shocked innocent incapable of any active function went straight into poetry, dismally and then opened an Art Gallery off the King’s Road in London before taking up the reigns of head of the family on the death of his father by whisky. The second son, syphilitic, blind in one eye, addicted to young boys, had entered the church. The third, and youngest, returned replete with money from deals in Belgium, France and Prussia – family now owned several chemical factories – had relocated North to invest in more factories still. He prospered, greatly, while all around him foundered mysteriously.

    With the Second World War came an unfortunately mistimed dalliance with fascism, but so did most of the English upper aristocracy and commercial upper class, and so it was mostly forgotten. The 2nd Earl spent most of his time in London and the Cote D’azure exploring systems at the gambling tables or practising Magick in the hopes of yet more power.

    However, following a disgustingly publicised dalliance with a young fellow in Antibes, the Earl relocated to The Demons Club in St James where he proceeded to be shot dead in 1956 by his last remaining son – the impatiently titular 3rd Earl. The 17th Earl had escaped becoming the last aristocrat hanged in England.

    There had been rumours at the time that due to a congenital weakeness of the hands, the younger aristocrat would not actually have been able to pull the trigger of the Thompson submachine gun that had splattered his father’s parietal and occipital lobes across the walls of the The Demons Escoffier-designed kitchen. It was also unlikely that he would have been able to simultaneously shoot the old man in the chest with a Luger pistol. 

    Tragically, all the legal advice provided free of charge by the Yorkshire branch of the family, could not save him from the tender mercies of the Wormwood Scrubs nooseman. The Yorkshire branch had sprung from the loins of youngest of the sons to return from the War to end all Wars. The title of Earl, the house and everything else that went with it passed to him because the Bishop was unable to leave Rome, where he’d fled to a few years earlier. 

    So, the house speaks of historical precedents, of grandeurs earned over centuries, of honours bestowed and of achievements yet to come. It is called ‘The Glancings’, no one knows why. Its central courtyard, protected on all sides by high walls each cornered by tall, elegant towers, is home to a Go-Kart track, a permanent marquee and several angry peacocks.

    Those trinkets are nothing, however, when you experience the 15-metre high statue of the Buddha bedecked each day by new petals and neatly polished swastika; you won’t experience it because you will never be allowed near it. It was not the swastika at the 45-degree angle mind you, but the good one, the nice one, the family having divested itself of its Nazi connections on the advice of their spin doctor.

    Mrs McDonald-Sayer spends an hour a day cleaning the Buddha with chamois cloths and warm, soapy water. She whispers even warmer, even soapier entreaties to it, often collapsing onto its lap in fits of desire and giggles. She knows that although the Campbell-Stuarts are a lean stringy clan for the most part, so this statue is as dear to her as the man she truly loved. She calls as “Darling David, dearest Hurst” and loves it as such. He was a boy who she knew when she was a girl. He had disappeared when she went to school in Switzerland. He was somewhere in the world, she prayed.

    John heads to his rooms, red-faced, with puffy eyes and a firm requirement to shoot something soft and alive with a handgun. Cadrew follows.

    “Why the fuck would someone take the piss out of me like this, Cadrew? My mind is as open as my heart to the truth of the now and the holy me inside. I can perceive and experience Real Moments. I relay the life force. What the fuck is going on that these people should do this?” He slams his foot into one of the cushioned pillars provided for that purpose – outwardly expressing his anger rather than repressing it so that it would grow and infect the authenticity of his life experience – as the sign attached the pillar advises him.

    “Maybe sir should call a meeting with the relevant parties in order to ascertain the circumstances under which this, if I may say so, such an outrageous tragedy occurred?” Cadrew speaks slowly as he selects some suitable shootingwear from the sporting wardrobe.

    “I don’t want to experience those kind of anti-authentic vibes for fuck’s sake. All that negative energy in one room! Having to deal with small souls would obviously feedback in a severely unwhole way. I’m over it. Let the fucking building take care of itself.”

    “Then,” Cadrew lays layer after layer of tweed, and a snakeskin holster across the bed, “maybe a cool way to inject some realism to these people would be to send our person at Hardy, Crum and De Angelis to see them right, if you get my meaning, sir?”

    John welcomes a smile into his physical world and casts a nod to his servant. 

    ”Our lady, Cadrew, our woman, our goddess, our Kali. What a bloody marvellous idea, yes invite Ms Belinda Dylan to a meeting with me tomorrow morning at 11:30am.”

    Chapter 3

    “History? fuck it.”

    Left to its own devices, Barleycorn Building slowly fills with the homeless. By the hour it becomes engorged with the wanted, the unwanted, the witless, the weary and the wary. Music thumps from the 21st floor. The walls of the 18th floor are transformed by spray cans, the roof pool fills with the scum of months.

    The security guards watch the TV, read true crime and graphic novels; nod occasionally as the stream of new residents is complimented by one more character. They call the occasional internal number to ask that the fighting should not include the ejection of items from the street-side windows; and they direct the pizza delivery relay crews to the correct locations. 

    The edifice warms, and in its nooks and crannies things are hidden. It echo with stories of both the hard and no luck varieties. Dreams fill its cavities matching themselves to long, secured, comfort-blessed snores and sleep speech. 

    Anthony John Woods (A.K.A Pokie) sits cross-legged on the 15th floor boardroom table drinking schnapps from the drinks cabinet and throwing spitballs at the postmodernism on the walls. His hood is down, his sunglasses are off, he smells horrific even to himself. 

    He’d been sexually abused since aged 11, drunk since 12, on the street since 13. He is now 17. He is 17 today. It is 11:30am and he is partying, full of breakfast for the first time in six months. He flicks at the remote control and called up another music channel. 

    “History? fuck it.” Flick.

    “Sport, fuck it.” Flick, swig, smoke.

    “A total eclipse of the heart” – What? Flick, swig, smoke.

    “Terror alert medium. Campaign continues in the West. Next I speak to Francine Jordan about why banning the writings of Kahlil Gibran in our schools is freedom of speech.” Flick, swig, inhale. 

    “Anthony, stop changing the channels, man, there is nothing to watch, just bang some tunas on the box. Play tunas for your birthday, Tony, play up, man.” 

    Under the table, on his back lays Neil Hendle, AKA“All-in-One-Boy” or “Fireman” compressed into a singlet and camo jeans stolen from somewhere. He’s smoking a spliff and trying to read a book on Japanese management theory that he’d discovered the previous night. 

    “It is my birthday, All-in-One-Boy, my happy to be older day! Pressies and games, bro’.”

    “Yes, I know, man, I am totally and completely upon that. It is all good. But how is a man supposed to consolidate his mind on a subject when box is blasting randomness galore into the air? Happy total birthday to you and all that, but that’s no excuse for pollution of the aural ocean is it?” 

    “Go on then, you choose. I can’t be bothered.” Standing quickly, elegantly from the cross-leg, Anthony John Woods, AKA Pokie, jumps from the table and takes a seat on the floor next to the smaller boy. Handing over the remote he blows a kiss and closes his eyes, “you choose for me. It’s my birthday.”

    “You really do stink. There’s a shower behind the mirror over there. All god cons, seriously, I was in there last night for an hour or more, very nice it was with lots with the hot and the cold and body wash stuff. Why not treat your birthday suit to clarification, Pokie mate? At least for my sake because I have to live with you are not easy to love, love, not right now.” Rolling away from the source of the stench, with remote in hand, All-in-One-Boy lays in hope.

    “There’s a shower behind the mirror? That’s unusual. How did you find that one out then?” Pokie looks nervously at the enormous wall mirror and then back, slightly less nervously, to his friend.

    “I went lurking. Last night, while you were asleep and screeching about rape as usual, I went on a bit of a search and destroy mission. And you should know that when there are mirrors, there is in-aviary something behind them – like magic times.” All-in-One-Boy hopes hard about the shower, his hope is that later on when things got naked and close, he won’t have to hold his nose as well as his dick.

    “Walls, man. You tend to find walls behind mirrors. My foster parents didn’t raise an idiot.” Pokie walks over to the mirror, thinks about smashing it with his already scarred fist, looks back at All-in-One-Boy who shakes his head, and so he presses his nose against the glass until the stink of his breath forces him backwards.

    “Go and have a shower, man, because sometimes I’d like not to notice that you’d come in. You know I love you, Pokes. But, despite what the world wants us to believe, some things can go too far even for love and, frankly, you have done. Now fuck off and stop analysing what’s behind the mirror, it’s a shower, go into it.”

    All-in-One-Boy met Pokie six months previously, so their love was still marching ahead. They had looked at each other and their loneliness had subsided to form a warm, safe place to live just big enough for their cynicism and defences disappear long enough for them to share food. They’d fucked the first night, how ashamed they didn’t feel, how warm and satisfied they did. Then they kept walking together, swapping stories and holding hands, taking what they could from each other, and giving back. They were in love, so the stealing of bags, and the rolling of drunks, the begging and slipping into each others arms in the same Salvation Army bunkbed flew by with the accompaniment of birds and rain. 

    “It’s my bunk, you fack!” 

    “I know, isn’t it great?”

    “Yes, hold my head. My head hurts and acts up.”

    “Why do you fuck around with your words? With the sounds? I always understand what you say, but I don’t get it.”

    “I don’t think I do do, Dodo.”

    “OK.”

    Pokie looks around the place to soak it all up and remember it for when it all goes away on him. This is what he sees:

    It is a big, glass room, carpeted and balmy in its never-think-about-it warmth. Red, Japanese-patterned carpet. Injected warmth from the air, when the climate was acceptable, from the mechanics when it wasn’t. It was brilliantly put together, working well, as perfectly as any design could.

    (Once every 23 minutes and nine seconds, everything slows down, starts clanking here and there, gurgles and bubbles and generally creates a feeling of irritation. At least it would be a feeling of irritation if you were the kind of person who expected superb pieces of design to work superbly every time, all the time.)

    At 11:26am the same day a Jaguar pulls up outside The Glancings. Not one of those flash Jags, spoiler-ladened, bright yellow, modernised and wailing of its owner’s wealth. This was your classic Jaguar. Silver, E-Type. Yelling its owner’s wealth all the same but also taste, great taste, the best taste. Its owner is the company of Hardy, Crum and De Angelis; avenging angels, cleaners, lawyers.

    They also own the soul, or near as makes no difference, of beautiful, sharp faced and even sharper brained Belinda Dylan (28) who steps out of the car, immaculate both. A wonderful spinster in the new-fashioned sense of the word. Wise beyond her years in all matters pertaining to living a life to the most exacting standards of look-after-yourselfishness. She is good to her mother and father – still living, on a farm, somewhere deep in Derbyshire. She Skypes them on a weekly basis, confirming her still childless state with a smile in her voice. She sends birthday cards and anniversary gifts, she even goes home for Christmas Day, but is always back in her city central apartments by Boxing Day.

    There is nothing cheap or tacky about this woman, from her abstractly perfect diction down to her elegantly cropped pubis. She walks in splendour, everything matching save for one, usually small detail, a broach, a belt buckle, a t-shirt, that she uses like beauty spot. Today her shoe buckles are ever so slightly the wrong shade of grey that they set everything else off perfectly.

    Belinda has been the preferred legal aid to John McDonald-Sayer since they met during his very brief attempt to study economics at one of the major Oxford colleges. She was the one who following a particularly heroic sex binge had enquired why somebody who never needed to worry about money should need to study economics. He left the next day, with her card.

    Chapter 4

    You haven’t neutered him, yet darling, he is still awfully attractive. I love the way he stands there imaging me naked and feeling guilty about it

    Emerging from the company car, Belinda straightens her skirt, collects her laptop and mounts the first step at exactly 11:29. Cadrew opens the doors, she plants a warm and deliberately embarrassing smoocher on his cheek, whispers, “What-ho Cadrew, how’s it hanging baby man?” and proceeds up the stairs to her meeting.

    “Come in, come in Belinda, sit down. Father is here, he’s doing his meds (by which he meant ‘meditations’) in the east gardens, he will be with us in twenty minutes. Would you like coffee?” John is clad in a very Cary Grant black worsted suit, open necked shirt and sandals. He is sitting in a desk that once belonged to the Dali Lama, his hair is superbly scruffy (to a tee, to a tee) and his skin glows with a ‘just swam 15 laps’ patina fresh from the bottle. 

    He adores Belinda. Belinda adores John. There is sex tension between them. Their eyes meet like old friends in a Balinese hotel room following an engaging lunch. Their rhythms synchronise as Belinda nods and sits herself down on a chair that once belonged to nobody because it was custom made from Tasmanian old growth forest for her at the behest of John.

    “Did you kiss Cadrew again when you came in? You know he hates it.” He slips off the desk and walks across to where she is crossing her legs. He takes her hand and attempts an admonishing expression.

    “You haven’t neutered him, yet darling, he is still awfully attractive. I love the way he stands there imaging me naked and feeling guilty about it. I can see the way he tortures himself in his imagination. You know that it’s really abut time that you started him breeding. After all, where is the next generation to come from?” She removes her hand from his and unpacks her computer.

    “He’s not getting any younger though. So, we have set in train that he should breed the next Cadrew within the year. We have a fantastic filly picked out for him. One of the Murdoch’s staffers I think. She’s incredibly fit, totally well trained and completely 18. By the time Cadrew is too old for us, we’ll have the new one ready.” He sits on the floor in front of her, lotus-like, looks up and as Cadrew places coffees on the Bauhaus table to his left, McDonald-Sayer begins to relay the necessary details.

    “Nice arse,” she comments, meaning it, as Cadrew does his best to exit face on from the room. He blushes and proceeds to the kitchen lavatory.

    He flirts more admonition at her, sips coffee and waits for her considered opinion. She looks at the laptop, says a few words to it, nods and then grimaces theatrically at him.

    “Oh my dear McDonald-Sayer,” her grimace morphs from the dramatic to the operating theatre, “Oh you have been a silly idiot haven’t you?”

    “S’pose so”, he has no idea what she’s talking about, but that’s why he employs her. 

    “Apparently you decided that you could write your own contracts for this,” she pauses and searches for the correct word, “debacle of a building. Were you sulking with me?”

    “S’pose I was.” He often did. He had asked her to sue the family of farmers who occupied a tiny piece of land within the McDonald-Sayer glebe. She had refused. She explained that simply because they kept pigs was not grounds to sue them. He had sworn at her, threatened to get her dismissed, begged her, implored her, swore some more and then sulked all the way to Bali. He refused to talk to her but Skyped her to berate her on this subject, every day for eight months. They only resumed civilised communication after the farmer accidentally fell backwards into his own Massey Ferguson’s reaping blades or something like that during a party.

    (The party had been thrown for him by a major super market chain – its legal representatives to be quite exact – to celebrate a pork distribution deal. According to the farmer’s wife at the coroner’s enquiry, he had never touched LSD in any quantity let alone the 780mg that had been discovered inside him post mortem. It appeared to be suspended in a litre of old school absinthe, the wormwood variety that wiped out what the French intelligentsia in the 18th century. The farmer’s family moved from the land following a hate campaign – “Acid Farmer’s Froggie Booze Binge Puts Pox on OUR Porkers!!!” in a national newspaper.

    Chapter 5

    “Bastards.” She breathes, clenches her fists and biting her bottom lip, “Mendacious, unethical, turdish bastards…

    During his Bali dummy-spit, McDonald-Sayer had conceived not only two children but also the grand plan for the Barleycorn Bliding that was to dominate the central business district. He’d decided that, in his own words, he “…didn’t need any help from any long-legged, sweet-smelling, over-qualified bint with an major customer relations problem” and had drafted the contracts.

    “Silly man”, Belinda called up the contract from the top secret cloud folder where McDonald-Sayer had stored it secretly.

    “Mad man. Look at this. It’s got more loopholes in it than a the walls of a very large medieval castle.” 

    “Eh?”

    She kicks off her shoes and folds her legs beneath her, rests the laptop next to the coffee tray and begins to read:

    The party of the first part (she sighs, gently but hurtfully in the mode of an office IT person watching a clerk trying to get his printer to print using slightly dated drivers) being John Marshall Garcia Lennon Donavan Maharashtra Che Kennedy McDonald-Sayer asserts the…

    “I have to stop it here. This is disgraceful. I mean, how did you get this passed the other side’s legals?”

    He looks down at this sandals and toys with his cup. He looks out of the window and says, slowly and deliberately, “Cleghorn, Barnstable, Groundling and Hayes”.

    “Bastards.” She breathes, clenches her fists and biting her bottom lip, “Mendacious, unethical, turdish bastards. You really were having a large sulk with me weren’t you?”

    “S’pose so. Soz. Don’t know what came over me. It’s all a bit of a blur. Are you saying that it’s not legal though? That it wouldn’t stand up? Can we get out of it?” He’s up now, on his feet, fighting posture, blood pumping.

    She is icy. Still coiled, a drop of blood drips from her lip, settles on her teeth and is washed away by her emerging smile. She is thinking hard. She knows that this many holes can be filled with many dollars. She knows that it will take time. She knows that, aside from yet another tedious case featuring the Murdochs and some question of titles, natives, libels and drudgey drudgey jetting around, she’s not got that much on. She answers, “Yes, baby, yes, I think we can nail these uppity little sods to the wall. We must throw ourselves onto the mercy of the courts. What kind of mental state were you in when you put this bag of nonsense together?”

    Chapter 6

    In which the police sit back. A party happens and we meet the parent.

    The love that bellows its name from the gutters and back alley bars is rough and ready tonight. It’s all the go. It’s up. It’s the love of getting completely fucked up. 

    “I love this!” yelled Anthony, “I love this booze and shite! I love this music. I love this meat energy!”

    The gym of Barleycorn has been turned into a club. Sound systems compete from each end. The basketball hoops contain buckets full of ice. Dayglo paint is everywhere. The old bums are splayed in one corner. The smack addicts are dancing. The speed freaks are dry humping. The acid and E casualties are hugging and screaming and hugging again. The Care in the Communities are experiencing fun. Happy fun. 

    One sound system is run by an ancient punk whore called Soozie – she’s copping in her head and she’s playing Search And Destroy.

    Another other sound system is run by Pokie since its original master – a booze hound called Stuart – fell beneath the working decks. Pokie’s playing We Built This Love on Pledges by the Mighty Solomon Klepto Orchestra. 

    “This is almost worth it!” yells Pokie.

    “Worth what?” All-in-One-Boy, chugs some absinthe he’d discovered in one of the corporate mini bars. He’s gone through every room, gathering up all the booze – and some of the cocaine too – and bringing it down to the gym. You could say that this was his party. 

    “Worth the police turning up, which they will. Worth a lifetime of degradation and abuse…” he tails of, realises what he’s just said and cues another tune (Tony Touch’s Dimelo Springs Boogie).

    “Oh that. Yeah, I suppose it might be.” All-in-One-Boy really isn’t that interested. Introspection, looking backward, analysing shit really isn’t his thing. Right now he’s considering the best way to get the most stuff out of the place before the police do show up and wreck everything. What with the amount of speed he’s taken in the last 48 hours combining with his natural curiosity and greed he has thoroughly scoped the place out. He’s aware that there are some pretty sweet goods to be sold on. He’s also aware that much of it has already made its way out of those imposing front and back doors and is by now being liquidated. This kind of opportunity doesn’t even come once in a lifetime; somehow it has. 

    “All this chilling and partying is fine and dandy Pokes, but there’s cash to be made here and we’re not making it. Look around you mate, most of these mongrels can’t see what’s in front of their eyes. We’ve got a chance here.”

    Pokie doesn’t need to look, he knows that the love of his life is right. He would love to stay here, in this atmosphere, pretending that everybody in the room is partying together and not in their own worlds of schizophrenia, booze, drugs and hopeless numb disengagement. He knows that very soon they will all be back out on the streets, in the Starlight Hotel, due for a fate like Arthur Burrows (burnt to death by four teenagers) or Tim ‘Ziggy’ Jenkins (soda bombed). 

    All-in-One-Boy’s idea is an obvious one. A good one. Sensible and right. But Pokie wants this idyll to last. He’s not experienced many idylls. Not a single one really. Never.

    “Schrödinger’s Cat”, he says.

    All-in-One-Boy has heard about that Cat so many times that he really wants to rip its tail off, firework its mouth. As for Schringer or Schroder or whoever the fuck she is, take her outside, douse her in petrol and torch her. As for the uncertainty and the rest of the “sit on your arse and do nothing in case some fragile memory gets hurted”, drown it in a sack.

    “Fuck right off, bitch. Fuck you, fuck Schroeder. Fuck the cat. There is stuff here. We can take it. We can make money with it. We can be safe and comfortable.” 

    “We are safe and comfortable. Right here. We are.”

    “We are comfortable, bitch, for now.”

    Chapter 7

    “I happen to have had a red-hot tip – don’t be so rude – that a rather spectacular coke deal is going to occur very close to the Barleycorn Building…

    Now the murk is everywhere and is ready to take everybody unless someone injects an amp or maybe a volt of constancy. Everything in the gym is strangely, Berlin 1920s, disconnected. The scene is a sour one. The space is not creating synergies. Energy is high but negative. 

    There are two sides to this terrible project though. This deliberately terrible building set in the sea of the centre of the capital city. Clad in cheapness, underpinned by hate.

    On one side sit the poor, the dispossessed. Decaying and descendant. Outlines and out of line so we don’t like them and we don’t get them for what they really are. We’ve been with them for a while already, so we’ll leave them. Before we do, you have to know that they do not love each other.

    On the other, are the permanently wealthy, always ascendent. What are they up to?

    Before we go on though, I have an admission to make to you. I am Pokie’s father by the way. His biological daddy. I am dead, of course – on so many levels. So, most of Pokie’s current situation is my fault. But the honest truth, and I’ve talked to the big boss goomba, the head of the house, the Maker, the People Baker, God, is something about love but mostly, so I’m told, is that I can’t tell you the honest truth. By the way, the police are ready to go. They are just about ready anyway. 

    Over at The Glancings, John, loves her, Belinda. She loves him. OK, so the dynamic between them is all sheer (as in stocking) transparent (as in the emotions) pretence. Have pity our lord though, what choice do they have? They’ve been targeted since ever they met. Like Pokie loves All-in-On-Boy, John and Belinda do really love each other. That conquers all, right? 

    “No, Charlie, sweety, hang fire please.” Belinda had been trying to find any mention of security in the drunken contract for the building but she has had no luck. She rushes through pages on the off chance that amidst the paranoid, BBC law court dramatics that masquerades as a contract she can find anything whatsoever, at all, anywhere that would suggest liabilities against the security firm (on a rolling contract), the door or lock or lintel or window manufacturers. She can’t.

    So, she’s Zooming with Charles Drake, friend of uncle George, owner of race horses, and also rather conveniently rather high up in the strong arm of the law of the land. If he can’t help, then her next call is to Francis Moore MP, the Home Secretary, and another former lover. She wants to clear the Barleycorn out. Knock it down. Sell the land on for a profit, and forget the whole sorry saga. 

    “Charlie, aren’t we in a more caring time? We are. We need to build housing for real people. But right now, we can’t winkle out the pestilence in the corrupt high rise we worked so hard on”, she waited, tapping her head as she looked at John who was snorting a line.

     She continues, “I happen to have had a red-hot tip – don’t be so rude – that a rather spectacular coke deal is going to occur very close to the Barleycorn Building at circa quarter to eight this evening”, she didn’t. I didn’t matter. She was passing on a tip. He needed arrests.

    The more she examines the contract, the more she is reminded that John, bless his silken socks, is a child. One could send him in, head-down, tears bared into a fight and he’d do his best. He might even win. But this time, he didn’t quite get that there was no winning at the outset, it was a legal contract. 

    She listens to Charlie waffling on about the this and the that and the complexities and the having a drink later in the week when time did not contend and, ceteris paribus, all would go well. She makes familiar sexual noises and reads and reads and reads. He talks and talks. She stops.

    “What was that Charlie?”

    “It’s this thing you see, Bel, as far as we’re concerned, Barleycorn Building is a perfect right now. It’s attracting all the right sorts, if you get my drift.” 

    “You mean you’re not going in?” She’s confused, she likes to be confused.

    “Well, no. Not right now. Not for at least a month anyway. It’s actually working out quite nicely. I’ve got the Bobbies at the ready but there are”, he pauses, “some issues with pay negotiations you see.”

    “Issues? Pay? These are public servants” she is genuinely appalled. 

    “I know. It’s bloody outrageous. But our lot are a hair’s breadth away from being in the Barelycorn themselves most of them. The bloody whinges of my own mob takes up more time than the actual job. The less I actually make them work, the better at the moment. Tell you what though, I’ll put it about that we are going in? How’s that?”

    “Bless you Charlie. Bless your heart. But what do you mean by putting it about?”

    “Like you don’t know.” He winks, aural like.

    “I’ve already said stop the Benny Hill.”

    “Talk to our media chums.”

    She hangs up. She makes another call.

    “OK” she says. 

    She hangs up.

    It is 4am.

    Chapter 8

    In which music, art, theft, drugs, life disappear out the back door. I dislike All-in-One Boy. And hope starts to grow in The Barleycorn.

    The great, already crumbling building is mooned by the moon. Pokie is asleep. All-in-One-Boy is very much awake and stealing a lamp out of the door to a pile of goodies he’s curating for later selling on Jimmy the Fence in Highgate. He’s piling it on top of the chairs and paintings already there. He wants Pokie awake to nick a van. He can’t drive. He doesn’t want to be burned in a gutter like Burrows. He moves fast, but is slowing visibly. 

    At The Glancings, Belinda is racking her considerable intellect in order find key elements like cooling off periods, descriptions of works, service level agreements. She had discovered something about payments but despaired that it described how they were all to be made in advance, “because I can afford to, yeah!” as the rubric so inelegantly laid out.

    In Belinda’s head is Stoned from Dido’s Life For Rent album.

    John is bedded down, the hookah bubbles away by his vast, 1,001 Nights styled bed, the hookah hose rests on his chest. He is snoring on his back, a very regal, very assured, starfish.

    In John’s head a usual is, Fix You by Coldplay.

    Nothing plays in Pokie’s head. He still stinks to hell or high heaven and he is dreaming about his family. His father died (that’s me) when the boy was 18 and already gone from the family home. Pokie had been fostered at 14. His mother had gone somewhere or other. Dad stayed on at the family home, smoking blow, watching the telly, listening to old Punk Rock albums, betting on the dogs, flogging stuff off and holding onto other stuff for various acquaintances. 

    Pokie is dreaming that he has to drop by his Mum’s. The house is always immaculate – in reality it was always immaculate before she left and died of a broken heart and knives late one night in a park walking back from her second job. 

    He sees his father (me!) there, spliff in hand, Don’t Dictate blasting away, vacuuming the hall carpet. He exchanges some US dollars and moves into the kitchen where the old man is bleaching ashtrays, spliff in mouth, whispering, “Which one of you bastards hurt someone near and dear to us. Come up here and we’ll kick the shit out of you, you bastard!”

    He buys an eighth of hash with the money changed and slips upstairs to the bathroom to skin up. His father is brushing and Ajaxing the lavatory pan, shouting “You’re in a rut! You’ve to get out of it, out of it, out of it!!”

    “Dad, why are you always cleaning up?” he asks dream Me. 

    Chapter 9

    At home in Algiers, the once hesitant architect checks his watch and begins to laugh, and laugh and laugh and laugh until he is sick. Actually sick.

    An amateur band starts to practice in a nearby yard. I continue to scrub and shout. Pokie slips out of the dream and rolls over. 

    All-in-One-Boy, still moving faster than you or I would consider decent at this time of the morning, he is unscrewing art from walls and stacking it in the service elevator. He already has Jimmy the Fence prepared to move the gear. The paintings are amazing, there’s a Jenny Watson, a John Brack; he knows this because every one of the motherfuckers has a little card next to it saying what it is, who its by and what it’s supposed to be about. Albert Namatjiram, Chris Ofili, Caroline Zilinsky, Renoir, Damien Hirst, Chris Pignall. Circles, sheds, dots, more dots, portraits, landscapes, money, money, money. 

    The heating kicks in at 4:30am as the shuts off with an explosive percussion that wakes many of the gym sleepers briefly. The building’s shutters come down as the security cameras black-dot in sequence. All the tapes are wiped and the fire-safe sprinklers shower the kitchens with detergent. Freezers either ice up or start slowly cooking their contents. The building is eating itself, it hates itself, it was made that way. It had shit parents.

    At home in Algiers, the once hesitant architect checks his watch and begins to laugh, and laugh and laugh and laugh until he is sick. Actually sick.

    I’ve realised that I’m looking in on all of these people for a reason. Obviously I keep a weather-eye on Anthony because of our relationship. In so doing I can’t really avoid inclusion in some of the life of the little turd, Hendle. I don’t like him at all. There’s something sneaky about him: All-in-One-Boy? What kind of a name is that? A wanker’s name. 

    The actual fact is that he’s only as waif and stray as he wants to be. Unlike my Anthony who is your actual orphan, that other toerag is living the life predominantly to annoy his parents. That he could leave it at any time, that doesn’t sit well with him or me. The fact that he has no soul is not a good sign either.

    That happens, being born soul-free, it’s not a mistake or anything, it’s due to one of two things: either (a) the soul is already as full as it can get with lessons learnt and experiences earned but the owner of the soul hasn’t realised this and still wants to go around again (often this ends in suicides and at an early age – I mean you would wouldn’t you, once it’s become apparent that you’re just treading water, you’d move on; (b) it’s sealed itself up and in so doing it has withered away to nothing.

    This often results in suicide as well, but more often than not in massive amounts of excess, of pouting and sulks, of getting your own way for the sake of getting your own way. You’re not able to let anything else in to charge up the old karmic (or whatever you like to call it, the big boss is quite free with terminology so don’t worry about it over much) so it’s all out-out-out. The whole soul thing is, if I’m honest, a bit out my league at the moment. I’m still floating about a lot trying to get a handle on the general after-life concept. It’s not as straightforward as you’d like to think. But that’s my story and you’re not here for that.

    As for John and Belinda, I’m damned if I know why I’ve got an oversight on their goings-on. I opted out of the whole, “seeing the future” thing on advice that it would be a bit of a culture shock. Tried it once, and the advice was spot-on, it made me incredibly nauseous, all time mixed together, choices required as to exactly which future I wanted to be able to see. I’m not good with choices.

    Now, the curious architect. I can see him right now in an apartment in Algiers reading the paper and drinking a daiquiri, he’s got remorse in his veins and it will not let him go. All the laughter in the world is not going to rid him of his natural good nature. He’s even started sending what he thinks are anonymous cash donations back to his ex-girlfriend bless his little heart. For now, however, he’s avoiding the remorse as it makes its way remorselessly (as it were) to his spirit and hence to his soul. He’s pretending that it’s not remorse at all, its power. He’s got the power now to brighten up or tarnish other people’s lives. His decision all backed-up with the almighty buck. 

    So, why do I have oversight? My guess is that the law will come into play, probably around that fucking abysmal contract and that Anthony will have to fight the good fight. As I am attached to my boy, it looks as if he’s getting attached to these others. He’s getting quite attached to the place as well. He can see in some of the folks around him that they are too. 

    Chapter 10

    Two bums are having a real go in the kitchen as well, cooking up a storm.

    Right now, there are 423 people in the tower. Well, 439.5 if you deal it in the pregnancies, and no I am not going near that one, I’ll leave that to the powers that be. 423 people in less than two days. That’s some serious pulling power this building has. “Indian burial ground?” you think? Take another guess, for a start this is not the United States. “Ley lines?”, possibly, there are so many of the fucking things who can tell? No, I really can’t tell you, just be satisfied that it’s happening, that the people are coming in all of their colours and shades. 

    I can see them, I move relatively freely within the limits laid down for me and at my request, and I can observe them. But I can’t see into them, not unless they make a connection with the one I should really love. 

    The artist colony on the 21st floor is really starting to make a go of it – there’s already a performance in planning. OK so a number of them are fellow-travellers, wankers and the usual kinds of wannabes that mistake splashing some gloss around on a wall for communicating a vision. But there are some good sorts up there.

    Two bums are having a real go in the kitchen as well, cooking up a storm. They are going to be well pissed off when they go back there later today. But they’re developing a stick-at-it-ness. 

    There are students in the penthouse, nurses on the fifth floor, asylum seekers in the basement (natch), divorced, middle-aged men in the games rooms on the 17t floor, divorced, middle-aged women all over the ninth, tenth and eleventh floors, and there are ghosts all over the shop – seriously, the newsagent on the mezzanine is overflowing with spirits.

    It’s a bit of shame that so many ghettos should happen, but that’s people for you. It’s 5:30am in your earth time (I love saying that) now and the heat (in your earth therms, OK I’ll stop) is pretty unbearable, so people are waking up and wandering around, bumping into each other because it’s dark what with there being no light and all the shutters having been closed. Everything is compressing and over-heating.

    Chapter 11

    In which we discover choices can create inauthentic moments. And smell can override all other senses.

    A month has passed. My Anthony is dead. Still not here though. 

    The wealthy cowardly architect is on the telephone. He’s been called up by Cleghorn, Barnstable, Groundling and Hayes, solicitors at law to attend the inquest. They are advising him of sticky situations, of possible wrinkles and potential liabilities that could not have been foreseen. The architect is listening, vaguely. His brother, the accountant has already salted away the lottery win and the payments received for Barleycorn. 

    “We may need you to return within the next month in order to help out in the courts.” Junior lawyer, Sam Wells, makes it all sound so blasé but he’s got his finger inside his collar and is pulling for fresh air, needing it to hit his inflaming razor burn. 

    “I don’t think that’s going to be possible really. I’m planning to go to Verbier for some skiing prior to Christmas. I’ve really got nothing to say anyway. I’ve given up architecture. I’m writing a novel.” He gazes out of the window at the sky.

    Junior Wells wants to say, “Oh go on!” but knows he mustn’t. He’s also concerned that the architect hasn’t asked to speak to someone higher up. Clients always ask to speak to someone higher up. Wells is not comfortable with actually speaking with these people for more than a few seconds. He’s certainly not good at convincing them to do something they patently do not want to do. He consults the script given to him by Mr Groundling.

    “Let me assure you, sir, that returning as requested by one of our very senior partners, will certainly be of immense benefit not only to yourself but to the cause of justice. Sir, you will be contributing greatly to the overall wellness of the world in which you are living. Making the sacrifice you are going to make to”, he consults the notes again, “not go to, to miss out on going to skiing, sir…” off he trails, unable to keep it up. He waits.

    The architect is aghast. He’s just seen two planes seemingly missing each other by a whisker out of his window. Or he thinks he has, the total and complete lack of stress he feels about everything has been making him hallucinate a little recently so he can’t be sure.

    “What was that you said. Something about making the world a better place by going skiing?”

    “No, sir. I said that you could make the world a better place by not going skiing. By coming back to contribute to the cause of justice that is. Sir?”

    The architect looks down at his espadrilles and thinks for a while. As soon as the sound of Junior Well’s rabid pen tapping stops he knows what decision he has to make.

    “OK, I’ll come back.”

    “Pardon?” Briefly, Wells waits for the inevitable caveat.

    “I’ll come back if you represent me.”

    “I don’t think that will eventuate, sir. I think that a client of your import will be handed up, sir.”

    “Then I won’t come back.”

    “Can I consult for a moment please, sir?”

    “No.”

    A fix. A right fix. Time to make a decision that could result in either a great deal of responsibility or a great deal of lost revenue. Either way, Wells reckons, it’s going to result in a great deal of unwanted pain. He closes his eyes, tries not to think, tries to let the words comes come from him. This is the kind of chance that comes along once. He’s been told this on numerous occasions by numerous bloody people who won’t let him alone to get on with his reading and his music. He has to let his true self make the call. He breathes out, calmly.

    “I’m afraid, sir, that I’m not in a position to make that call. Do you want me to hand you up to a person of more authority?”

    The telephone goes dead. The architect sits back and reviews the sky. Not much more has happened. He starts to count his cash-counting pile, this time organising it into notes that are less damaged on a sliding scale beginning with the top, right corner and excluding graffiti has a parameter.

    Junior Wells stands up from his desk and walks towards the door marked, “Mr Groundling Sr”. He knocks, enters and observes Mr Groundling removing his earpiece.

    Chapter 12

    He is smiling displaying wonderful teeth – the kind that should belong to somebody at least fifty years younger than his seventy years (they do).

    Groundling is a fat man with an enormous head and fingertips the colour of old scrolls. He is dressed in black with a collarless shirt open at the neck. His suit is the thickness of cartridge paper, it is flecked with white flakes. He sits in a modified and extremely high-backed, Charles Rennie Mackintosh Monk’s chair with no upholstered seat. He is not scowling.

    He is smiling displaying wonderful teeth – the kind that should belong to somebody at least fifty years younger than his seventy years (they do). His desk is embedded with three 17-inch plasma screens – big desk. The telephone that feeds the earpiece is hidden. His legs never move. He is entirely stable.

    “Other people are laughing at you.” Groundling bends towards the desk, slams both fists down. Leans back and shrieks, “Other people are laughing!”

    Wells turns around and leaves the room, leaves the office, leaves the street. He heads towards the the remains of Barleycorn Building. Five minutes into his departure he realises that he’s left his sandwiches in his desk drawer. He turns, returns, enters the offices and experiences the feeling he used to get when he’d pop in on a Saturday to use the computer. It must be the same feeling, he now realises that refugees get when they go home after an absence of 10 years; you know the place, some of it is familiar, but you’d really have to want to be part of it again, because it’s got a life of its own without you, and you’ve had a life external to it. He takes his sandwiches, places his mobile phone on his desk (now only the desk) breaths out and rejoins his previous route.

    As he walks he finds that he is terrified and happy. He notices the street signs, the cracks in the pavement; he starts to jump to avoid them, to avoid the devil breaking his mother’s back. He can see The Barleycorn. He is approaching from its south side. He can see some banners but he can’t read them. He can smell coffee and garlic. He looks a pretty girl in the eyes as she approaches to walk by him, she smiles at him confidently and continues. He smiles back. He realises that she’s smiling because he is jumping cracks. He is nineteen years old. He’s actually quite alive and very poor. The coffee and garlic are delicious.

    He reaches the place where the the doors of The Barleycorn used to be, the revolving doors that would accelerate and send people spinning into the atrium are no longer there, he steps over the threshold. Despite the residual tropical Singapore-in-summer humid hea, he feels very much at home. He sits on a crate near the shell of the vacant front desk, he leans down and puts his hands on the blackened and cracked marble floor. A hand covers his hands.

    He looks up and sees a girl in a tracksuit. She’s asking him for money for a dance group that are going to travel to Australia. He says no for the first time ever. She moves away to two old fellas sitting by the Westside entrance eating a porridge of some kind. He waves at them all and replaces his hands on the marble floor. They begin to play a song on two battered guitars. He has no idea what the song is but he lifts his head up to look at them. The girl is singing now, so slowly that it could be Billy Holiday rendering Strange Fruit to God himself or it could be your ideal mother singing a lament for the death of your ideal self.

    People come down the stairs, there are not spinning elevators left, they are silent. The evening comes in as the heating moderates.

    “Want some gear bro?” All-in-One-Boy is there. Emaciated, a bit charred but keen as mustard, “Want some gear?” he asks Junior Wells.

    “Gear? Drugs? No thanks.” It’s been a day of No for Junior Wells and he’s getting a bit over it by now and he really does not want to start the slow descent into the hell that is drugs. 

    “Oh, go on” for All-in-One-Boy, “no” is water and he’s one enormous duck’s back, “It’s nice. Don’t believe the hype and all that, the only reason you’re saying no is because you think you should. Why not try to experience something for yourself, eh bro? Or maybe,” he says, moving his feet like a billion-dollar sports star, “you’re not ready for it.”

    “No he’s not ready for it.” I say, but he can’t hear me, obviously.

    “Do you want to get high?” Hendle asks Wells. 

    “No. I don’t know.”

    “Fuck you, mate. This is fucking business. Fuck off, man.”

    “Are you talking to me?”, I ask.

    “Yes, of course. Fuck off”, I am stunned.

    Now, from where I’m sitting, his has all the makings of a fight. So, I’m going to lean into this little turd and tell him to walk away. The little All-in-One-Boy-turd will be nasty – and not in a good way – out of sheer desire for power. Anthony has been stabbed or burnt or crushed or something.

    Chapter 13

    Selfish? Me? Of course I bloody well am.

    I can’t deal with him face to face, mano-a-mano right now. OK, I’d be able to let him into a whole bunch of perspective about the eternal this and the interacting life forces of that, reincarnation on demand, all that stuff, but he’d ask me some hard questions that I honestly do not have the answers for yet. He’ll ask me why he never had a chance and why I left, why his mother left Sure, I could send him off to a deity or saint who could lay it all out for him, but where would that leave me? Anyway, I’ve not seen him.

    Selfish? Me? Of course I bloody well am. So are you. So let’s not fuck around with that particular area of debate shall we? It won’t get either of us anywhere. I want to make my son’s afterlife a happy one. Just not right now. If it isn’t obvious by now that I stuff things up. So, now just give me time. Can you hide in heaven? Yes. Is this heaven? I don’t know, do I.

    All-in-One-Boy looks at me, looks back at the marble-clutching junior lawyer, thinks about just how much he misses making love to Pokie and he backs away. He goes to cry. He misses the boy, I’m hiding from. Ironic that.

    Chapter 14

    In which there is a death in the family.

    John McDonald-Sayer is getting out of a Mercedes. He is taking the air. There are olive and orange trees around the front of his father’s house. There are mangroves to the east and west. Each has its own eco-specific system, never the twain shall meet.

    His father lives alone save for the all the house staff who he keeps on as long as they meditate with him in the mornings and evenings. He supports them, six of them and their family. He ensures that they are home-schooled, clean, well-fed and above all else, he ensures that they are centred. He never asks them to do anything he hasn’t already done, from chopping wood to making paella. He pays them well and is prepared for them to leave at any time. He is self sufficient in all things.

    He is in bed right now. He has had three strokes in two weeks and he wants to stay alive for his child or someone. He talks to another child, one he killed. It is a private conversation that he is taping on his Chilton 100s reel-to-reel tape machine for later inclusion in the “Archive of Authentic Time”.

    It is a private conversation.

    John marches into the house and sits on one of the beanbags that is close to a landline telephone. He’s come to ask his dad for some advice. John’s used to waiting for his old man to appear. He’s had occasion to wait for a week before, but this man is the only man he is prepared to wait for. Anyway, Belinda is due to arrive in seven minutes and she is always on time so John won’t have to be alone for very much longer.

    He needs to know whether to bother with the Byzantine complications that Belinda has presented him with or just to own up, blame the architect and push through. On the one hand, John, he’s got enough everything not to have to bother with anything. On the other, he is angry, someone has taken the piss. Someone has interfered with his balance and that could mean that he has a chink in his armour that could somehow impede his progress. No matter how much stuff he’s got going on: spiritual, temporal and material, he seriously doesn’t want to repeat himself in this life or in any other.

    Having reviewed his life constantly in trips, hypnotisms, hash acid meditations, sensory deprivations, sensory overloads, fasting, Blakeian excesses, trances, transcendentals, Endentals, cold, heat, sadism, masochism, primal therapy, and driving fast with chicks on his dick, he is aware that repetition without the correct underlying vibe is the deadend of universal truth. His dad has told him so too.

    He meditates until Belinda arrives, which she does in seven minutes later. 

    She has been working hard, taking the dog – Carol, after Carol King – out for walks since 6:30am. She got in her car at 8:30. It’s Saturday and she’s arrived at 2:30pm. She is in a foul mood, having had once again to review notes on land leases provided to her by a senior – wrong, again.

    She wants a drink, a movie, a swim and not much else until at least this evening. She knows, however, that she has to draft a last will and testament, and that is always wearing for everyone concerned. She also knows that Barleycorn Building is going to cost a great deal of compensation money even though the dead and injured were all homeless, mad or both, and consequently of no real value as even they would admit.

    She enters the house, kisses John on the head, “He’s asked me to go straight up, read this and remember as much of it as you can”, she says as she heads upstairs.

    “Eh? I didn’t even know he was here yet?” He drops the thing she’s given him to read. 

    “Did you bother to go and see,” she asks from the top of the stairs. “He’s not well. He’s dying.” She goes into the bedroom.

    John is wondering whether or not his father dying is a good or bad thing. After all, the old man has been banging on about moving on to the next stage for as long as John can remember. 

    It’s going to mean quite a large gap in his life. Probably going to be bigger than when nanny passed or when the grandparents ploughed into the mountainside on the way to the Buddy Holly convention. You’d have to assume so. John isn’t entirely certain. I’m sure. It will and he will make the most of it until the day he too dies, and that’s not telling the future, it’s common sense.

    On the one hand,  no more Pa to talk to. 

    On the other, there are the additional funds to consider, unless Pa’s gone and made one of those “give it all to good causes”, which is unlikely. The will! Belinda’s got to be here to sort out the will. John moves rapidly to the kitchen where gets a servant to sets out ginseng tea things and arrowroot biscuits as the kettle boils.

    He selects a suitable face from the armoury, not too sad (he might not be supposed to know) but not too much levity either (he might have been supposed to know). He gets the servant, Ming-Ming or Pan-Pan or some other panda bear like name, and makes his way sadly but not too sadly, to his father’s futon which is placed out on the wide, wooden, west-facing balcony. 

    Chapter 15

    Belinda at the foot of the futon can’t help herself and makes a derisory eyebrow raise. 

    Pandit Vasant Rao Kadnekar is vocalising on some old vinyl in the background as the Jasmine and Jacaranda blur the air. The old man is sitting up on a pile of comfortable cushions on his futon. His eyes are closed and he looks very old. He has been tearing the hair from his beard and head because he can no longer speak and this is frustrating him. He is tapping out messages on a Stephen Hawking voice machine.

    “Mumma must be looked after at all costs. She can’t look after herself. We must make sure that Cadrew and offspring Cadrews are supplied with everything they needs to maintain the house and her.” It sounds like an adding machine making sure that compensation payments are ordered for its family of calculators. 

    John stands in the doorway. He is shaking. His father’s calming voice gone, which sort of answers his earlier conundrum. 

    “Look after the animals. Make payments to petting zoos as mentioned in earlier correspondence. Make provision for house staff. Make provision for schools in Calcutta, Dhaka, Darwin, Birmingham and somewhere in Vanuatu. Maximum class size is 20 pupils. Curriculum as previously outlined. Only the poorest need apply.

    Make provision for LSD research. Make provision for cannabis and hemp lobbying. Increase security in Tasmania. Increase security in Arkansas. Submit all rock, Beat and trek memorabilia to Powerhouse Museum, Sydney. Submit all the Burroughs crap to British Library (that should annoy them).” He tries to laugh but the stroke has paralysed his left side so all that happens is a lop-sided leer. 

    John moves forward rapidly and, placing the tray on the low side-table designed by George Nakashima for Pa McDonald-Sayer personally, he sits at his father’s right hand side. 

    “What about the me, Pa? I have a court case to fight”, he pauses and looks to Belinda for advice, she frowns, he understands. He continues, “Don’t die, dad.” He says. This is the moment of truth. Ask the question.

    “Don’t be concerned about the material things, John”, rasps his father’s voice-box. 

    Belinda at the foot of the futon can’t help herself and makes a derisory eyebrow raise. 

    “I won’t Pa. I’ll be fine, really. I’ll look after mumma.” John’s in tears. Real, whole tears are coming from him and he has no control over them. He’s noticed the scars on his dad’s head and face. The man has shrunk and now appears to be the short man he actually is. He’s wearing an extra large t-shirt with a mandala printed white on a dark green background and the neck ring is somewhere near his nipples. His neck itself is all vein and sinew connecting with his shoulders like the root system of an ancient tree connects to the ground. 

    John honestly can’t stop himself from sobbing. He’s trying to catch his breath and at the same time he’s realised that he’s cradling his father’s head in his arms and stroking the old man’s hair. Pa’s breath stinks to high heaven. It reeks of garlic, coriander and rot. Sliced up, harsh groans come from inside his mouth and John thinks that he hears words that he can’t translate but can understand. Long sentences packed tight. 

    “Of the peace of the peace of the peace of the peace…” he thinks he hears. But he doesn’t, I’m telling you.

    Belinda walks to the edge of the balcony, looks into the trees, the canopy constructed for the birds and monkeys. She’s never liked the old man; too full of shit. All this maudlin crap is wearing her down. No more than a sentimental attempt to draw some particular closure to a life that has basically been thrown away on a search for life. She’s seen the books, and the old man has contributed nothing to the family capital that already existed. OK, most of the time he’s lived on the interest, give him that, but as for providing more value, it’s not been that sort of a quest. She doesn’t trust quests. They tend to be open ended and more about the journey than the goal. Goals are what make the world turn. Journeys are time wasted on views of passing things. 

    All she can hear is crying and gurgling. Whoever said it was right, we do go out the way we came in. Babies in and babies out. She also wishes that the annoying, whining, music would stop. She breathes gently and snatches a look at messages that have appeared in her silenced phone. She texts back responses to dry cleaners, the garage, her new literary agent and the caterer. The sounds from behind her have quietened. She turns around and sees John, foetal – as is his wont – with his father’s right hand on his son’s ankle. The left hand is slate. His face is flat and grey. His eyes are milky. He moans.

    She returns to her position at the foot of the bed, opens the laptop once again, and he continues to relate his last will and testament. The sun is setting as a fight, a monkey fight, breaks out in the trees. They are fighting over food or sex or territory or something that can’t fight back.

    The music stops.

    She looks through the record collection wishing that someone had ripped the lot to a decent format instead of this aged nonsense and finds an LP at random. She puts the stylus on down and as the noise begins she enters her own escapist state.

    She don’t like the music, she doesn’t like the words, she doesn’t like the sentiments,

    Well, money certainly can buy you love, she thinks.

    The old man has sat bolt upright and is typing, “Ha ha ha ha ha ha COME HERE hah hah haha” incessantly on this keyboard. Belinda stays exactly where she is. Deathbed scene or no, she has no inclination to find out what’s he’s on about outside of the business at hand. For all she knows another tiny but massive explosion has occurred inside his brain and he’s turned into some spastic sex attacker. Or maybe he wants to impart yet another truism.

    John is silent, foetal. She looks the old man in the working eye and spits at him, full in the face. He can’t move to wipe it away. 

    “You never really did anything much did you, Stephen? You just soft-cocked your way around the world visiting all the places that you figured were The Places. You’re a spiritual tourist aren’t you? A godless dilettante. As for your family! Your wife fucks a monumental Buddha in your own front yard and your son, well, he’s the spitting image of you.” 

    He waggles a finger and begins to type once again. “Please turn the music off.”

    She doesn’t.

    He continues, “You’re one hundred percent correct and at the same time wrong. Stop raising your eyebrows like that. I didn’t…”

    “Want to be born into wealth and privilege.” I’ve heard that one. You said that one in Montreal, in your house in Montreal, or was it Mont Blanc or Monte Casino, I forget, there are so many of them, one of the ones you fucked me in.

    “No, not that, you stupid girl. I didn’t have to worry, so I didn’t worry”, he machines at her.

    She frowns.

    He backspaces over what he was going to type next. It’s dark outside now. The automatic lighting has come on, all very sombre and slightly golden. Jani, one of the housemaids puts her head into the room and decides that it’s not her place to interrupt such an obviously holy moment. She backs out and goes back to the kitchen to continue watching Punked while reading a gossip magazine. She’s laughing at the pictures of the fat women gone thin, and gasping at the dashing men gone bad, and generally having a lovely time with her sisters. 

    The old man types and his mechanics speak, “As for the family money, well, when it comes down to it there is only so much you can do about it.”

    She frowns again.

    She’s enjoying this. He’s about the die and she’s here to see it.

    Chapter 16

    She finishes a second vodka and pours a third. She puts on another record.

    Belinda gets herself a drink. A vodka. Ice. She looks through the record collection, her back to the old man. She knows that there must be some cocaine in the house somewhere. It’s a comfort to her to know that she hasn’t gone looking for it.

    Her plan is to abstain for a while. See if the brain still functions at a higher level that way. She sips and recalls that the old man had suggested that idea to her. She’d expected him to be a stoner, but he’d quit the lot in 1974: booze, drugs, fags. He kept booze and drugs in the house to challenge himself and, in my opinion, to watch other people do them.

    I’ve seen him, alone, spending long evenings skinning up endless spliffs and placing them around the house, then counting them again the next day, the next week, the next year. Chopping out lines and putting them in custom-made glass tubes. I’ve watched him soaking incredibly beautiful pieces of paper in Owsley’s acid. I’ve seen him decanting bottle after bottle of wine and spirits. He cries his eyes out when he does this. He won’t be doing it again. 

    Over the years she’s had a few conversations with him, usually when John wasn’t there, that lowered her guard to critical levels. He could act the role of really lovely man. She takes a sip. She remembers talking to him about abortion and love. Those two separate conversations got to her in tears and decisions. 

    She finishes a second vodka and pours a third. She puts on another record. Back to the old man. Her back to the old man.

    “Why are you doing this to me?” The lack of an inflection in the voice makes it easier for her to interject her own feelings into the query. She doesn’t answer, there is no possible point to an answer. She hasn’t thought one through. She really does want some coke though. Short burst energy with dangerous history. It would take her mind off the matters in hand as she considers:

    Will it be it any good? 

    Will the rush be depressing?

    What will this rush be like?

    Aren’t all rushes the same?

    How beautiful am I?

    Do I need this cigarette?

    Could I handle crack?

    Do I need to fuck John one last time before I get married?

    Did all those people really die in the building?

    Am I a good person?

    Didn’t Freud recommend coke for therapy?

    Do I look OK?

    Does that matter?

    Do I look good?

    Do I look great?

    What is he saying…

    Introversion at warp speed. She’s trained herself to do that. She doesn’t take any because she asked enough times to know the answers. She’s made a decision to keep at arm’s length those things that limit her. I don’t blame her. I’ve gone back over her catalogue. Believe me she’s got no reason for comfort in a deathbed scene, which between you and me is where she is. 

    Chapter 17

    These people are not to be trusted ever. The only ones worse are the middle classes because they are so incredibly dull. Watch the toffs, Belly-girl, watch them close.

    Family members died on her like a pigeons fed poison bread by crows. Dropped at her feet one of them, an uncle, did. Cracked his head on the fridge as he fell with the aneurysm bursting. She was or is twelve. Pardon my inability to deal with tenses – death does that. 

    The family deaths come as one six-month event when she’s twelve: Grandma Burton, Granddad Burton, Uncle Charlie, Uncle Phil, Aunty Sharon, Uncle Bill, dad, Uncle Bill, David, Grandma Dylan. At Grandma Burton’s lying-in, she curses God, challenged him to a fight she knew she couldn’t win, cries and swears in the church (all in her head).

    At Uncle Bill II’s funeral a reaction was born in her that getting too close to these people would lead to more tears and hurt. She decides to better herself as an act of defiance against the Santa-faced big boy in heaven. 

    I’ve seen a conversation between her and the old man in which she related this story and he’d intersected a question about her distinction between “a reaction being born in her” and her “making a decision”. She got stoned. I would have as well. Way too nit-picky for me.

    Belinda emerges from her reverie. She finds that she’s scared.

    There is this bloody figure – a man who has featured as prominently in her life as her own father dying in front of her, and then what?

    She shakes herself down. A water. Cold. Swift. Back to the old man. Her back the old man. Here’s the situation in her mind: the immobile, foetal son whimpering slightly and then silent. The fighting monkeys screaming at each other as they tear something apart. The sickly yellow ambient light that doesn’t light the room. The inane laughter, or the laughter at the inane, from the depths of the house. 

    She drinks her vodka and pours another. She keeps her back to the old man. No matter what he’s got in mind, she can take him. If he’s genuinely ill and has come up with this, admittedly out of character, arrangement it’ll be even easier to take him down. She works out and has decades on him. He’s weak, always has been.

    She can take John as well. No problem there. She could probably take him with one sharp word to the brain. He has to be ill though. No one would deliberately get themselves into the state he’s in for a gag. That makes things more complicated. That adds levels of unpredictability above those usually exhibited by the spoilt brat brigades. These same brats are deeply unpredictable – after all, they set the standards for behaviour and to be able to set one standard is to be able to dismiss another. Belinda knows not to take anything at face value.

    “These people are not to be trusted ever. The only ones worse are the middle classes because they are so incredibly dull. Watch the toffs, Belly-girl, watch them close. They can go years and years without showing their colours, but one day ‘Pow!’ and you’re forgotten. They’ll break your fucking heart and then ask why you’re not laughing along with them about it.”

    Her elder brother had told her this. From experience. She remembers him. She remembers good people, days and nights but she also remembers when she didn’t feel lucky because the people around her didn’t feel lucky.

    “Why am I doing this to you? Because you’re going to be dead soon and I won’t have the chance to say it so that you can respond. I can’t do denial, there is no point in bargaining, I don’t do despair, so in order to get to acceptance I’m having to do the only one left that’s available to me and that’s anger. As I have no anger at myself for your condition and imminent death and I have no one else to blame, it’s going to be anger at you.” 

    “Good show. Well done”, says the machine. “That’s clear thinking. Always my problem that, no clear thinking. Now can we continue with finishing my will please?”

    John stirs, farts, rolls back over and searches for his dad’s hand, goes deeper into defensive sleep.

    Belinda turns around, laughing at the old man’s pure effrontery, ready to reply

    with a quip. He is dead.

    Chapter 18

    In which two old men speak and two young men don’t.

    “Where the fuck am I? This is not Nirvana!”

    “Calm down mate. As usual, it’s a shock to the system”, I told him.

    I remembered my previous time coming round after death. After that last little spat of the breathing and aching and pain then the confusion, ages of it. But then, bim-bang-bong! Shazaaam! It all comes back doesn’t it? What is the use of that?

    “You’re still on corporeal time, mate”, I’m telling him.

    The one thing that gives any of us stability, the beginning and ending. Knowing they’re there. It’s the middle, like hope, that fuck’s you up. Looking back, I hate all that being alive. But that’s the power of hindsight.

    “Calm down, mate. How many times do we have to do this before at least you can deal with it? You’re on your knees weeping, reacting to the whiplash and unhappy as all hell. Every single time it’s the same thing. We have to spend ages just getting the language sorted out. Do you want to move on to the next stage or what?”

    Every time he dies we go through this. Even if he dies before me, I get here and we do this. Sometimes he’s just rocking backwards and forwards having blasted himself into a state of non-language. When you’re here, language is quite important. Nothing exists so describing it is essential to get round the shock.

    Last time he told me he’d done that by imagining small disabled children throwing themselves off rocks by force of spasticity, crashing into flocks of seagulls and having their bodies pecked to shreds before being impaled on the rocks below.

    He’d cried and cried and then realised that, well, they’d be as dead as him and, well, where’s the big deal there? As ever he’d let rip with a tirade of invective and expletives at “God” who is convinced is responsible for the whole thing. Fortunately, this time I had Anthony to help out. 

    If I could find him.

    The End

  • O’Keefe and the Maltese

    O’Keefe and the Maltese

    He’d lay out a solution using his own code. I’d remind myself never to wrong-side him. Never.

    O’Keefe sat at the bar and told me that he was going to retire before the business killed him. As ever, he was wearing his old grey mac, sipping a stout and had just stubbed out a Carrolls cigarette before lighting another one. O’Keefe ran all the slot machines in West London.

    He was a Wexford man who had lived in the English capital for 50 years. He’d been a regular in Kevin Conroy’s pub, The Exchange but everybody just called it Conroy’s, since it had opened. Before that it had been known as Farrell’s, and O’Keefe had been a regular there too. Conroy’s was in a small lane off Praed Street in Paddington. It was small, maybe cosy, and well maintained by Kevin and his crew, which had included me for the previous six months as a barman and cook.

    “The Maltese have made me an offer”, said O’Keefe. “But they’ve done that before. Only this time it involves bad feelings and guns.”

    This was on the same afternoon that Kevin Conroy returned from Newbury with his prize-winning chestnut mare, “Dancing Flyer”. He’d walked the Flyer up from Paddington station, past the Alexander Fleming so the doctors and nurses drinking there could coo over it and pet it. Then he’d walked the massive beast through Conroy’s double doors, its only entry and exit.

    The Flyer stood in the bar, twitched his ears, nodded his enormous head and flicked his tail. The regulars, all of whom had put money on the mighty horse to win – nothing each way in Conroy’s – cheered. The horse appeared to enjoy the accolades, and nodded again. Someone bought him a pint of Murphy’s stout, someone else gave him an apple. Then the victorious horse was backed out onto the street where its transport out to the stables, to peace and quiet was waiting for it.

    “Good horse”, said O’Keefe.

    “Great horse”, I replied from behind the bar, with £150 in my pocket, my winnings. “So, what are you going to do about the Maltese?” I asked him while pouring him another pint of Murphy’s.

    “Did I ever tell you that you remind me of my cousin?”

    He had told me this once or twice before. His cousin lived in Sydney, Australia having moved there a decade or so before from a small town called Fethard on the coast of Ireland where his family ran a pub.

    “You have. How is he?” I said.

    He went quiet, became thoughtful and a little misty eyed as he considered my question. He rarely if ever answered questions. I’d learned this over the months. That didn’t stop me asking them though, it was conversational, I was a barman and part-time cook. I considered showing an interest in my customers an essential part of my job. I was 18 years old, it also seemed to be the respectful thing to do. He ran his finger around the rim of his glass until it sang at which point he stopped and looked at me.

    “I think the Maltese are serious. I do. I don’t fancy a war in West London. I like the place”. He took a sip and smiled. He was a small man, less than five feet nine in his scruffy brown brogues. He always wore a brown suit with a waistcoat, a thick black belt with studs, and a white shirt and red tie. Always. He was a pale man, with wispy, cobweb fine grey hair that he combed over from left to right with using his long, thin fingers to manipulate a mother of pearl effect comb, which he replaced in his jacket pocket in a delicate movement.

    Conroy had told me when I started that O’Keefe was worth millions. He was part-owner of The Flyer, and he wholly owned the stables out in Hampshire. He didn’t look as if he was worth more than a regular weekly wage to me.

    “There’s a reason for that”, said Conroy as he polished the bar. “It’s camouflage. Watch his temper, mind.”

    Months on and I’d never seen a hint of temper from O’Keefe even when one of his towering, marble muscled members of staff came and told him about a breakage in Southall or a fiddle in Ealing Common he retained a quiet, direct, thoughtful demeanour. He’d lay out a solution using his own code. I’d remind myself never to wrong-side him. Never.

    Outside, barrel chested, balding and sweating Conroy had finished manoeuvring The Flyer into its trailer and was giving the driver, a lad my age called James Plunkett, final instructions for the journey. The rain was coming on from the north and was pushing a strong gale up Praed Street past St Mary’s hospital. It was a Sunday I seem to remember.

    “I think it might be time to retire. Marie is keen to go home and see more of the grandkiddies. We have a house by the sea, beautiful views, quiet, lovely and safe. Fine pub only a short drive down towards Fethard where they serve a grand beef and horseradish sandwich – not as good as yours, mind. I’m growing fond of the idea myself. I’m getting no younger after all”.

    The double doors were pushed open so O’Keefe looked briefly to his left to see who was coming in. Nobody had been playing his slot machine, maybe this was a punter.

    It was one of the Maltese. Black leather jacket, dark jeans, cowboy boots, slicked back black hair he removed his sunglasses and walked to the barstool next to O’Keefe. In the warm gloom of the bar two of O’Keefe’s boys shifted their weight, emptied their glasses so they became better weapons and began to stand. O’Keefe lifted a finger and they sat back down, disappointed.

    “Whisky”, said the Maltese. I poured him a Paddy.

    “Ice”, he said. I put ice in his glass.

    “Thank you”, he said. His accent was a mixture of Valetta and Cable Street over in the Eastend.

    O’Keefe and the Maltese looked at the mirror behind me, their faces sliced in the reflection by the bottles and optics. Conroy joined me behind the bar and began to clean glasses. The wind stopped and the rain began, hard, with no rhythm.

    It was unheard of for any of the Maltese to venture into Conroy’s. A month or so before, they co-opted The Wilkie Collins near the station by walking in one night with sawn-offs under their coats, just visible, and knuckle dusters like a mad giant’s wedding rings on their fists, very visible indeed. That was their enclave, their beachhead out of their East London home. In Conroy’s that night, the presence of the Maltese added to the cosmopolitan mix of the pair of Lebanese, Irish, English, Sikh Indian, Jamaican and Barbadian who called our pub their home from home.

    The Maltese drank his whisky. He patted O’Keefe’s hand. I heard O’Keefe’s sharp intake of breath and then his gentle exhalation. Conroy took the glass from the Maltese, finished the final pour of O’Keefe’s stout, and rang the bell for last orders and then immediately after ran it again for closing time.

    “Time gentlemen please, can we have your glasses now”, he said quietly with no room for the usual, good humoured replies of “No! Conroy you cannot!”. It was seven thirty in the evening in Paddington, with the rain pelting down sending all the stray cats back to their home under a vacant office block on St Michael’s Street down the road. The customers stood up and filed out quietly, leaving me, Kevin Conroy, the Maltese, Oisín O’Keefe and two of O’Keefe’s boys to see out the next few minutes.

    “You need to go now”, O’Keefe said to me.

    Conroy nodded, “Come back in tomorrow, usual time”, he said.

    I picked up my coat and lifted the bar flap, and O’Keefe handed me a fat envelope.

    “Now then”, he said, “you remind me of my cousin, my cousin Padraig, the one in Australia. I’ve told you that. Take this and maybe look him up in Sydney for me, there’s a fine lad”.

    I took it and I shook his hand and I left The Exchange, Conroy’s bar. I walked to the station feeling the weight of the envelope in the inside pocket of my raincoat. I was at work the next day behind the bar. I never did see O’Keefe again but I did catch up with his Cousin in Sydney. And I did look like him.


  • Why the hell learn Irish?

    Why the hell learn Irish?

    A continuing series about how I’m learning to speak and read Irish (Gaeilge). Brexit changed everything. It charged me up enough to get Irish citizenship and then contend with the language. Laughs and tears galore.




  • Revenger’s Tales – John & Gordon

    Revenger’s Tales – John & Gordon

    John sat in that room and began writing and then recording audio and video about everything that was wrong with it and, therefore, with Gordon.

    Stasis is never wanting to be wrong. Or right for that matter. People change their minds all the time anyway. Unless they have revenge in mind that is. Revenge makes you right and wrong simultaneously. Something tells you that what you want to do is wrong but by doing it, by completing their Revengers’ Tale, the world will be set right.

    Some Revengers manage to convince themselves of this dualistic approach all the way to their graves. Their consciences vomit guilt into them.

    Some don’t.

    Some are so convinced of their messianic mission of revenge that can convince others of it. Even to carry that mission forward after the death or imprisonment of the original Revenger.

    Some Revenger’s Tales grow and morph long after the Revenger and the original target of their revenge have long been forgotten.

    You should also note before we continue that most Revengers are almost like you and I. As are the objects of the particular revenge. Most revengees look either much, much more beautiful or much, much uglier. That is how you can tell the former from the latter.

    Many Revengers can disguise this difference. Some of you are even cleverer than that. Many appear to make their object’s beauty or ugliness your own. I mean, their own. Not you of course.

    Subjectivity is objectivity. An effective Revenger can combine these. Pain is pleasure. A great Revenger will be able to convince first themselves and then others. The truly masterful Revenger will be able to finally even convince the revengees that, in fact, everybody has benefited from the act or acts.

    At their genesis, however, the Revenger must first be able to eliminate any doubt from their souls.


    Take the example of ‘John’ who hated his room in a capital city. Of course, he hated his life in the city. He hated everything about the city. It’s bright lights especially. John was not a hugely prolific though. He concentrated his loathing on his room in the house owned by a man we’ll call ‘Gordon’.

    John sat in that room and began writing and then recording audio and video about everything that was wrong with it and, therefore, with Gordon.

    One year in he was preparing to show Gordon written notes that detailed the noise, the damp, the smells and the fact that the shy lady in the room above him had a new splash of paint on her landing despite only having moved in three months previously. John’s landing remained wallpapered in the dark red flock of a decade before.

    He showed Gordon his notes. Played him audio (John had a podcast with three listeners). Showed him the video. Gordon told him that he could always move out. So, John modified his plan and opted instead to understand the other man more deeply. John decided he could do this by acquainting himself with Gordon’s haunts and habits. These, it transpired, comprised a local bar called ‘Chicagos’, which was frequented by actors, actresses and their hangers-on. Gordon had become the second character in John’s Revenger’s Tale.

    Soon, John started to eat and drink at Chicagos on a more regular basis than Gordon. He discovered that Gordon enjoyed throwing his weight around. This was strange. He was a tall man, but he was slight, he was wiry. He dressed in unrealised low-camp. Usually in white shoes, pale blue slacks and loud, Hawaiian shirts.

    The people in Chicagos, as John soon discovered, were open, generous types. They took to John quickly, because he helped them with taxes. John was good with money. He helped others to find happiness in their complex relationships. He had no desire for a relationship of his own so was able to view theirs with great clarity.

    John was sure not to mention that Gordon was his landlord. Gordon never appeared to acknowledge John’s presence, except for one occasion in the lavatory, following a particularly morose and drunken session. Gordon had come up behind John, who was washing his hands, and had explained – sotto voce – that he knew who he was, and he knew what he was up to.

    Mr and Mrs Martini, who owned the bar, had invited John and some of the other regulars to the christening of one of their battalions of grandchildren. The party had returned two hours before to find Gordon, sitting at his small round wooden table in the middle of the bar area with a chessboard in front of him, his head in his hands. Other drinkers were scattered on various stools, at tables and of course, at the bar itself. The exclusion zone around Gordon’s table was apparent though, as were the chessmen drowning on the wine-drenched board.

    John had gone to the gents, and as he was finishing up Gordon had stumbled in. After explaining that he knew what John was up to, which elicited no reaction, he told John about his room. It was cursed. Not only that but the curse would never be lifted. Gordon slurred about the love of his life, his whole life. He had died in John’s room, on John’s bed. There had been nothing he could do. The suicide had been so unnecessary, it had been so cold.

    “So, why did you rent it to me?” asked John.

    ”Because I needed the money to pay for the funeral. Because you said you would take it. Because nobody else had”, sobbed Gordon. He told John that he wanted someone truly unpleasant to occupy the room, to suffer in the same room that his beloved had. His beloved who had let him down so badly. He said that John was perfect for the role. He told John that he enjoyed every piece of his writing, every sound from his audio, and especially every piece of his video.

    He told John that his revenge on his beloved for leaving had been beautiful to see and hear.

    John returned to the party. John returned to his room. Alone.

  • The Rimmingtons

    The Rimmingtons

    “Quivering slightly he turned some fifty pages, slowly and deliberately seeking a specific passage.”

    The dear, dour cloisters of Rimmington Hall rang with excitement. Cleaning, dusting, painting, polishing, rejuvenating were the orders of the day. The young master was coming home! For the first time in four years the curtains were not drawn, the fires were alight, and the sound of music – in the form of off-key humming – could be heard in the anterooms and backstairs.

    Old Joe Raggedy, the beaming butler who only a week before had been the rheumy, despondent, physically distant under-gardener hummed gently to anyone who cared to listen as he walked purposefully from one chamber to the next. His three and a half year struggle to overthrow Thamesmead, the previous holder of the master keyring and butling suit had been more successful than he could ever have dreamt. Thamesmead had not only unseated, he had also been disgraced.

    “This place! Bugger me, this place! Who would have thought it? Bugger me blind!”, he whispered to himself as he cleared playing cards from one of the tables in one of the rooms in the east wing.

    Outside in the stables a movement beneath the hay in what used to be Longbuck Ridge Messiah’s stall sent two mice scurrying for safety. Isis the Siamese cat tracked their location before making a quick exit herself.

    “Mrs Catchmole? Mrs Catchmole?” Lady Rimmington, still startlingly beautiful despite her hundred and five years on earth, called the communication tube to her head-cook. “When are Philip and Dilip coming from the village to uncanker the chandeliers?”

    “Bless you, ladyship, but they’ve been here this last two hours past. They’ve just finished cleaning the young master’s gun cabinet so I was getting their strengths up…” the lady Rimmington thought she heard some grunting and a giggle, “with a nicer cup of tea and some Kedgeree. They’ll be into the second ballroom for the decankering in two snips of a Christmas turkey’s doings.”

    “Very good Mrs Catchmole, please see to it that they remember to calm the slurry pit in the back-back garden before they make their way home.” Her ladyship swept her still-blonde hair beneath her father’s fourth-best rowing cap and surveyed the room.

    She sat on the bed that her son had so often vacated in order to ride to hounds, climb trees. Or simply to sit at his mother’s side, listening as she arranged the week’s menus down the communication tube. There, neatly folded just as his batman, Swallow, had left them, were the running shorts, cricket whites and birdsnesting trousers of the heir to the Rimmington estates.

    These were the togs of a baby, their owner would soon be returning as a man. Next to this holy pile sat the cricket ball with which he had taken his first hat-trick of wickets on the village green at a mere twelve years of age. It was a Rimmington tradition to take your first wicket between the ages of twelve and fifteen at a village cricket match.

    HMS Ingenious, now safely docked in the Port of London gave no sign of its recent Antarctic voyage – the burial at sea and fresh new coat of Buenos Aires paint had seen to that.

    Captain Gerald Glyde sat in the wardroom, alone, putting the finishing touches to the twenty-eight letters of commendation he was to dispatch the Admiralty. Dotting the final “i” he laid the pile to one side, examined his sidearm and drank from the Glencairn of Glenditchdrudard at his right hand. Refilling the glass he selected a beaten brown leather-bound notebook from the stack near his left foot.

    Dog-eared it might have been, yet he touched its opening page with reverence. Quivering slightly he turned some fifty pages, slowly and deliberately seeking a specific passage. On finding it, he drank another glassful before tearing out a page and lighting it over his ashtray.

    No one close by heard the single gunshot crashing from the wardroom. No one was there to soften the blow as Glyde’s badly damaged head slammed into the table. Again he had failed, and now he’d have to find yet another new ship’s lad to continue to sacrifice and search he thought before losing consciousness.


    “What-ho, Swallow! Pass me a towel!” Charles Bayer Ffenmore Rimmington bellowed good-naturedly to his batman as the icy water of his Sunday morning shower coursed over his aristocratic body. Cambridge had been as good to him as it had been to any of those Rimmingtons who had preceded him but today was his farewell to all that.

    “Swallow, where are you with that towel?!” He knew that despite his own tender years – he was coming up for his 21st birthday, Swallow, respected and looked-up to him. What he wasn’t so sure about was where the fellow was right now.

    “I will be with you forthwith sir, I was laying in a few more buds of lilac to the cummerbund draw in your travelling valise,” Swallow deftly threw the towel over the heating rail without actually setting foot inside the bathroom itself. His dexterous flick of the formed a perfect fold and the white, freshly laundered material settled perfectly as his master’s left hand shot from the stall.

    “Brrr, I say, Brrrrr! That does one a power of good of a winter’s morning. Now, are we ready for the off?”.

    Drying himself admiringly in the mirror, Rimmington awaited the response in the certain knowledge that his servant would still have a few minor touches to add to the packing.

    Despite his lowly station, Swallow was a perfectionist. As it was, the young serving man – a mere 18 years-old himself – was indeed putting the finishing touches to the packing of the paraphernalia that had been his life’s work since the age of ten.

    Making the final fold to the final shirt before laying it lovingly inside the shirt-case, Swallow patted down the pillow on the recently vacated bed, dusted off the sideboard, opened the windows that overlooked St Aspinall’s quad and breathed out.

    Cambridge had been a lark but Swallow was looking forward to the thought of a week at Rimmington Hall followed by the taking up of digs in London. St James was to be the new place of residence. His young master was to take up his position as barrister at law with the chambers of Lucet, Gudgeon, Glyde, Capron and Morecambe.

    Lincoln’s Inn was to be the place of work. Swallow would, within the fortnight, be surrounded by the culture, energy and life he had craved ever since he’d learned to read and write. For a young gentleman of this modish new generation, Swallow was aware that not only must he know his place, but that he must also know how to better it.

    Below in the quad he could see the cab arriving to convey him back to Rimmington Hall, his home since childhood. Swallow imagined he heard the last chained step of his old life before he leap into the new, the modern, the upwardly trajected.

  • A crumb goes to work

    A crumb goes to work

    My empty soul, my hypercritical mind assure me everything will go wrong. I’ll go wrong. My inner voice seemed to be that of a whiney teenager.

    I’m 60+ years old. Until a few weeks ago I was a KP (Kitchen Porter) and ‘potwash’ – the lowest form of life in the professional kitchen. It was great. I worked with some lovely people in some heated moments. Now I have to complete my Masters degree, spend time with my wife, be a regular human being, a ‘civilian’. Being a potwash, a KP, saved me from a sticky end.

    I’ve been a journalist, an editor, a TV captioner. I had been a book editor in London and a managing editor in Australia. I had owned and run a bakery. Meeting old friends and colleagues as I occasionally did by phone or email, has been ‘challenging’ to say the least.

    My bakery in ‘Yorkshire’s food capital’ had closed for good a few years before and I was shorn of all confidence. I was terrified about going into work with a group of top-of-their-game professionals. I was scared even of putting my foot out of my front door. I was scared of other people. In my late 50s. Scared of people. My grandfather Murphy would have snorted in derision.

    Difficult for a frail male ego that is. Mine that is.

    I’ve still not baked a loaf of bread or made a scone or a flan or a quiche or a pie that I’m proud of or feel anything for since the place closed down. My motherdoughs are in the fridge with a thick black ethanol liquor on their surfaces. I could bring them back to life. It could bring me back to life.

    It’s just washing pots

    So anyway, I began my life as what the French call a ‘Plongeur’ on a hot, humid night in July. I was in my late fifties, fresh from a crashing failure, overweight, skint and taking no joy in anything.

    Here’s what went through my head on my first day.

    I know I’ll drop those dishes and glasses, smash them, not be fast enough, not be fit enough. I know I’ll hold the team up on one of the busiest nights of the year. I am old and slow and overweight. I just happen to know some really good people who are short-staffed.

    I’m worried about what to wear: it’s pot wash. It’s just washing pots.
    I’m worried about what to say: no one will see me. It’s just washing pots.
    I’m worried about fucking up: it’s just washing plates and pots and glasses.
    I’m worried about everything: I’ve worked in kitchens for years. It’s just washing pots.

    I had a business, it failed. The death of my bakery left me in a lot of debt. It left me with no energy and also with the certain realisation that it was my fault entirely.

    Don’t believe my hype

    I made good bread. Good pastries. I know I did. I think I did. I probably didn’t. I probably made horrible food.

    “Chase your dream. Open that bakery. You only live once! It’s your passion!” said my friends. Said other chefs and professionals. I fell in love with the ‘You got this’ vibe.

    But, but, but! Looking back, I was like the people I saw on TV saying, “Mum told me I was a great cook so I opened a restaurant”. The people who sane people yell, “Noooooo, don’t!” at the TV about.

    “You fucking idiot”, my grandfather Murphy would have said.

    First night jitters

    My first night was a busy one, it was university graduation day for a city with two universities. Proud families with brilliant children looking into bright futures, out of their special meals. Rites of passage. Important moments in life. I don’t want to let anybody down.

    As I walked in to work for the first time, I bullied myself in my lately unsupportive manner. My empty soul, my hypercritical mind assure me everything will go wrong. I’ll go wrong. My inner voice seemed to be that of a whiney teenager.

    So, of course I didn’t want to go in. I was sick with foreboding. I’m a 55 year old crumb. It’s just a pot wash job.

    I will hide in my house, away from my wife, away from the work, the people. Let the furies go elsewhere. Maybe I could die here tonight if I wished hard enough? I am wishing hard enough.

    But I’ve made an agreement. Those pots and plates and glasses need washing. The good, gracious people at my favourite restaurant where I used to eat when I had money, where I would take my wife, those good, gracious people are expecting me to turn up, do a shift, wash some crockery and cutlery, and go home.
    
After the work is done. I’ll walk home through the night to my wife and my dog and my home and I’ll hide until tomorrow night.

    I breathed slowly in and out. I looked up at the city-blighted night sky. I fought back tears. I opened the door to work.

    (more of this soon)

  • Sports: for peopl who hate sports

    Sports: for peopl who hate sports

    Any Winter Sport is immensely entertaining because it will show you people far more wealthy than you will ever be injuring themselves badly.

    You don’t get “sports”. Who can blame you? School sports were terrifying and full of equally terrifying teachers and students. Post-school sports, for you, are dead times, moments murdered by inanity.

    Sports talk reminds you that Hell is other people who insist on talking about sport. Follow this quick guide to discover how you can be in charge of the conversation with hardly any work and no real knowledge.

    In order to steer any conversation, pub or bar time, car or plane journey that is being ruined by a Sports Fan (I have to admit to being one such) you only need to know a few  handy pieces of info. This handy list will enable you to derail conversations like this in several countries around the world. Make a note of it, you will find it endlessly useful.

    Cricket

    Parents are wrong. It is possible to eat a full meal (or in the case of cricket, two full meals of lunch and tea) and then immediately run around outside without dying from cramp. Change the subject to food.

    Soccer/Football *TOP TIP

    Falling over in floods of tears and holding any part of your body can sometimes get you a booking: this can also work with hard-to-get-into restaurants. 

    Baseball

    Legendarily, the Inuit people have billions of words for “snow”. The same can be said for baseball players and fans when it comes to throwing a ball. The curveball has at least 1,000 names including: “Yakker”, “Yellow Hammer”, “Drop Down”, “12-6”, “Bender”, “Uncle Charlie”. Change the subject to language or other cultures.

    Rugby Union/Gridiron

    Rugger and Gridiron, are fabulously interesting sports now please may I leave this pub/bar I appear to have stumbled into and may I have my trousers back and could you stop lifting me off the ground and throwing me like a dodo egg, thank you.

    Rugby League

    Rugby League is played in New South Wales, Australia, especially in Sydney. There used to be an excellent pub called The Excelsior with a pool table, live music, interesting clientele, and very decent beer in Sydney. It’s now serviced apartments. Don’t let that stop you changing the subject from Rugby League to live music, travel or serviced apartments.

    Tennis/Squash/Badminton/Squash

    King Henry VIII invented Real (e.g. Royal) Tennis at Hampton Court Palace as a way of sorting the wives from the corpses (hence 15-Love). The game morphed into several other racquet-ball versions all of which have the same things in common: they are played on Courts (as in Hampton), watching them can end your marriage. Change the subject to famous buildings or divorce.

    Winter Sports

    Any Winter Sport is immensely entertaining because they are all based on people far more wealthy than you will ever be injuring themselves while dressed stupidly. Change the subject to Christmas, eggnog and the fact that everything is going downhill fast.

    Lacrosse

    Seriously? Change the subject to anything you like involving catching things in your shopping basket.

    Cycling

    The original bicycle was invented by an English woman who left the country because opium, absinthe and other drugs were easier to get and higher in quality in France. The lady’s name was Penny, she would ride from one end of the Left Bank to the other daily, singing ‘God Save the King’ and smoking Gauloises. People now watch cycling for the drugs.

    More soon…

  • The Wallington Shocker

    The Wallington Shocker

    The high seriousness of the five Special Branch officers crossed the border into absurdity when held up against what had actually happened.

    George Rugley refuses to talk about the sub-post office at the end of Breaker Street in the Somerset village of Wallington. Save for a petition to have it demolished, and the ground on which it stood since 1899 concreted over, George is adamant in his silence.

    Over the years local media news-puppies eager to make their name by unearthing some further titbit of scandal about the 1962 “massacre” and “sexual goings-on” would ferret him out. These encounters generally lasted two hours, most of which was spent plying the 62 year old with Teachers whisky and Bensons. They inevitably ended with a pissed George tipping pissed-off hack into the night.

    The meetings always took place in the Dragon Inn on the green. George would not abide guests of any kind in his ground-floor flat in one of the converted 14th Century alms houses on the steeply sloping, river side of Archer Street.

    No one in the village ever asked and George never gave invitations. You could see him through the window of his televisionless living room, at his type-writer, pressing away like someone feeling for their keys in the dark. He never looked up. One writer even suggested to a colleague after a particularly fruitless visit, that George was like an Amsterdam whore, parading his own brand of titillation to prospective punters without ever putting out unless paid.

    George just didn’t like having the curtains closed and as the flat consisted of a bedroom, kitchen, bathroom and living room, he had little choice but to work at his desk in view of the street. Because the rest of the village knew to pass by looking up the street to the church, and because he knew when to buy a round, attend the amateur dramatics, and umpire during the summer it worked for him.

    So, the writers, hacks and curiosity seekers would seek him out at the pub where he ate every night. He was willing to be sought, he knew they would find him, but he was far from willing to confide. He had no confidence in their story telling. So he listened and drank and remained like the frigid whore they all thought he was. At home he typed and typed, neatly filing the sheets of A4 cartridge paper away in dated ring-binders. Every month he would make the trip to Taunton and its main post office to send a copy of the most recent notes to an address in New York.

    One night in June, as the rain prepared to green the surrounding hills, he’d finished his eggs and gammon and was considering a game of cards with Tuft and Parker, the two longtime companions who owned the Dragon. Before the deck was taken from its place on top of the travel draughts next to the wine glasses, in walked the kind of face that cooed “desperately interested, no really” from every open pore.

    George returned to his seat, unfurled his copy of the International Herald Tribune and prepared for the worst. After ordering a pint of the local best, the researcher asked Parker: “That’s George Rugely isn’t it? You wouldn’t know what he drinks would you?”

    Parker nodded and poured a large Teachers whisky with no ice: “You’re not going to get anything out of him you know, there’s little point you bothering. George won’t say a word about it”.

    “We’ll see”, replied the younger man developing or trying to develop an attitude of sanguinity that was barely achievable in older pros, let alone an eleven-stone, twenty-two year old with a £4.99 book about the original Ripper murders to his name. He wandered over to George, who could almost see the opening line edging to get out.

    “George Rugely I presume”, it was more than unoriginal, it wasn’t even appropriate for the occasion.

    “You may as well take a seat, give me the scotch and get on with it. I take it this has turned into some form of initiation rite, if only I felt like a holy relic and not simply some… how did they put it?”

    “Whore, titillating Amsterdam hooker.”

    “What do you know and what do you want to know? Before you go on though, let me stop you going down any path that begins: ‘This isn’t about the murders PC, sorry Mr, Rugely, it’s a profile of you. We want to know more about the only man who has ever come close to identifying Mr Why’. It doesn’t wash, and hasn’t washed since 1976.”

    There is no profile of me. I have done nothing of any note. The only reason I am of any relevance outside of the village is that every other officer with any concern in the matter has already given their side of the story, excluding of course Special Branch who are not allowed to.

    Even the corner gave two hundred of his four hundred-page autobiography over to the incident. I have not, and that’s what makes me interesting. I am a potential surfeit of new, unpublished and therefore exclusive insights”, not even George was aware that he could sneer quite that effectively.

    “You would like to know as much about the creature who pulled the triggers, tied the knots, hammered the nails and wielded the knife. I imagine that you have your own theories on the pairings of the civilians, the note, the relationship between the eight and the reason for choosing Wallington above all other villages.

    “Also, do not tell me that you are long-lost relative of the murdering bastard and have come to admit to the discovery of a similar note to the only person who could understand or forgive. That was tried several times in the 1980s. Do not tell me that you are an honest writer who wishes to make unglamorous something that no one but the sickest of minds would possibly find glamorous in the first place. In short, please, don’t waste my time. By the way, I will need another Teachers and a packet of cigarettes”.

    “It is a kind of initiation rite, you’re right there. I’m writing a book on the effects of murders and my publisher appears to be fixated with the “Wallington Horror House”. Personally I think it holds as much interest to most sane people as Manson, Jim Jones or the Wests. It’s old, old news, but nevertheless, you have to be talked to, so I’m talking to you.

    Frankly, I can’t see what difference it would make to you how the information is going to be used. I’m not expecting to get anything out of this evening except maybe a lighter wallet, a trip to Somerset and the chance to wear a badge to the next Guild of Crime Writers dinner that says: ‘I’ve met George Rugley… and he’s worse than that’. That’s about the only place your legend pertains any longer Mr Rugley. Teachers was it?” He stood, and walked back to Tuft behind the bar.

    George was more impressed than usual by this approach. It was possible that the reverberations from the multiple murders were finally turning from page leads into interesting margin notes for bigger, more immediate events. It was even possible that his contrariness was going to be the only thing left for the carrion-writers to chew over. All the other facts of the case were known.

    Most of the perceptions had been logged, made into “True Life” dramas and forgotten or sewn into the mythic tapestry that covered the actual events. It might be the case that his own thoughts on the matter, so long suppressed, had lost any actual relevance, replaced as they seemed to be by the hunt for them. Then again it still seemed like just another angle, another way of getting him to say a name, and that wasn’t going to happen. He’d lost more than a few scotches in the decades since the slaughterhouse tipped its contents into his life. Not opening his mouth had by some accounts lost him millions, but that wasn’t close to the real value. So he wasn’t going to start worrying about it now.

    George’s wife had left him as a result of the events at the sub-post office. Shortly after that he’d resigned from the force, moved from their home to rent a small flat in Wallington. She’d left because he couldn’t make her understand that he had to remain objective, that despite the nightmares, he couldn’t share the details with her. Even though her younger sister had been one of the casualties who, along with the other seven had been consigned to a closed casket as soon as she was tipped off the post-mortem slab, he still was unable to communicate anything about what he’d seen to his wife.

    As the local bobby, he’s been first to the scene that at that time was still under siege. He’d cycled down from a council meeting following a phone call from a neighbour who had heard the shots and then screams. He’d called in the CID who took at least an hour and two deaths to get there. In that hour, PC Rugely had stood, as unable to do anything as the victims inside.

    When they did arrive he was swiftly relegated to crowd control. As local liaison he’d been led into the place to identify what or who he could. The assassin or murderer was later to be christened “Mr Why”. He’d removed not only his own finger-ends but also his face, including the teeth, before managing to put a knife directly into his heart – speculation was that he’d fallen onto it.

    George entered the sub-post office at 11:15am behind Detective Sergeants Bentley and Tucker of Taunton CID, the till was in place, unopened, a note was pinned to the grill, and that was the last sign of anything approaching normal life. Eight civilians, as they came to be called, were literally scattered around the small room in pairs tied with bailing twine into positions of close intimacy. No one retained his or her own face, hands or genitals.

    Mr Why was slumped on top of the counter like some fairy-tale shoemaker who had offended the fairies into revenging torture. His crossed legs held one of the shotguns, a hunting knife and thermos flask containing the kind of hot sweet tea that was used after such tragedies. His hands held the knife and a small, plain gold ring.

    The viscera was everywhere except for the till which was conspicuously clean. Both CID officers gagged, turned and ran from the scene to throw-up outside on the village green onto which the post-office abutted. George stood, too aware of who he was seeing and why they were there, to equate the piles of meat with dead people. Eight people had been there for the everyday purposes of pensions, stamps and conversations. Now they were ragged parcels, tied, packaged to strangeness.

    The message of the events was yet to move past the recognition of the participants let alone reach the part of his brain that would trigger a gag reflex. He was literally and completely transfixed by the sheer out-of-the-ordinariness of this eminently ordinary venue. He walked further into the small, ten-feet by 12-feet room trying to get behind the counter to the kitchen and back yard before recalling something about not disturbing anything until forensics arrived and turned the insanity into some form of observable reality. Turning back towards the door he kicked a revolver.

    George was ordered to door duty while Tucker made rapid notes and Bentley screamed insults down the phone to forensics who had still to leave Taunton. By the time they arrived newspapers and TV had descended on the village and were talking to everybody in sight. George was incapable of saying anything to anyone, he merely stood, blocking the entrance looking into some distant place.

    The blood had soaked into his trouser legs up to the shins and his hands were washed red. Unlike CID, he’d been immediately aware of the identities of the eight paired victims. Standing outside the post office for four hours, he’d been able to match faces to bodies, voices to faces and conversations to voices. From the conversations he’d been able to remember their movements, mannerisms, idiosyncrasies and from that he’d been pitched straight into the depths of what they must have suffered.

    Of the eight, three were women: Janet his sister-in-law, Mr Gregson the widow, and Ellen Santry the sub-post mistress. Four of the five men were in collecting pensions, Misters Owen, Crofton, Hemsley and Forsyth, while the fifth was probably running an errand for his wife. Clive and Maureen Edwards were in their late twenties, outgoing, middling wealthy and awaiting the inevitable call to the parish council.

    George had played cricket with Clive and would visit him at his desk in his antiques shop two doors up from his death-place. They joked that Clive was the only dealer that the constable would ever have any trouble with.

    He made a tidy living and was often out of the village at trade fairs or auctions. A stalwart of the cricket and football teams, he got drunk like everybody else and needed stamps like everybody else. He was an inch under six feet tall, sandy haired and was always in a suit and tie with a pair of brown Churches brogues shined and double-knotted on his feet. Clive’s business afforded the household a cleaning woman and several trips abroad a year.

    Maureen wrote romantic fiction for pennies – substantial pennies by the means of many of the other villagers – and made sure to include at least one or two of the ladies of the five-hundred soul village in at least three of her yearly output of twelve books. She’d been writing too long to believe everything she created, but quietly within her heart she held the virtues of tempered passion and binding love-loyalty to be the saving graces when all was said and done.

    Both Clive and Maureen were known, not disliked and often talked about. Now the writing would cease, to be replaced by a kind of dry, kindled mourning that would eventually ignite in her own suicide four years later.

    The next time George entered the room was at eight that evening, as local-liaison. By then the place was packed with ranking officers and forensics patiently going over the scene.

    The bodies had been removed, still paired: Mrs Gregson with Ellen Santry, Janet with Mr Crofton, Owen with Hemsley, and Forsyth with Clive Edwards. White chalk marks in weird patterns had been marked on the floor where they lay, squatted or hunched.

    One pair that hung, strapped to nails, recently hammered into the left-hand wall, their feet a few inches from the floor, so they didn’t even make it into the Sunday newspapers with a chalked memorial the next morning.

    The days that followed were sliced into sections of short sleep, CID grillings, witness reports, more CID grillings, and the arrival of snoopers from the Met who thought that one of their hardmen might have taken a country jaunt, he hadn’t. George also encountered, for the first but not the last time, Special Branch. 

    The high seriousness of the five Special Branch officers crossed the border into absurdity when held up against what had actually happened. All of the un-ranked and barely identified officers were dressed in dark suits with the tallest seemingly the leader. They then ranked down in size, ending at five-feet nine inches. Five-nine did all the writing.

    “We know you were familiar with the civilians PC Rugley, so we don’t want you to go Mrs Marpling the incident”, commented five-foot-eleven towards the middle of the first interview.

    “You’re not a suspect”, advanced five-foot-ten at the start of the second.

    “This method execution is not an MO with which we are unfamiliar, we merely need you to flesh out the details”, began six-foot-one, unaware of his pomp or the raw choice of words.

    George was dumbfounded by the way in which he was relegated to data conduit without ever truly being listened to. On joining the force at the age of 18, in preference to a job at the local box-making factory, he had longed for an occasion like this one where he could actually be useful. Slowly, as the years of his service had progressed, he’d grown comfortable with his day-to-day tasks in Wallington.

    By the time of the post office slaughter he had learned to look on the murders, rapes, indecent assaults and other detritus that flopped onto his desk in the form of memo and poster in the same way as a weekend soldier looks at a minor war. He knew it was happening and that he was, nominally, trained to deal with it but was aware that he wouldn’t have to.

    Complacency was an everyday event in a place the size of Wallington. When the most you have to deal with is a boundary dispute, the occasional drunk and disorderly, rumours of wife beating, and the annual vandalism of the cricket club’s prized sight-screens (courtesy of Mark Hornley who couldn’t abide the damn things blocking his view of the cricket so would paint obscenities on them), you grew comfortable.

    But now the human abattoir had opened its doors onto the green, and the chief slaughterman had evaded any blame by deleting himself from any chance of tracing, and George wanted to do something. Instead he was left to feel unattached, peripheral and even marginally to blame for somehow not spotting the stranger. This was the only thing that was known about Mr Why. He was not a resident of Wallington nor, to the best of anybody’s knowledge, had he ever been. He had simply drifted in pursuit, or so George’s wife maintained, by his own demons and taken life.

  • The poet’s wife writes

    The poet’s wife writes

    I became intensely envious about exactly what was happening during those lunches.

    Sales are filthy things even though they are the public’s gaze made concrete. The sales channels like coal mine shafts involve grubbiness and demeaning yourself for a quid. Just to feed yourself and your loved one. Let alone attain enlightenment. Even the fucking miners could get a flame from the coal to warm and light their dismal lives.

    That’s not how it works with poetry. Apparently.

    Poets are never the centre of a publisher’s attention. We are all alone and battling in the market.

    James’s note continued, rambling, arrogant, scared, mediocre as always. Yes. he had lots more to say.

    This is because the galleries, magazines and journals, the newspapers and book publishers, the labels and studio have no idea how to act around poets.

    Especially us serious poets. Poor idiots that we are.

    I’ve given up drinking and smoking grass. I also appear to have given up any form of structure that could count as living.

    My wife, Jemma, is understanding or she is very distant. I think we are drifting apart like an elegant ocean liner (me) and its doughty tugboat (her).

    Oh we really are, and none of it’s my fault.

    I am more than aware that, minus the tugboat, the mighty and elegant ocean liner is just a hulk of metal full of rich people rammed up against each other like bad ideas.

    I should have remembered to pick the car up from the garage. This simple act would have allowed me to do the grocery shopping. Enabled me – the car has no control over me.

    That simple act would have given me the chance of a stable, maybe even a happy relationship.

    James and his easy answers. A poet is he?

    But I didn’t want to go out into this heat, this humidity and all those people. It’s too hot. That’s a simple fact, and there are few enough of those now that everybody has their own truths.

    The thin skin of my forehead is peeling off me as raw leaves like a book in a hot shower.

    That said, anybody who takes a book into a shower deserves everything that is coming to them. The book remains innocent, no matter its contents. Soggy but not to blame.

    Where is that damned and damning car though? Which garage? Of course, like everything else, I have it written down somewhere.

    I am a fucking poet. I produce… I produce lines that distill the human condition. I have insights. I understand and manifest beauty. I feel and express pain so you don’t have to.

    On and on he goes. Dear, lost James.

    I award myself a point for not swearing at this point.

    I should have picked up that car. It would have got me out of the house for a few hours and I needed the exercise.

    Dylan Thomas – the hero of my adolescence.

    The man who set me on this path – he had the pub and the bar to visit and he couldn’t care less about his wife although he loved her and she loved him. Despite the violence.

    I can no longer get out of the house by going to the pub or the bar or the bottle shop or the off licence or the bodega. Booze is no friend to me now that it causes me physical pain deep down in my kidneys. I am a coward in the face of pain. I am a poet but I am no Wilfred Owen.

    I see all these other people beavering around the place, getting on with things and whether or not they seem happy, at least they seem engaged, attached, tethered to a reasonable and mundane reality.

    Does this sound pretentious?

    Yes, James yes.

    It is my truth (which is now currency, so fuck you).

    Their feet seem to be connected to the ground.

    They seem to be at home.

    They are fine.

    Their hands grip the bannisters of stairs leading to public squares, where they sit eating pears or apples and talking on their phones.

    I rather miss watching other people simply having lunch in a square hemmed in by grand buildings, or having park picnics in the cool green doesn’t make me hate them with envy and pain.

    Or at least the idea of it.

    As time went on though, I began to feel paranoid, as if the people were doing these things just to show me that I wasn’t, that I couldn’t.

    For me, eating in public was a performance in the same way as an English exam in a big hall was.

    Or making a cup of coffee for two? Always a huge performance.

    Was I eating the correct fruit?

    Was I eating it correctly?

    Was the fruit the correct way up?

    Should I be using a knife or eating it au natural?

    Was I dribbling juice down my chin and drawing attention to my pale, pudgy face?

    Was I even in the appropriate public place?

    Would the combination of food and situation look attractive enough to ensure at least a passing look of approbation?

    Had I got everything wrong, ensuring multiple looks askance and pitying?

    After a while I knew that I was doing those simple things in such normal places wrong. All wrong. I didn’t have the script.

    I was a fat clown who had removed his make-up by mistake. I was a poet but I was no Lorca, no Victor Jara. Nor will I ever be.

    At last! Some insight. Some self-knowledge. Don’t be fooled. This is a standard tactic for getting someone, anyone, to tell him that he is as rich in meaning and heart as Lorca. That is as brave and ill-fated as Jara.

    Of course, that was when I was earning enough money to afford the time to sit around eating fruit in public.

    Poetry does not pay. I don’t know what she sees in me. Just a pathetic, scriptless flabby husk I am.

    The telephone is ringing.

    I should answer the telephone. I can see it’s Jemma calling from work.

    She is a professional. She probably wants a lift home. She has been busy with work. Meetings with colleagues and clients. She is probably exhausted and wants to avoid the stink of a bus or the idle chat of a taxi.

    I really do need to go outside and get that car before the garage closes. And my marriage goes with it.

    Not just the car, Jimmy. Let’s not fool ourselves.

    Nowadays I don’t bother to attempt going out unless I absolutely have to: to wit, my wife Jemma’s car. The one she needs for business and pleasure.

    Not having to get drunk or stoned is a relief, especially in the heat and humidity.

    Not waking up hungover.

    Not waking up slack jawed with anxiety.

    Nowadays, guilt is something I sneak out to church with.

    That’s where you go! Mystery solved.

    Except for the car.

    The damn car.

    My wife.

    My soon-to-be-ex-wife.

    Gave me the money to get it fixed.

    It is not fixed. Or rather it is. The man at the garage sent a message electronically and told me it was ready. I wasn’t ready. It was fixed. I am not fixed.

    I’m going to join a gym next week so I will get out of the house. Jemma wants me to. She assures me that not only will it make me feel better, it will also make me feel.

    But I am a poet. But I am no Sylvia Plath. But I am not Vladimir Mayakovsky. Not Hart Crane nor Anne Sexton, nor Randall Jarrell.

    She should really have left me by now.

    James only sees love as a form of exchange. Not too poetical if you ask me. He’d like to think I’m imminently going to walk out. I am not. Yet.

    Two years ago, I was indeed running my own company, selling pieces of words wrapped in designs to people who sold them on around the world. I absolutely (I am a poet) hated it.

    Driving or flying hundreds, maybe thousands of miles a week, talking to people whose names escaped me just as mine were lost to them. The evening binges were different, more difficult to stick at because they required us to form relationships – these were good for growth. Me and my three partners needed growth, growth, growth. Cash, cash, cashflow. The fact that we weren’t bothering to have fun, fun, fun was by the by.

    Instead of cracking on with creativity, I was flipped and I flopped into sales, which I discovered to my astonishment that I was actually quite good at.

    What James means, but will never admit, is that he’s always been a salesman. Not matter how he looks down on Sales, he’s good at it. He should stick to it. We’d both be happy.

    Even pissed I could retain the plot and close. Every time I closed I felt the need to get pissed and tell everybody. Every time I told everybody my partners dampened a remnant of my joy with, “You’re only doing your job”.

    They were also paranoid. It was business after all and the thought of anybody outside the confines of our high-rental walls knowing about anything that happened inside filled them with fear.

    The only time that they left the building was to go to lunch at the Greek bistro across the road.

    I should answer the telephone.

    I should go get the car.

    I should get dressed.

    I should leave the house.

    I am a poet but I am no Emily Dickinson. No Hanshan. No Shiwu nor W. B. Yeats.

    Christ, this is the sort of thing that dribbles out of his mouth after one glass of wine.

    I became intensely jealous about exactly what was happening during those lunches. Not just eating. Eating and talking about me.

    I had lunch with them several times. After saying how much they worry about you, James. We talked about food and finally about whether I’d like to invest a little more in the company.

    One Friday I got back to the office, with a sale closed, at three in the afternoon and no one was there.

    I got drunk and I stayed drunk through Saturday punctuating the hours with love calls and fights with Jemma. All of this in the house that we, she, was trying to turn into a home.

    Well, fights.

    I smoked dope. I drank rum. I took pills and I drove a hire car into a wall on Sunday night. Jemma was at her wits end. I was in hospital having tried to do for myself in an expensive hotel room with an expensive bottle of rum and not very expensive over the counter pills, all of which I paid for with my company credit card.

    I was sacked by my partners on the Wednesday for betraying company secrets, misuse of company funds and for being an unstable addict, which I was not. I was quite stable most of the time. I was certainly an addict but it was me who was bringing home the bacon while the others played at being in business. As for betraying trade secrets, that was a bunch of hooey.

    I’d stood on a table in a bar and yelled out the names of our client base and revenue (all of it down to me) at a bunch of hardened Sunday evening drinkers who couldn’t have remembered, had a few of them not recorded my performance and uploaded it to various popular internet sites.

    It was in the hospital that I decided to become a poet. Unlike many poets, I had built up quite a substantial amount of savings, and various financial instruments against my old age. Unstable addict, my fat backside.

    The telephone has stopped. I have just realised the best way to solve this conundrum.

    Suicide!

    This is where this rambling note from my husband James stops. There are two red wine rings on the paper. He doesn’t even say sorry. Never mind though. I found him slumped into the couch, drooling but alive. I’m writing this from the hospital. I’ll take him home soon. We’ll have words.

  • ‘Dapper’ Dale’s death

    ‘Dapper’ Dale’s death

    “In the absence of leadership, a group organises around its least flexible member”

    We started the hunt first thing in the morning with the sun barely out of its bed. We had beer and rain. Rain so hard that it felt like it would smash us into the grass on the hill. I decided to kill Dapper Dale. Finally. Once and for all.

    We were hunting rabbit. Dapper Dale and me had rifles. Craig and Danny had crossbows; nasty things in my mind. We all had knives. Those knives were big enough for rabbits and cutting a bit of undergrowth and killing our fellow man.

    Like I said, it was raining hard. It was horrible. The night before when we’d set out from the farmhouse and headed in-country we’d had no warning of this wild, delaying downpour. We were already full of unsweetened porridge and drenching in summer rain.

    Still, moaning about it was not going to get what had to be done, done. No amount of complaining would have dried us or made us clean. In three hours, rain and shine, we had to be back inside the house with the job done and all our hunting stories wide and straight. 

    I thought about Kathleen as the rain drove diagonally into my face. Going up the hill, the rising warmth was behind us. I was going to marry Dale’s daughter Kathleen later in the month. She was a beautiful girl on the outside and not plain in the head either. I had been promised.

    I needed to rest but asking for a rest with this crew was not in play, not even if both your legs had been broken at different times over the years and had been set badly. No, you were not going to ask for a rest unless you wanted hours worth of hard banter.

    That’s how we all were back then. Life was just that way. That’s how it worked. It could be painful if you stepped out of line; if you got above yourself. Weakness was out. And good forbid you showed cleverness because that meant you were putting someone else down.

    Unless it was called for by Dale.

    But once you knew the rules, not only could you avoid the pain, you could even come up smiling.


    Don’t think I’m lying about this either. I was in a bar where a bloke, whose wife of 40 years had been buried about a month before, was being brought back down to earth. His mates, my mates, were tickling his ribs with some chat, like it was an act of kindness for the bloke.

    One fella had his arm around the drunken widower’s shoulders. “At least you can get some takeaway later, Jim. Lovely meal for one. Anything you want. Lovely.”

    “Cos’ she won’t be there to cook it for him, thank gawd”, guffawed another mate of his ramming home the point in case Jim had missed it.

    “Lucky bloke, her cooking was worse than his aim!” yelled someone from the bar.

    The widower tried a smile, and said, ”You bastards. You fucking lot! We’re still here though. Us we’re still here! Altogether. All the boys!” 

    I happened to know that he loved his Joan very much. He was broken by her death. But he knew the rules and he kept drinking. That was it for him though, he just kept drinking. He sold his house in the end. Took his pension, bought a little bungalow up north. I meant to visit him.


    I wasn’t going to ask for a break at any time soon on this hunt.

    The three others kept walking, eyes front, striding, not walking pardon me. We all knew the ground even after the rain had changed it. We’d made this slog loads of times before. It was a 12-mile round-trip from the bay, enough for an early start, a rabbit hunt and back in time for dinner, a dinner starting at around two and going on until late into the night.

    There was a chance of boar maybe. That would be excellent. It would add time. Craig and Danny would shoot back for the truck and meet me and Dale half way. That’d be really good because even now, only five miles in, I was over it. 


    Kathleen and I had been up late talking. She talked about babies, and I talked, through a bit of beer, about getting away, going abroad before babies. Getting away. She said her dad had better not hear me talking like that because there were plenty of other people who would love my job and would take it for less than he was paying me. That meant she’d already had that conversation with Dale. 

    He wasn’t one for changing his mind, not on his daughter. Not on any subject, not even if he was wrong. Especially not if he was wrong. I once saw him inflate the price of a car he was buying.

    He’d assumed it was older than it was, and a different model number. He’d got them both wrong but no one in the family was going to correct him. So, he told the fella he was buying from, that he wasn’t going to spend such small beans for a car so slick. He would pay a fair and reasonable price or be damned for it.

    The other fella, a straight-up sort called Ted, we’d all known him for years, was almost pleading that the car was not worth the money being shoved at him. He knew what might happen later in the year or even decade or a day or the next minute. Everybody else knew too. Craig piped up, ”Come on Daddy, Ted wouldn’t lead you wrong”. 

    Dale wouldn’t walk away, if anything he pushed his face closer into Ted’s. People gathered around because of the noise and, I swear to God, because of the static and the smell. You would have thought that Dale, not a big man but forceful, was going to lay the other, bigger, fella out flat on the concrete forecourt. Dale was angry. He wasn’t going to let it go.

    Ted’s son brought out the papers from the office and showed them to Dale.

    “Look, here, in black and white. Check the engine block number. It’s all here”, he said as calmly as he could.

    ”Fuck off with your paperwork you little clerk. We’re men. We make men’s bargains”, he took the papers and buried them in the pocket of his overalls. He threw the money on the floor in front of Ted. 

    ”See, my car now. All legal”, he said. 

    You could tell just by a slight movement, a sag of the shoulder, that he knew he was wrong about the deal. He also knew that he wasn’t wrong about ensuring his reputation for never taking a step back on a made decision. He held his huge right hand out for the keys.

    ”We are still mates, Ted. Me and you. Solid. You must come to the house soon, Ted. You must come.”

    Ted went white as a shroud, and Ted sold him the car at the price Dale wanted. He sold it because he knew the rules. Even in the face of rank fucking stupidity, people respect you if you don’t back down.

    Two nights later, Dale and Ted were in the pub, up the back, telling each other how they were the best buddies, the greatest mates ever. When Dale got up and went to take a piss though, I could see the other man breathe out a long sigh of relief. His hands were shaking.

    Dale stood him drinks for the rest of the night.


    Those were my thoughts as we pushed up the hill with the rain lashing us while the heat built up, and those were my thoughts just moments before I felt a slap across my shoulders. 

    “You’re taking your fucking time. Still, if you want to shuffle along like an old lady, well…” It was Dale. The punch line was coming. Just not now, not this time.

    He stalked off, his muscle mass – as he delighted in calling it – driving his thick frame up and on, up and on. His middle finger prodded away the rain near his usually deliberately deaf left ear indicating something of tremendous importance that I could not understand.

    I saw him catching up with the other blokes, pounding past them. I saw them trying to match his pace and failing. He slowed down. He stopped. He never stopped. I thought he was having a heart attack or, given the earlier indication, a brain haemorrhage.

    The others, heads down against the rain, kept walking, talking to each other, apparently unaware that Dale had stopped. They disappeared into the rain and over the hill.

    I had seen brain bombs before thought, so you couldn’t be sure. A friend’s girlfriend, her aneurysms, they should have killed her. Everybody including the doctors had said as much.I stopped.

    I wasn’t going to have to kill the old bastard after all.

    I began to plan what I would say at Dale’s funeral. I kept walking. It kept me walking.


    A year or so after the car incident, I was in a bar when Ted the used car man slumped into me. ”She just fell down there right in front of me, she went down like a sack of potatoes, bang!” he sobbed.

    He illustrated the point by slamming his empty shot glass down on the bar and looking at me for some kind of response.

    I offered him a whisky. He had accepted. Ted had become a serious barfly, an old soak. He was partial to coke too.

    ”She’s not old,” he reminded me. ”Well, she was. You don’t expect it. You just don’t expect it is all I can tell you.”

    He was talking about his wife of 30 years. Before tying the knot, he’d know her for eighteen months. He figured he was in love and obviously she was in love with him. After all he was tall, slender, dark haired and not even slightly sick.

    “Got any coke?”, he whsipered to the whole bar, his face was streaked with sand and tears.

    She was, or at least she appeared to be, in good overall shape. Plus they had a lot in common. They liked music, movies, walking along the beach at sunset (they were going to do that soon) and dogs.

    “Doctors say she’s got maybe a week if she survives the operation. Bang!”. He drank another shot. I bought him another shot. I thought she was already dead.

    I was a little shocked he’d tell me something like that in the bar. Sure, he’d been through some stuff. But it was private. What did he expect me to do with it?

    Anyway, as it turns out, she had never been dead. She had been leverage for Ted to bargain for drinks with. A week later she’d had some surgery, she woke up, she said a few words, and he was back in the bar celebrating like he was the fucking surgeon.

    A month after she came home he was in the bar again. He explained to everybody that they must definitely not get him wrong, he was happy that and all that, but that she’d changed a lot. 

    Before she’d been feisty – she hated that word – but reasonable. Now she was full of weird ideas. She wanted to travel for a start. He took another swallow of hooch and breathed out filth.

    He’d had to sell his business, his life’s work, to pay for his habits since Dale had turned him around on himself.

    He wanted to tell us about how much she had changed. Instead he talked about his hope. Hope was as acceptable to us to hear as it was for him to say. The fact of the matter though, was that he was no longer in love. 

    The more the night wore on, the more he drank and talked, and the more no one stopped him, the more positive and hopeful he sounded. But everything he hoped for became like a candy wrapper wrapped tightly around a broken bone.

    It was as we were staggering and swaying to the taxi rank by the town hall in the rain that he finally admitted that he hoped that, “She might change back. I mean because she’s already changed once already. Even her mum says so.” Then he bent over and started to puke.

    Dale had done this to him. Threat after threat sandwiched by false friendship, even sympathy. Dale played with him until Ted finally broke.


    I was terrified of him and his ability to do exactly what he wanted and to have other folk follow along with no apparent care for themselves.

    Of course that’s not entirely true. Folks, me included, did follow along with for care of themselves. Some, me included, because they did not care to be bullied with words and threatened with physical violence

    Some followed along because they thought that Dale was mightily cleverer than they were and that his ideas and motivations must also be bigger and smarter than theirs. So, they must benefit.

    I just wanted him dead.

    Others got behind him because they were lazy as cats and thought they were cleverer than Dale. These people were the ones who egged him on, pushed him forward and applauded his bullying: “Dale stands up for honest folks” or “Dale keeps things simple”. 

    These were also the people, a couple of doctors, a local politician, a volunteer policeman, the chairman of the local team, who stood by Dale “through thick and thin”, most specifically through the death of the nurse in Dale’s house at a Dale Open House party. 


    There was a lot of confusion and statements that contradicted other statements about her death. One thing was never in doubt though, she died in a pretty brutal way and she put up a long fight.

    ‘Dapper’ Dale had been arrested but denied everything. He did help the police. He had a pal who had a pal who worked on a national newspaper. Dale got his story into it. He got his story out first.

    When he was finally exonerated of all charges, he made sure that everybody involved was bought a drink very publicly.

    A weasel of a guy called Bradshaw who had a bad record of violence against women when he was unmedicated admitted to the charges and got 25 years, out in ten.

    Bradshaw had been working for Dale up at the farm for a few years. He had replaced a bloke called Minter who had committed suicide. Having owned up to the unmedicated murder of the nurse, and having gone into a secure unit, Bradshaw was replaced by a bloke called Grimmond who was also educationally behind.

    Dale always had one fella on his staff who could be sacrificed if needed.


    Dale loved to thrown parties. Dale loved to throw the farm house and some of its grounds open to anybody who could get up the hill, onto the plain and into the grounds, no invitation required. 

    “The more the merrier,” said Dale.

    These “Open Days and Nights” were where favours and deals were made. Everybody had fun, that was one of the house rules. Sometimes things got a little, to use Dale’s word, “funky”, a bit out of the hand. That was fine but God help you if you were found in the vicinity of any damaged property. If you were found actually damaging something (without permission) then not even Jesus Christ and Buddah riding shotgun were going to be able to save you from one of two fates. 

    Either you were going to be falling over something or you were going to be owing Dale. Not always Dale himself but certainly one of Dale’s pals. You would get invited back, in fact you would be one of the selected group with a permanent invitation to Dale’s. More a command in fact. 

    Definitely a command.

    I’d been going to Dale’s open houses since I was very young, four or five years old. In that time I had only ever been in the vicinity of one damaged piece of property. I was twelve at the time, a small, dark, permanently worried twelve year old who could climb trees but could not catch a thrown ball or a fallen lampshade to save his life.

    I looked down as the tennis ball that my dad had thrown to me in the courtyard rolled away. I looked as the glass lampshade fell onto the stone floor. I looked on as dad ran, and I looked up at Dale who had marched around the corner, one of his daughters close by. Dale was smiling at me broadly. 

    “Now then young man,” he said. “There is some damage, there is some damage”. As you might expect his emphasis was on that second “is” and my emphasis was on understanding what he meant. He seemed pleased rather than angry. 

    “Look what you did, young man. Look at this mess, this damage.”

    What he said was true, there was some damage. What he meant was not true. Or maybe, I thought, maybe it was. After all, without me being there, Dad would not have thrown the ball.

    I have often wondered where Dad found that ball. That ball that did for his dignity. My Dad worked for Dale, in the used car lot.

    I told Dale that I was sorry but that it was not my fault.

    “Then whose fault is it?”

    “Not mine “, I said.

    “Then why say sorry?”

    He was so big. He was so right. Why would I say sorry? Because if I didn’t then it was going to be my dad’s fault. I was not about to land my Dad in it. 

    Dale knew the answer to his question. He always did or he’d never ask it.

    “Who do you think broke my lamp?” 

    I shrugged and tried to look brave and innocent.

    “Someone did. Look at it. Look at what’s left of it”, he said, softly.

    He was right. It was broken. 

    “Go away now love”. His daughter danced off his arm, patted me on my head, moved on to learn about being a nurse.


    I really wanted my Dad to respect me back then. Not love me, that would have been soft.

    Dale turned to my dad and beckoned him over with a look. My dad shook his head. Dale nodded his. There were five paces between them. He told my dad, he said, “You broke my fucking lamp. I loved that fucking lamp”.

    “Then why was it in the yard?” I wanted to ask.

    My dad began to shake. Dale shouted at me, “Come over here now you!” 

    I started to walk on stickman legs.

    My dad screamed, “Stop!”

    He took a step towards Dapper Dale. He took another and another and another until he was standing within arm’s reach. Dale took him by the shoulder and pushed him into the house and slammed the door.

    That was the last time I saw my dad. I saw a man who looked like my dad but was stooped over, he was crying. He walked out of the house an hour or so later. I’d cleaned up the broken glass by then with a dustpan and brush I’d found in a shed. I’d tidied up the mess. Then I’d just sat on a trestle table in the yard waiting and promising myself I’d do for Dale one day.

    After we got home from that party I never wanted my dad to respect me because I didn’t respect him. Over the years before his death from a quick and easy heart attack he became smaller and quieter. He’d disappear for days at a time on business for Dale. When he came back he’d drink rum and make model kits of military vehicles on the table in the kitchen. Mum left.


    My rifle was ready in case I needed to put Dapper Dale out of his misery. I felt I could do it. I even felt a jury would understand. That’s mad. That’s how much Dale filled my life. I felt he must fill everybody else’s too. They must all know what an animal he was. They’d understand that you put animals out of their and everybody else’s misery. I felt that. All I was doing was feeling.

    I reached Dale. He was on his knees. His head was down. His hands were in the earth digging into the mud. Clawing at it.

    “Look at this! Look at this! Fucking hell young man! Look!” 

    Dale didn’t die on the hill. Dale was eternal. And I have married into his eternity. 

    Dapper Dale had discovered a golden pendant. Not golden, gold. Solid gold, engraved, a thousand years old. The heavy, endless, pounding rain had washed away the earth to reveal it. He’d noticed a glint as he walked up the hill. The pendant had revealed itself to him. 

    He stood up and laughed and hugged me.

    “Fucking hell young man! You’re my good luck charm!” He shook my hand, he hugged me again. “Go and get my boys!” 

    I’d never seen him hug anybody. He’d never shaken my hand. It felt good. It felt amazing. It still does.

    So here I am. Looking at my son, drinking rum and waiting for Dale to call. There’s a party tonight.

  • Photography

    Photography

    Some photos I’ve taken over the years. I’ve used a variety of cameras and phones to take these.

  • On being questioned about the death of my child

    On being questioned about the death of my child

    It was a case of good cop/good cop.

    I was living in Sydney, Australia the day that my daughter died of a combination of pneumonia, a badly administered anaesthetic following dentistry work and her cerebral palsy. She died in the bedroom next to mine. I discovered her in the morning.

    She died in July 2005. Twenty years ago. She was called Zuzu and she had a form of cerebral palsy called holoprosencephaly. It’s a rare and extreme version of CP. Zuzu was fed by tube. She was unable to sit up or speak. She couldn’t crawl or do anything really other than be happy unless people were being angry. She was very, very happy.

    We loved her very much indeed. Once other people had got used to her drooling constantly, and her tube button in her stomach, and the fact that her life was going to be a short one, they grew to love her very much too. People are scared of all of those things and more with disabled people.

    Lots of things about disabled children – especially kids with such extreme and obvious disabilities – make people very uncomfortable.

    The author with his daughter, Zuzu. Also a lamb. We were at the Royal Easter Show at the Sydney showgrounds.

    I had separated from her mother a year before Zu died. But we were on good terms. I would look after Zu for two weeks each month, and her mother would care for her for the other two weeks. There was some flexibility in that schedule. The night Zuzu died, my ex-wife was over at my place, we chatted. It felt a bit like we could have patched things up. We didn’t.

    I am writing this now because time has passed. I have moved back to the UK, I have a new partner who I love. My ex-wife is still in Sydney with her new partner. She and I Skyped this morning.

    “Zuzu’s condition was extreme wasn’t it Tim, that must have been very hard for you…”

    I am also writing this now because of a news story that broke this morning regarding the deaths of three children.

    The Guardian – among others – reports this:

    “A 42-year-old woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder after three children were found dead at a house in south London. The three children – a girl aged four and twin boys aged three – were pronounced dead at the scene.

    “The Metropolitan police said a 42-year-old woman was arrested on suspicions of murder after being treated for minor injuries. A Met spokesman said: ‘We are not looking for anyone else in connection with this incident.’

    “A neighbour, who did not wish to be identified, said the family, originally from South Africa, moved into the five-bedroom house a year ago. She said the family’s three younger children were suffering from genetic disorders ‚Äì believed to be life-limiting. An older child thought to be around seven or eight years old, was in good health, she said.\”

    “I bet it was exhausting too, wasn’t it, Tim?”

    This forced me back in time to a police station in Balmain. To two rooms in that police station: I was in one with my interrogator. My ex-wife was in another with her interrogator. This was four days after my flat had been turned into a crime scene, which always happens in the case of a sudden death at home, I had been told.

    My officer, a woman in her late 20s. I forget her name. We hadn’t been arrested but questions had to be asked. Her first question was:

    The room was on the ground floor of the police station in Balmain. I was on one side of the desk, I think it had a green formica-like surface. There was a window, maybe a metre square on my left.

    I asked the policewoman to repeat the question because I honestly didn’t believe what she was trying to get at. Everybody knew I loved Zuzu. But bringing her up had been hard, she was right. Other kids were running around, walking, talking, saying that they loved their daddy and mummy way before the age of 7. Other kids didn’t make people haul their kids away in some irrational fear that CP might be catching. Other kids weren’t fed by a tube in the stomach.

    She repeated the question and I replied, “Yes, very hard sometimes.”

    She left the room to get me a cup of coffee and some tissue paper and left me to think.

    More of this factual story later.

    Zuzu and Dad in the park.
  • About Me

    About Me

    The author looking meaningfully into the distance.

    My name is Tim Smith, and I’m a writer of 40 years standing. I am now based in York, UK.

    I began my professional writing career at Future Publishing Ltd in Bath, UK writing for a variety of magazines.

    I left Future as an editor, and moved on to the role of non-fiction editor up in London.

    After that a move to Australia where I was a managing and launch editor for magazines.

    I then became a TV captioner, then technical manager during the analog-to-digital change-over.

    Returning from Australia following the death of my daughter I edited websites and became part of the University of Leeds digital accessibility team. I was responsible for providing written and face-to-face training for senior staff.

    I have published one novel. It’s about the need for strangers, the kindness of strangers. It’s published by Amazon. However, I am thinking of making it available here instead.

    I have also published a podcast ‘Don’t Do Things the Way I Did’. These are interviews with successful people (such as comedian Al Murray) about how they got to where they are.

    My own podcasts aside I have also edited and produced those professionally.

    Hire me

    Please get in contact if you need editorial assistance, or for making your site accessible to potentially thousands of new – and disabled – visitors.

  • Mountain pressure

    Mountain pressure

    “Some delicious soup might teach you at least one decent recipe too,” said Jane.

    A view looking down on clouds seen from between two peaks. I took this while ascending Mount Olympos.

    Dread, dread, dread. The forest is dark and full of autumn, chewed over by winter frosts and snows. There is a crunch to it as the sun sets behind the traveller making her way up the mountainside to the refuge and a warm, thick stew.

    Some wolves are howling far away but still too close. Karen’s mountain hike dips, losing valuable ascent but she pushes on. The day is leaving. It’s getting dark. It’s been 12 hours since she set out from the town this morning. She walked out past the graveyard, the bar, the tourist office and the mayor’s house. Her friend, Jane, was walking with her.

    The last time they’d walked together had been on the same hike but a year previously. They’d gone in the winter, in January, because that was the only time they could take off from their jobs: Karen in catering. Jane as a lawyer. They’d walked and talked about their lives. Long, involved conversations fuelled by the rhythm of their breathing, the steady beating of their hearts and the contentment of taking measured step after step with a destination and return planned and available. Ups and downs and winter birds singing around them. The pine trees’ scent, the wind in the needles above and around them.

    Finally an ascent regained some of the lost height. They met a hilariously blond Swedish family coming the other direction along the sandy path: mother, father, teenage son and daughter. Tall, slim, smiling. They’d shared information about each other’s routes, drank some water. Apparently there was an ancient monastery carved into the valley side just a few kilometres ahead. A step ladder of sorts carved into the side too. The monks were the jolly kind, happy to meet and feed travellers with a vegetable broth that was absolutely delicious according to the nodding Swedes.

    Jane and Karen had time. They decided to visit.

    “Some spiritual enlightenment would be just the thing for a lawyer”, said Karen.

    “Some delicious soup might teach you at least one decent recipe too,” said Jane.

    They walked, and a few kilometres later they wandered down into the valley. Looking up into the wan winter sun they saw the monastery and carved stepladder. Steep. Steep. Steep. But the building looked amazing. White, vertical, calm, beautifully simple.

    “After you”, Jane told Karen as the drizzle began to slick the steps. 

    “Let’s get in there before the rain really starts.”

    As they climbed they chatted about the state of the world and how Jane’s marriage had finally turned the corner after her second, agonising miscarriage. She’d decided not to pursue children any further. Her husband, Craig – a teacher at an inner city state school – had taken that badly at first. He’d fought hard against it, looking for reasons and reason. Then he moved to self-blame and then to self-hate, then to hating her, then to hating everything. 

    They’d nearly separated after seven years of relatively untroubled togetherness because of the kids they never had.

    Up they climbed. Nothing more than a dampening, slickening drizzle to mar the day. Half way up they stopped on a platform and looked over the valley. 

    “My god doesn’t it look brilliant from all the way up here?” said Karen. Jane nodded. She looked up. Not far now. Delicious soup. Maybe they might overnight with the monks? 

    “It’s not going to come to us. Let’s go. You first”, Jane prompted. They set off again in good spirits and then Jane fell.

    On the approach to the foot of the mountain, on a needless detour to an ancient monastery carved into the valley side. Jane fell.

    
She fell maybe two metres onto the platform. Where she bounced due to her day pack. She bounced and then rolled, and she saw the platform disappearing in front of her. Terminal velocity in seven seconds. Jane fell and Karen didn’t realise for five seconds. Karen turned and stopped breathing as she watched Jane scrabbling to get a grip on the wet floor of the two metre-square platform.

    
Jane fell. She died. Right there. Right then.

    That was a year ago.

    Now Karen walks on with Jane beside her, inside and ahead of her. She isn’t going to the valley. There haven’t been any more pointless detours in the past year. She is completing the hike as they’d planned on the flight over and then the train journey to the small town where they’d stayed the night before the hike, and where they’d intended to stay the night after the descent.

    In the left breast pocket of her technical top was a photograph, a piece of cloth, a tealight and a cigarette lighter.

    She is going to have a small ceremony, find a memento and take it back: a pebble, a flower, anything, something. Karen keeps walking, thinking about her friend. She walks to the place where they’d met the lovely Swedish family and instead of taking a right turn a few kilometres later she walks straight on. Up and down. On up to the refuge. Thinking of Jane. Thinking of getting home and getting on with life. Not thinking about death.

    She loves Jane and she always will. Jane is her sister. Jane fell and there was no reason for it.

    Just drizzle and a detour. An accident.

  • Lucy’s days

    Lucy’s days

    The noodles would slip down and fill his stomach, taking away the humiliation he felt at being in debt to his own daughter.

    Abstract image of fireworks going off in slow motion.

    February 9th #1

    Finding the bird was easier than Leeland had imagined. He’d picked it up by the war memorial near the park. He’d taken it from its nest to replace the one he’d bought the day after his daughter’s conviction. He called it Lucy-Doosey the Third. Once he had got it back to the house, he looked after it as well as he could.

    There was, of course, only one way to steady the old hands: a shower, then some noodles and a mug of something.  He sorted the first, quick and cold, scraping away a week’s worth of night sweats and smoke from his hard, inflexible, old self with a rough cloth and some dishwashing liquid. 

    He waddled to his bedroom where he packed an old, off white Adidas sports bag with two shirts, a pair of khaki shorts, three passports, and an oilskin (the first one that came to hand). He wrapped a parcel and a block of cash. He’d buy a phone and some new clothes on the way to the airport.

    Throwing the main fuse – the stuff in the fridge and the freezer didn’t matter any more, he stood on the top step outside the front door and looked back into the room. He sniffed and pulled the door shut, locked it, threw the keys under the mat and turned away into the mist and traffic of another October morning. Despite the mist it was bright out there. Then again, he thought, most everywhere was bright compared to that apartment.

    He planned to eat noodle soup. Pho they called it, pronounced ‘Fa’. He’d learned after having called it ‘Foe’ for years. He would eat it on a formica-topped table in a Vietnamese cafe around the corner. It was run by a tall, tall man. It was up a flight of stairs. He would be seated at the table at the back near where an old man sat next to a massive pot in which they made the broth base for the Fa. The tall man had told him about this one night as they both sipped from cheap, bottled beer and the lights outside in the street came on. 

    Lots of basil, he thought. 

    Lots of fresh chilli.

    He sped up, going nearly as fast as his chubby legs and smoker’s lungs would allow. Lots of chilli, lots of meat, some lung, some tripe and lots of fat noodles.

    A mug of rum and coffee, maybe even a glass of that salty lemon/sour plum drink. Stuff to look forward to.  He’d be fine after that, not only would his hands stop shaking, so would his view of what he’d agreed to do. 

    That bird had died, of course it had.

    The noodles would slip down and fill his stomach, taking away the humiliation he felt at being in debt to his own daughter. Something to look forward to indeed. Finally being free of a debt that he shouldn’t have owed. Whichever way he looked at it – and as a man of zero honour, he had to have plenty of viewpoints – he should just have moved on.

    He opened the door and stepped into the cafe, salivating and ready. Once he’d consumed this rich and sustaining breakfast he’d go about getting a gun.

    Feb 10th #1

    Lucy walked around the kitchen. She walked and walked. She walked around the lounge room. It wasn’t her room in her house any more, it was just a room in a house with two big, ugly capital “AYs”. 

    Changes had been made, to increase salability maybe? It was cold and impersonal, without things in sight. No books or magazines or things. There were photographs at strategic points. To her it felt temporary, not the home it had once been. It offered no clues as to why she had been summoned.

    She made do with one of the warm, cheap bottled beers she had brought with her, and went into the garden where she sat waiting for them. 

    Finally, two people came out. They had fitted doors to the garden from the kitchen. What an idea. “Sorry to keep you waiting, Lucy. We had a lot of preparation to do.” It felt to her as if they were saying it in unison like a well rehearsed choir. Sickening.

    She studied them closely as they walked towards her. They looked much the same as they had last time they’d all met. Perhaps a bit weathered but it had been years. Her ex-husband, Bob and his new (not new) wife, Pauline.

    The beer helped take the edge off her anxiety and anger. 

    “Why have you asked me here? What do you want?”, she asked, feeling for the key and vaping pen in her skirt pocket.

    Bob put the plates on the table in front of her, gave her a, “Are you okay?”, look. As if. As if she was and he cared.

    Pauline sat down in the slatted, beautifully pre-battered summer chair and smiled. She had a large, dimpled wooden bowl of salad on her hands. She put it on the table. She reached out for Bob’s hand and Bob looked happy.

    For no possible reason other than spite, Pauline said, “We’re so happy together”. So weird.

    Lucy balled her hands in a tight fist on her lap. She smiled. Then she actually said, “It’s nice to be happy”.

    The other woman’s reply didn’t matter. Lucy drank some more beer and wondered idly what the first best way of hurting Bob might be: a bullet in the back of Pauline’s head maybe?

    “Yes it is”, Pauline replied not having expected that response from the dried up, bitter and obviously lonely and unhappy woman.

    Lucy felt weary all of a sudden. Old memories like jellyfish tentacles, liable to sting, nearly visible, horribly long, coming up from the depths.

    Bloody Bob and Pauline. Bloody happiness. Fuckers.

    “Have some salad, Lucy.” Pauline gestured towards the bowl she’d placed on the table.

    “I’d rather not,” she replied. “I have an intolerance.”

    Bob’s face made an insipid, “Oh poor you” expression.

    Pauline shrugged. 

    “Look Lucy, this isn’t easy for us either. I know you probably still hate us,” Bob’s already pathetic voice tailed off as she looked to Pauline for help.

    “You said it”, Lucy.

    Bob piped up, ”But we have to come to some sort of arrangement regarding Charlie.”

    “You’ve got the bloody house Bob, what more do you want?”

    “Charlie needs a stable family, Lucy”, stated Pauline as a fact that she considered no one else had yet noticed.

    “You’ve been in prison, you need time to reacclimate to the modern world”, said Bob.

    “Fucking hell, Bob, it was only five years. I’m not the Count of Monte fucking Cristo. And I was in there for you! For our family.”

    Bob drummed his fingers on the table. Empty wine and water glasses rattled.

    “That’s not the issue now though. Our son is. His well being is. That’s why Pauline and I want to formalise things.”

    “That’s why we are adopting Charlie”, said Pauline.

    “And Pauline will be another of his mothers”, simpered Bob.

    Pauline nodded like artillery.

    Feb 10th #2

    Lucy had ended up in jail because she was stupid. That’s the word she used. White collar, fall for it, protect your man, stupid… jail.

    Jail? Don’t fuck with the fine language. Stupid. Prison. She breathed in. She took some salad. She hit Pauline full in the face, she hit her with her balled fist. She wanted to cave her head in.

    Bob, as usual, did not know where to look or what to do.

    Meat started smoking on the heat of the barbecue. 

    Lucy waited for the other two to do something.

    “You fucking whore!” screamed Pauline. She jumped up, spoon in hand, ready for action. Lucy hit her in the throat, flat of the hand. Bob was in what he would have called “a tizz”. This had suddenly become very untidy indeed. Pauline fell like a city centre tower, clawing at her throat, trying to breathe.

    Five years for him. Now out of prison and it was a cold and shitty world. Lucy, looked at Bob who was kneeling over Pauline. Lucy spat down, turned on her heels, went indoors, upstairs, and into Charlie’s room. Of course, Bob had made sure that Charlie wasn’t in this house. 

    Lucy went into what had been their bedroom, shut the door, leant a chair under the handle and sat on the bed. This wasn’t helping. She looked at the phone by the bed. She looked out of the window onto the wide, safe, road. She removed the chair and felt in her bag for what she knew was in there, just to make sure. Where the fuck was he? He wasn’t there. Again.

    She threw the keys out of the window so that they landed on the driveway.

    9th Feb #2

    Leeland woke up from a nap, he coughed. He’d been coughing for days. Too many cigarettes, too much booze, too many drugs, and all that interminable time on his hands. Cancer probably too.

    The phone rang. It never rang. 

    His hands shook as he pushed away the bird feed, bottles and pornography to locate the receiver.

    “Yeah?”

    “Dad, it’s Lucy.”

    He was only mildly surprised.

    “Lucy-Doosey the first”, he said. “Well now. I hoped you wouldn’t need to call me.”

    “I know,” her voice sounded shaky, “I need to call in that favour.”

    He laughed. Then realised what she wanted from him. What he’d promised to do but only if she asked him.

    “OK Lucy-Doosey, OK.”

    “Tomorrow. My house. Our house. His house. Their house”, she hung up.

    Leeland drank deeply from the bottle and turned his thoughts to the task ahead. He picked up the bird feed and opened the cage. He’d leave as soon as his hands were steady enough to drive.

    “Can’t leave you to starve,” he muttered and reached for the bird, shaking fingers snapping its neck like a winter hawthorn twig.

    He’d probably be gone a while.

    Feb 10 #3

    Lucy came down to the kitchen. Bob was, as usual, looking for God to descend and make it all better. 

    Pauline had recovered and was looking so pissed off. Lucy had to laugh. 

    “Pauline, you look absurdly fucked up.”

    “I will kill you, girl. I will – Jesus this hurts.”  She felt her throat and grimaced. She was scared, Lucy could tell.

    “Bob, why don’t you do something?!” she screamed at him. He sat down in a damp mess looking more like a bag of washing than a man.

    “What? What should I do?”

    Lucy thought of her child, thought of Charlie, as she looked at the couple. Then she thought about the hell-strike she’d just called in. She almost fainted, at least she imagined that’s how almost fainting probably felt. It was quite pleasurable. In prison if you fainted, well, the cycle of gaining your self-respect started again. She’d only ever seen two women, only one got up. She’d seen one thousand girls faint though.

    A car pulled up outside the house, coughing its guts out. A car door slammed shut. Slow, unsteady footsteps, and the front door was unlocked and pushed open. Then the door into the kitchen opened.

    She was reminded of prison and her sacrifice for Bob. She smiled and said, “Goodbye”, as her father walked in. 

    “Charlie’s in the car, waiting”, he said as Lucy walked past him. She pecked him on the cheek.

    “You don’t look so good, Dad. We’ll fix that”, she shut the door behind her and went to wait with Charlie in the car.

    END

  • It comes to some of us in the End

    It comes to some of us in the End


    Good old snake-hips, author of Confessio, and a much more nervous man than you’d expect.

    A medieval angel figure floats over a gravestone in a sunny graveyard.

    He stole the car. He stole the car and crashed it into the fence and died and went to heaven and came back because it wasn’t his time or because there wasn’t enough room there or in the other place. Whatever the reason Tom ‘Bopper’ Keys came back, yes.

    Tom ‘Bopper’ Keys was returned unto the earthly Earth. That much was certain.

    “You will find it all rather difficult I’m afraid. Going back will be confusing, but we’ve decided that, as most of this was our fault, we’re going to remove your sense of fear as a bonus”, explained his rather forlorn and embarrassed spirit guide. No names, no pack drill.

    It was St Patrick, of course. Good old snake-hips Pádraig, author of Confessio, and a much more nervous man than you’d expect.

    “Oh, righto, no worries then, cheers”, said Tom looking from purgatory into the world and not seeing much of it. 

    “Is it working yet?”

    “No, not yet, it won’t start working until you’re back on earth.”

    Then Boom! There he was, inside a box, under the ground, with only foetid air. He was returned again but not born again.

    “Bugger it,” he considered as he began scratching languorously as his new ceiling panel, “Bugger it, this is going to take some time,” he continued.

    “You’re not afraid though, are you?”, queried Saint Pat.

    “No, no I’m not.”

    “Right-ho. No worries then. I’ll look in on you after tea. Take care now.”

    Tom nodded and to dig his way out patiently.

    The End

  • Sydney by cab

    Sydney by cab

    I’ve heard of thousand dollar bottles, dug from a Napoleonic cellars over which a shopping mall was soon to rise.

    The thing about expensive wine, by which I mean wine that costs more than $200 a bottle, is that I can’t imagine anybody slooshing its dregs down the sink at the end of an evening.

    To my mind, $10 worth of Château De Plume du Plom at the bottom of a glass heading for the waste disposal of a stainless steel kitchen sink is an image of pure sadness.

    Of course, wealth, real wealth is all about surplus. It’s not about what you keep; it’s about what you can afford to throw away without a second glance. The after-thought boys might chipping the crystal the enforced guests might be gurning over the latest piece of art, their fingers stained with labour about the stain the frame, but the wine doesn’t get a thought.

    I’ve heard of thousand dollar bottles, dug from Napoleonic cellars over which a shopping mall was soon to rise. A thousand dollar bottle of plonk? How? Do you drink it? Do you share it with friends or save it for yourself? Is anybody rich enough to slob out on the couch, dressed in silk boxer shorts, crackling sea-salt and basil-flavoured fried oyster snacks down their fronts watching bad television and drinking the thousand dollar bottle in $50 swigs straight from the bottleneck?

    This is what I was thinking as I looked out into the bright rain from the sweated front seat of a cab that I could barely afford, heading down the Paramatta Road in Sydney, Australia. My driver was a German who looked frighteningly like my maternal grandfather. So I immediately assumed that he was a gutter-bastard with no concerns for humanity other than how they were getting at him.

    “You are Australian?”, he asked without moving his gaze from the bus in front?

    “No, I’m English.”

    “Did you find it easy to get into Australia?” His head was gently spiked with a fine blond crew cut, his eyebrows were translucent and I could see no other evidence of hair aside from the tufts that came like tendrils out of his ears – showing him to be at least sixty years old.

    “Not really, not a problem, no.” I wanted to continue my train of thought, to work out why my visions of wealth had ended up sprawled alone in a room watching television.

    “It was hell for me, forty years ago, so much paper, so many problems. Not like these Asians today coming in like drones. The drugs and the gangs now. Sydney is not like when I was first here.” He smiled and finally looked at me as we waited at the lights that turned the Paramatta Road into Broadway. It was a genuine smile, one that begged me to agree with him. Had I been in another mood, I might have forgiven him the tattered rhetoric and predictable spew that had already turned my day into a cliché. I would have looked into his speech and discovered a man with a past, and a few bricks to build a safe house in a confusing world. That day, however, I was in no mood for it. I needed a fresh day – a fresh afternoon at least, it was already two o’clock in the afternoon – and here I was mired in rain and a cabbie who could have come straight out of a left-wing agit-prop production.

    “The reason I found it so easy to get in was that I flew in from Timor under cover of darkness last Tuesday. It’s simple if you know the right people. I paid about $10,000 US and had some papers forged by a man I know in Bali. The problem with these other queue jumpers is that they don’t have any style. No flair.”

    “And too many children! The fucking Asians!” His smile had broadened and I thought for a moment that he was going to try and shake my hand. Maybe he’d got the gist that I was joshing him, or maybe he was simply so bitter that it didn’t matter. Either way, we were edging towards the lights that turned Broadway into George Street, just in front of the Central Station Bus depot and, looking at the meter, it was my time to get out.

    As I left him, his smile reframed itself to a blank stare – no tip – and he headed off into the CBD. I was standing at the small crossroads that lead down into Quay Street, on into the Exhibition Centre and down to Darling Harbour or straight on to George Street. Quay Street – Sydney’s plaguey, rum-roasted past sliced back into sanitary futurism.

    I decided instead to head into the crumbly, up and coming, old fashioned main street. George Street is bullied by an architectural gangbang where the old Empire arrogances of thick rock “establishments” more fitting of Manchester or Liverpool or Leeds battle it out with rorted high rises to shame the venerable old thoroughfare into their way of life.

    I had arrived into the morning.