What she said added to my later tears but there were so many of those and their reasons flowed into each other so easily that I can’t distinguish their flow today.
He sat in the churchyard, feeling the fag packet in his pocket. He didn’t want to go home where all his relatives would have arrived in black, coughing into sandwiches and mini sausage rolls. They’d try tell him stories about his dad, pretending they knew his dad better than they did.
You snake! You dog! You dirty snitch. My brother’s got 15 years in prison because of you
Do not call me Satan. I am a man with a simple desire, a passion if you will: to maintain and then better my own standard of living. I have certain vices, as does every other walking soul on this planet. I have a code of ethics that wouldn’t have been out of place at the first sitting of the Round Table. I am not a thug or a psychopath. Don’t listen to what the scumbags say. They’re just ignorant animals.
Jeeeeesus when gossip gets out of hand, eh? Mad times. Like this, for example.
So, I’m at the bar drinking rum and coke, whistling quietly, checking out the lovely boys and pretty girls having their joys.
So, some bloke walks up to me. Big bloke. Posh it turned out. Very posh. We nod at each, as you do, as is correct etiquette between two big, ugly lads.
So, instead of getting a beer and a seat, he puts his face to mine and screams, “You snake! You dog! You dirty snitch. My brother’s got 15 years in prison because of you.”
So, I shrugged. It was an open prison. It wasn’t as if the little twat was going to get shivved by Bubba. Far more likely that he’d meet old pals from school. He was an idiot, a useful one though. He wanted to rebel against his family, his clan, his good old family tree. It worked for me.
So, he hits me. Coked out his head. I’m sure it started as a punch. That must have been his intention. I’m sure that was his intention, but the punch sort of got half-arsed on its way over and became a weak slap.
So, I parried with my huge forearms. Then I hit him back. Full-on, heel of the hand under the nose.
So, he falls over. As you do when you know that there’s not going to be any follow-up to a matter, you relax. I don’t. I didn’t. Never under-estimate the powerful stupidity of an over-educated, upper-under-class middle child who wants to show his family exactly what is what, before he accepts his lordom or sirship or whatever these things are called.
So, he says while staunching the blood coming from his nose, “Just you wait. Just you fucking wait!” He tries to get up but his legs crumple beneath him. Ugly. He swings at me from his crumpled-up prone position.
So, I was going to kick him. Instead I decided to be a bit classier than that. I’m maturing, everyone says so.
So, I picked him up, wagged a finger at his broken nose in a hardman manner. I called the barstaff to clean him down and get him home. I headed off out and down the street. Geezer should have really viewed this one experience through a survival lens, turning the experience into a learning event rather than a painful interlude in an otherwise gilded life.
The fact that he wouldn’t talk to me much more after this, until Christmas Eve at least (and this was two months away), meant that the loss was all his.
It’s a smashing street really where I live. It’s leafy, but it has an underpass beneath the motorway down to the river-front. Between these two points were two miles of shops and pubs all of which have residential flatlets above them. Lovely.
I ran a shop at the motorway end, or as the older inhabitants called it “the Meadow Lane End” – cute isn’t it? It’s not. It’s one of those names given to pits of debt by local authorities. Not a meadow in sight. Not even a tree.
My shop sells electronic equipment, secondhand records and computer games, televisions, you know the rigmarole. It’s dowdy, smelly and does not encourage browsing. I don’t encourage browsing, I don’t even encourage spending that much. However I do make my money from the shop. I pass people through it – the new gadgets. Everybody wants one sooner or later and for a variety of reasons.
I like to think of myself as an amoral kind of gent. Well suited to the modern age. Capable of coping with emotional and unemotional situations. Able to empathise, sympathise and distance. I don’t do drugs, I do drink a lot. I gave up smoking last year. I like to think of myself as literate. I do a lot of my own research into important matters. I pay tax. I am heterosexual.
My name is Wayne and I’m 29 years old. I am a depressive – bi-polar but I don’t take Prozac, Lithium or any of the others. I exercise and keep busy, when I get suicidal and steer clear of the drink and watch black and white movies – mostly “Bringing Up Baby” which bears no resemblance to my life or that of anybody I know. I like the way that Cary and Katherine really want to find reasons to avoid the obvious happiness that awaits them. I often cry for no reason. I am not a likeable fellow and have destroyed at least two dead cert relationships with malice a-during-thought.
Self-pity is huge with me. I seek out biographies of self-pitying folk. I avoid actual self-pitying people though. My self-pity is fuelled by mediocrity. I never wanted to be mediocre. It’s not my fault.
Anyway, back to Bryyyannn. He is one of the chaps who comes into my shop to try to sell me things. Brian has no chance whatsoever of anything. Brian will never even win the lottery. Brian is a deadman walking but no thoughts of suicide ever mug him mid-beer. He’s too thick, he’s a moron with more yelping sprogs than braincells.
He’s a big lad with a t-shirt, a Ford Escort, a CD-player and a colour television. He depresses me more than any of my own internal, bad chemistry ever could. Because Brian just keeps on surviving and I have no idea how. All that’s reasonable, holy and rational dictates that the 16-stone, wannabe American, shit-shoveling, shit-eating, shit-looking, shithead should have turned up his toes years ago.
But then again, I have trouble working out how he learnt to drive let alone how he makes it through a month without starving to death, walking into a glass door or simply exploding with the inward pressure of so much thick-as-shittery.
Now, it’s fairly apparent to me that the reason I don’t kill Brian is that I need someone worse than I am hanging around my life. Well, yes. But it also has a great deal to do with the fact that I’m a coward and I’d probably get it wrong. I fantasise about it though; machetes, machine guns, knives, poison, drowning, car accident, drug overdose. But I don’t do it. I give him work instead, and he lets me down. So I insult him in the pub, behind his back at all times.
Tonight though, I hit him and he tumbles. It doesn’t make me feel any better. There’s only one thing that ever makes me feel better, and that’s money.
I worry about money all the time. I never have money although I spend it. I scrounge with no compunction. It’s the only way.
Once, when I was younger, before the relationship problems, I asked the deity to let me have love not money. I was standing at a bus-stop opposite Bow Church in the City of London having just walked out of another interview for another job. I’d smiled and talked the talk and thought to myself that this was too much mammon for a young man and knew that I hadn’t got this job.
I tossed up my options and tried self-pity with God. This was during a period when I searching for my own soul. The speech was along the lines of: “I don’t want the money. I want love. I can live without money but not love”, kind of thing.
That prayer has always stuck with me because when I did get a soulmate, all we ever did was argue about money until the sense was screwed out of it all.
I was so young. Innocent. Dumb.
The deity obviously meant: “Look, you’re no good with relationships, go with the money”. I talk to God a great deal, without of course, having any belief in him.
I simply like to hedge my bets and he’s about the only one who is anywhere near me in terms of ability. You can’t second guess him. He’ll fuck you. Or if he doesn’t then fate will. And if that doesn’t get you, well Karma will, and if that’s not the case then pre-ordination will. Or there’s the class-system. There’s always a reason and there’s always something to go wrong.
I’m concerned at this time with making a lot of money. I mean £100,000 or more if the thing plays out as well as the planner thinks it should. Then I can get some good therapy that will enable me to spend some time talking about this condition to someone else. That will then enable me to make some more money until eventually I will be able to kill the condition and get on with having a relationship, travelling the world and killing Brian.
The planner is a Mr Hughes who does come from Wales, from Swansea I think. He’s like the rest of us but with more front and a 15-year old Jaguar just like you’d expect. His quirk is magic. Mr Hughes believes in the power of timeless and eternal external forces. Go figure. Mr Hughes wears a green suit with brown brogues and never carries jewellery. That surprised me because he just looks like the kind of 50-year old who loves baubles. But Mr Hughes’ Jaguar is under-stated. He sees himself as a planner, and planners never are more concerned with the life of the mind than the trappings that come with a successful plan.
I’ve worked with Mr Hughes before on a small con in Winchester. What a cutie of a county town that one is. We put up in one of the outlying villages, a small hotel on the riverbank, quiet and alive with the local pool competitions, barmaid chats and under-18s on the run from sobriety.
The con was a simple one that revolved around charitable contributions to an overseas fund for poor children. I was the aid worker who’d seen it all in Senegal or Cambudidiliia or wherever. I’d come to Mr Hughe’s attention via a mutual friend called Paul Gorse who smoked too much hashish and saw the delivery of beans on toast as some sort of sacred event. Lovely bloke. Such a shame what happened to him.
Mr Hughes is a tall, tall man and skinny. This means that he’s always cold and forever shivering. It also doesn’t help that he’s smooth skinned like a down-hill bike racer or a girl. He’s got olivey skin with a brown birthmark or mole on his left cheek. He likes to plan cons and he likes to watch them happen.
He also likes to take heroin. He tried to get me to have a bash when we moved to our second job – he claimed that it would lead to a greater mutual understanding and also provide me with much needed motivation to make the cash that we both loved. I thought he was trying to fuck me and then control the supply. I told him. He cried. We moved on.
The Winchester con involved shagging a liberal but cash-wealthy company out of cash that they would have thrown away on charity anyway. Simple con; all you need is a video, Mr Hughes’ London contacts for a decent piece of letterhead, some suitably heart-rending letters, and the right time. Mr Hughes knows this kind of thing. He’s aware of the moment.
This chapter begins in the ex-Royal Navy town of Porthampton, specifically its train station. It is concerned with our protagonist’s souring relationship with his remaining blood relative: the vile Aunt Bernadette.
What went wrong with this chapter? It’s a jumble. It’s two chapters maybe three. For some reason I wrote about Laurie’s (our mulit-gendered/sexed protagonist) early love life before bursting into the Bernadette description.
Laurie’s first-love story had been brewing on paper and in my head for a few months. In reality, I should have given these two elements (love and hate) more air between them.
Also, lines such as “Fuck it. Fuck it all. Memory is not the boss of me. Fuck you”, I said to little me in a way that sounded exactly like little me”, should never have seen the light of day.
Now, here’s the kicker. Originally chapter was set in Dublin and a small town modelled on a place called Fethard-on-Sea. I’m learning Irish you see, to go with my new Irish passport and naturalisation.
A lesson learnt here is that actual life events can seep into the work, become distracting, and eventually disintegrating of the main plot.
“Write what you know… except when it interferes with the entertainment value”.
I got off the train and walked across the concourse of Porthampton’s huge main station. I kept my head down. You never know who might recognise or remember you from some bad time in your life. The station had been cleaned up, modernised and heavily technologised since last time I was there.
I was been sixteen years old, drunk on sweet cider and stolen cigarillos. I had been in love with someone, someone grand, my dream, my first love. I was running away from them and from my family. I wore a lot of black eyeliner, my hair was dyed black, my clothes were black and dark purple and dark, blood red.
Dark music was branching through me from my cheap, bright orange foam headphones. It was September and I smelled diesel oil, and a place with Saturday evening tension. The clouds were ganging together and whispering as they came in from the sea ready for a fight.
My first love – obviously also my first broken spirit, trashed soul, devastated heart – had turned out to be less fairy tale prince and more a filthy, angry drunk in their fifties who borrowed money on a no return basis. He used this to stand his round and to get us both high. He would then call himself a generous fella. Then he’d take me back to his flat and submit me to what he called ‘good hard healthy sex’. My first love called me his toothsome teen – that was the word he used, that word ‘toothsome’.
At the height of the one-sided romance I decided it meant to be eaten alive. That man knew that my looks could be turned into a very palpable (he taught me a lot of words; no right meanings though) profit for both of us. I agreed with all the knowledge and experience of a 15 year old. His penchant, his predilection (him again) for young flesh like my own perfect skin was, he told me, was so he could pretend it was his own. Relive his youth. Understand the young. Empathise. We met at a bus stop near a red post box. My first broken heart came just after a French cigarette and my first court appearance – his fault. After him there was nothing special about being in love.
As I waited for a train to take me away, I pickpocketed a student-looking lad more drunk than I was. I got just enough cash for a ticket to Paris and some fags. That was decades ago.
The station brought all that back in pieces, so I found a shop that looked like it had what I needed immediately. I popped in and bought a portable music player and a selection of funk, disco, hiphop, punk and Mahler if I needed him. I grabbed a copy of the first broadsheet that came to hand, and hopped on the first train going up and right – everything stopped at Crosschester. Leaving Porthampton was not like leaving Paris, New York, LA, Melbourne, Akra… it wasn’t like leaving anywhere else because it was a place that had impaled me young. Unlike those other places, I had no choice in the onslaught of its memories, rough and painful like its rocky, pebbled beaches. Those other places could be treated as passing fads, drug pasts, drunk pasts, working pasts, made-up pasts. Not Porthampton.
I realised that Crosschester and the villages that suckled it were more cinematic, more ingrained, more terrifying during a bright summer’s day than any of those other places could be on a winter’s night.
“Fuck it. Fuck it all. Memory is not the boss of me. Fuck you”, I said to little me in a way that sounded exactly like little me.
A train pulled in, going in the right direction so I got on. After a few minutes it grunted and complained and made its way out into the weak sunlight. I had two seats to myself. I tried to read the newspaper and let the countryside stutter by the dirty, scratched-up window.
I finished the crosswords and tried to read the newspaper but I couldn’t settle to it. Nothing seemed that important to me. Terrorist threats, popstar romances, housing shortages, murders, adorable three legged puppies, recipes with far too many ingredients. It wasn’t as if I’d missed any of this while I was locked up. If you wanted to stay up to date with life outside, you could. I did. So, instead, I returned to the undulations of the county’s green countryside obfuscated in places by angry looking hawthorn bushes, in others by industrial units, in others by matchbox houses until I fell to thinking about Bernadette.
I used to like her a lot, I mean a lot, almost like a lovely, cuddly aunty. People said that we were so very much alike. This is when I was about ten years old and still a way from blossoming let alone fruition. All the way back then we both liked making other people laugh. We could both sing a little, dance a little. We put on performances at Christmas: we played a ventriloquist’s dummy and the ventriloquist.
Two shows for the festive period, one on Christmas Eve, one on Christmas Day afternoon. We switched roles. These cute entertainments were not for the sake of pure amusement. The dummy would cruelly tease people watching. We performed for us rather than for the audience. We would mess up horribly and then simply roll it seamlessly into the show – we knew that the gawping faces would never notice. If anything it illustrated our amazing theatrical skills. We shared a general feeling that the rest of the world was just an audience. We never discussed this. We knew it. My take-away from it was how to turn this audience into a paying one. Aunt Bernadette just wanted the attention.
We grew apart as age withered her and strengthened me, by the time I was thirteen, we were inimical to each other in the world. I remember the day. I was fourteen and she was 150 years old. I had been dropped off for my monthly visit. We were eating lunch and I asked something innocuous about God. Something trite I’d picked up at school that sounded amazing.
“Can God create something he can’t understand?”, I helped myself to some more summer pudding.
“Of course not. God understands everything”, she sipped some port.
“So, God can’t do something then?”
“There is nothing God can’t do. You know this Laurie”.
“He can create evil”.
“No, that is Satan’s role”.
“So, there are two things God can’t do. He can’t create something that he can’t understand because he understands everything. And he can’t create evil because the Devil does that”, I sipped from my Coke. I felt good.
She stabbed at a block of sweating Stilton with the end of her steak-knife.
“We cannot understand God!”, she yelled, exasperated that I was missing such an obvious theological point.
“You can say the same thing about lunatics, Bernadette!!?” I yelled back, having become fascinated with lunatics as any teenage boy does.
“Have some bloody respect. I am your AUNT Bernadette!”, she roared.
She rose from the table like an avenging angel rising from the corpse of a heretic terrified to death and to Hell. She grabbed a whiskey bottle by its neck, and a heavy crystal glass, she took her cigarettes and stormed out into the garden. I had to laugh. Don’t get me wrong, each to their own beliefs, the more the merrier in fact, but fucking hell, I ask you, really.
She stayed in the garden, puffing and chugging away until my foster parents came to pick me up. They all had a conversation out there. Bernadette raving and gesticulating, fag-handed and engaged, my meek fosters nodding and shaking their heads sometimes at the same time.
When we finally made it into the car, my foster father turned around to me, I was sunk in the backseat reading about lunatics.
“Are you ok, Laurie?”
I nodded, and sniffed, not looking up. Of course I was okay, stupid questions. I turned the page. We drove home and I went up to my room. I heard them downstairs, below my bed, muffled discussions, one of them crying. I slept ok that night.
After that day Bernadette stopped talking to me in anything other than holier-than-thou platitudes, threats of agonising afterlives, and drunken mumbles. I stopped talking to her entirely. I stopped visiting her in her small, fag smelling house in Commiton just outside Crosschester.
A few years or maybe a decade later, the foster parents told me that Bernadette had retired early (“Maybe you’d like to send her a card?”, “Nah, you’re alright) from a dowdy job in one of the civil services. Her father – a grandad I never met because, well, I just never met him – had left her a decent sum of money and the mad old big old Georgian house in Shalford village.
She settled into two or three rooms of the house to drink whisky, smoke tobacco and eat next to nothing but fridge cakes, hot buttered toast, and honey-roast carrots with sweet chilli sauce. Shortly after the local doctor, hectored for painkillers, had diagnosed her with diabetes she recruited Julianna who moved in as her companion.
I was in Shalford at the time having run away from my first love. I was trying to touch a few old – I was seventeen! – school friends up for funds with no success. I had decided to run away to Europe, so I thought I should say goodbye to Bernadette, my surviving blood relative. Wealthy, surviving relative. That was the day I met Julianna.
Read The Assumption – the novel that never happened
I’m adding the novel, chapter by chapter each with a brief description of what went wrong.
Then he stripped to red-ochre painted nakedness and drank a bottle of gin to wash down a rattle of amphetamines.
The Fat Man is looking at a mountain exploding in front of him from a distance of ten miles. Not much distance for such an enormous explosion. The fat man is wearing a black, collarless jacket, expensive and fashionable some years ago in a different hemisphere. His white shirt is stained red, his matching trousers are in tatters, one leg missing up to the mid-thigh, which is little problem as the leg intended to inhabit it is also missing and has been for some days.
Sitting next to him is a blond woman with a china complexion and no expression other than blank indifference. Unlike the fat man, she is not sweating. All the fluid is gone from her body along with the salt and hope. She is as desolate as the scrubbed hill on which they sit.
“We’d better get going. Can you stand up?” he tries to stand, leaning on a rock for support, but he slips back down to earth. She laughs, using the same tone that a prematurely buried, suicide would use on discovering the weight of earth on the coffin lid. She no longer wants to work for him. He has killed all the talent that used to make the job fun, everybody leaves them one way or another. They travel the world, using his money and her organisational skills. They look for secrets and then get other people to write about them. They then sell the writing.
The exploding mountain isn’t a secret, never was. It was public knowledge that “tests” were carried out inside the mountain. It became common knowledge when the authorities relocated all outlying villages twenty years before. The mountain is called Ibis or in some offices in Washington and London, “Curlew”. The mountain tests theories about faster than light particle acceleration. Two thousand people worked in and around the mountain. Fifty per cent of them are hyper-specialists who understand subatomic physics, computers and paintballing. The other fifty per cent are support staff, visiting technicians, administrators and the military. There are (were) Japanese, French, Swiss, English, German, American and one Belgian human being. There are two non-whites and one non-occidental. They are all dead now. No bleeding – save for the fat man’s leg – no pain and no remains. They have all been accelerated out of this world and into several next ones.
They had isolated the Higgs Boson but this wasn’t the cause of the explosion, that was caused by what looks like a cock-up involving heat sinks, poor code, a date-related bug and a Microsoft Outlook infesting-virus sent person or person unknown.
Sandra Klept remains seated as the rest of the company Christmas party stands and applauds. They are gathered in the Museum of Contemporary Arts in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. They are applauding her husband, their boss, and the man that she wishes was if not dead, then at least horrible mutilated. She sneers and drinks some more mineral water. She scratches the back of her right calf muscle and sneers some more. The company, all three hundred and twelve of them, sits as her husband, Christ-like, motions for them to do so. She stands and walks away from the top table, taking her bottle of mineral water with her. He leads a round of applause for her, looking as if he means it with love and good intentions. He does, he doesn’t know that she is arranging a coup because, as she put it, she is, “Just so over his egomaniacal people manglement, talent vampirism and atrocious personality”, she goes to the lavatory to snort cocaine like the 1980s.
“This is too cool, fully,” Anderson Ballmoore hits “Reload” and the page drizzles down the screen of his Mitsubishi 56-inch multisync flatscreen, “They got it online yesterday and today they’ve gone bust… so Del put all their code libraries online just to fuck the manglement off. There’s gigabytes of the stuff here, all proprietary. Most of it’s C+++, some Java and VB and some stuff I’ve never seen before.”
Davis Dorn, teen coder and ultra-virgin, sweeps his contact-lensed gaze at the directories containing “stuff” and rocks in his seat, “That’s Logo, that’s Pascal and that’s Applescript but you’re correctamundo, that other stuff is stuff. Coolio.” He returns to a cross-legged, arm-crossed defensive mode on the floor, his laptop is on the desk, connected to his brain by an infra-red keyboard and mouse link. It connected to the world, via Novell networking, a Linux box, a Firewall (that he coded) and a T3 line. For once he is not writing code, not even a Perl script. Instead he is ripping the website to a temporary online storage folder that the company set up in one of its international mirrors. This one is in Finland and is 530GB in size. Until ten minutes ago it contained 100GB of music and video. That has been erased and the space re-formatted.
Anderson opens a window containing some text, he picks up where he left off twenty minutes previously, continuing with a letter of love and yearning. He intends to use it as the seed for a program that will create a virtual university; more accurately it will be a virtual hang-out where students will come and learn to relate to both the business and real worlds. His love letter will welcome anybody who wants to join because he realises that welcoming people is important, love is all you need and the search for that love is a massive time waster when you’re trying to work up some really useful ideas.
Dear <name_nick>
Welcome to MIT, the My Institute of Technology. We really <rand_pos_verb> that you’ve decided to enrol with us and <rand_des_verb) that you will <rand_att_verb> as much from the facilities as we do.
As today is a <rand_grand_adj> day in your life and ours, I feel that now is the time to tell you that I’ve never seen anybody as <rand_sex_adj> and <rand_sex_adj) as you. The moment you posted your profile, I knew that my life would change forever. Please keep this very much to yourself as I do not want to embarrass either myself or you.
You will find all necessary timetables, papers, notes and propaganda in your home directory. Your initial access pass is <applet code=”pass.class” CODEBASE=”/insecode/initial/runonce>.
You can reach me at <rand_lurve>@mitty.com.
Welcome once again
Jenny Rate
{You do realise that no one in their right mind is going to believe any of that shit don’t you?” A messenger window has opened up on Anderson’s screen, in it is the text of the file he has just saved to the insecure code-bin on the external server.}
{Of course I do. That’s the point, the students will also know that and they will do one of two things: ignore it or create a small cult around Jenny. I am interested in both of these outcomes. Anyway, what else am I going to do with my time and all this processor power?}
{You could win the lottery again. You could calculate the optimal method for reducing Third World Debt. You could hack a pharmaceutical company and then release its hidden files to the media. You could download porn. But most of all you could stop wasting your time on pointless sociology riffs that you never follow up. You are not going to get any students because you don’t have any teachers}
{As you well know, MITTY is a looped feedback system. The students are the teachers.}
{As I well know, that is garbage. That is the kind of enclosed loop that produces noise and no feedback. That is yet another way of looking as if you’re going to achieve something by piling up code, but never actually achieving anything other than code. How is your real work coming along?}
{Davis is keeping me waiting for the updates to the backend 🙁 }
{Davis, are you reading this?}
Davis glances into the messenger window that has crashed through his command line prompt like a garish tourist nosing around the Sacré-Cœur in Paris, decimating the sanctified calm with wolf whistles and awe-inspired shrieks and woops.
{Yes I am reading this.}
{And?}
{And what?}
{And where is the updated backend?}
{On the Minx server. Same as it has been for three hours. Please refer to my email of the 7th. Here is a copy for your reference.}
{Thank you Davis} and the message window disappears, enabling Davis to continue with his work.
{Anderson, you are a liar}
{Yes. And?}
{Be a liar on your own time}
{This is my own time}
{I am not getting into this. Suffice to say, you have entered into a contract with me and you are not fulfilling your part of that contract}
{So sue me}
{You know, winning that lottery has turned you in a socio-thug. Just do the work that is assigned to you and then I don’t care what you get up to}
{No really sue me. Or sack me. Exercise some fucking power}
{No. DO THE WORK}
And the message window closes. Untroubled by conscience or ethical considerations since winning 55 million dollars, US, on a state lottery, Anderson is surprised to discover that his hackles are up. He closes the workspace containing the MITTY model and opens another, checks into the code -safe and prepares to add some sendmail and other, largely kiddy routines that need his knowledge of the company’s security routines to the code that Davis uploaded three days before. He is sulking, at least his social self is sulking. The part of him that deals with work is causing his fingers to move an infra-red, force-feedback (totally unnecessary) mouse to highlight areas of the workspace, adding and subtracting lines here and there, compiling, linking and testing.
The fat man is not at all happy in his hospital bed in Darwin. He isn’t happy with the noise, he isn’t happy with the fact that his health insurance is in some form of bureaucratic stasis, he isn’t happy with food and he isn’t happy with his stump. This state of pissed-offness is not unusual for him, it is his natural state and derives from the fact that, despite all evidence to the contrary, he is certain that everybody else in the world, including his clients and the blond woman, are all idiots. Over the years, the rest of the planet’s population has stopped being a glob of disconnected idiots and morphed into a huge, integrated, circus of dolts, fools, cretins and clowns. No one is capable of doing anything other than throwing obstacles in his way. Even his mother, who threw more cash at him than is right and proper, is now a desolate, disintegrating blob of cells sitting somewhere in Canberra, writing longhand letters to Murdoch and Packer and, of course, to him. She travels still, even at 85, but will not come and see him because of an argument they had ten years before.
So he lies in a public ward, surrounded by aborigines (or Indiginies or black-fellas) and poor white trash all of whom are moaning or farting mouth-noises at their tribes of visitors. Having lost his travel documents in the rush away from the initial fires inside the particle accelerator, he has sent the blond woman off to the nearest Internet cafe to try to sort out his life.
He looks at his enormous stomach which he has uncovered to get cool but also to ensure that no one will come too close. He likes his ugliness mainly because other people don’t but also because fifteen years of therapy have armed him with enough false self-imagery that he honestly believes that it is really all subjective.
His ex-wife, Tara, had watched his spreading torso keeping pace with this ego in a direct anti-relationship to his hair and social skills. True, he retains charisma, in bucket loads but charisma is one of those strange character variables that won’t go away if you’ve got it. He uses it to manipulate idiots into positions where he can employ them before submitting them to a steep, ever descending curve that slices through their self-worth until they either leave his employ or are so reduced that they have nowhere else to go. He has roughly 100 to 115 such ghosts slopping away at research and hack writing in two offices in New South Wales. Every so often he choses a “favourite”, explains in some unspoken and unspeakable code to the blonde woman that this person must be treated with a smile and slightly more courtesy than she would usually use, and takes them into layer one of his confidence.
As a liar of some discipline and no small brutality, he then feeds through enough information to ensure that this person would be forced to perjure themselves if any of the companies’ less than entirely legal schemes came to the attention of the authorities. After about a month, often times less, this favourite begins their skid down the backend of the curve.
His current favourite is called Martin Closer – he never choses women – and Martin is now speaking with the blonde woman in an internet cafe just off the main Darwin drag, opposite Woolworths in fact where she recently purchased cosmetics, a can of Coke, a packet of Marlboro Lites and some sanitary napkins.
The blonde woman is not on the curve, never has been. She has the ability however, to seem less like a total buffoon than the rest of the world, mainly because she only ever does what she is told. She then takes her stress out on the ghosts and the occasional journalist phoning for an interview for some pointless profile in some pointless paper or magazine. She was going to be a doctor but smoked too much Bushbud and fell into the job as his PA. The Bushbud – hydroponically grown cannabis that musters the same effect as mildly pure heroin without the stigma – protects her from the mores of Fat Man rage. It also provides a thudding, woolly shield against the ghosts. His sociopathy has seeped into her ensuring that she never becomes attached to any of the “monkeys” as she calls the staff.
Her name is Joy. Everybody calls her Princess Lea because she always seems to be at the feet of Jabba the Hut.
Following the Christmas speech the MCA descended into a kind of null party. Not a non-party and far from a party-party. This was a party waiting to be filled like a function waiting to have its component parts related. Everybody knew what they were supposed to do but nobody, save the secretaries and “non-creatives”, knew how to do it. The support staff simply drank the drink, boogied to the music, said sentimental things, touched other support staff in a way that would usually be frowned upon and talked to the management in a way that would always be frowned upon. It was basic human interaction. Confusing.
Joseph Dyer, the “boss”, took it all in his stride, especially the abuse which, as he was honest with himself, was low level stuff and nothing to take seriously other than to deal with it.
“The second floor, up where Popular PC is, it’s always disgusting… they never clear up cups or papers or pizza or nothing. I bloody complain about them all th time but no one ever bloody listens to a bloody word. They’re animals they just don’t care.”
Billy Taylor had been with the company since it began in 1989 and was always complaining that the staffers were pigs, which for the most part they were not.
Of course, Billy Taylor is in fact, William Talforth-Taylor former emeritus professor of number theory at Monash University until 1988 when he flipped out in spectacular fashion, and published every single mote of research on Usenet silently in his office. Then he stripped to red-ochre painted nakedness and drank a bottle of gin to wash down a rattle of amphetamines. He has been Dyer’s tutor and good friend, so he had been taken in. But he would not stop complaining and he would not ever refer to his previous life as one of Australia’s most distinguished academics. He had, in fact, taken on the persona of his own family’s gardener, a deeply troubled, preternaturally surly old man called Mick Telfer who had offered the first true glimpse of fear that the young William had encountered.
Joe Dyer kept him around because this was not only the right thing to do, but also because Billy had a habit – unknown to himself – of annotating lazy spreadsheets so that they came up to some kind of standard. He did this because Joe would leave printouts in his cubby hole and retreat, the printouts would always be disguised as garbage, they would always be found in a bin by the first floor photocopier with various functions tweaked with a thick, green pencil. Joe made sure that Bill was paid well over the odds for an office cleaner – a job that he also excelled at. This exchange of crumpled paper was the only time that the psycho-armour that Billy used was ever penetrated; neither man ever mentioned it to the other.
Sandra Klept was buzzing now, riding the waves of cocaine, red-eyed and a full harridan. Her husband was talking to the old man, the rest of the dorks were spastically and spasmodically partying. She was once again trying to work out why she was feeling blue. One part of her, the part that drove down Madison Avenue in a Buick with cigarette ash blowing into her hair from the beautiful hand of a James Dean/Christian Slater/Brad Pitt/Rock Hudson/Raquel Welch creature constructed from moving denim and static, true diamond rocks; that part was a happy, sexually fulfilled, lucid, beating heartfelt person-girl, loved and loving.
The other part, the part that sat at long tables watching young vibroes still talking about work (and snowboards), targets (and holidays without partners or briefcases) not understanding why they asked for dreadful C&W like the Hanson Family, Emmylou Harris and Kasey fucking Chambers. Country and Western was trash music, disgusting, and these kids were educated at MIT and should have known better; even worse, she knew that she was just getting old like in a Philip Roth or Pynchon kind of way.
The thing that really got to her was that her upbringing meant that she wouldn’t cause a scene. She could see the sense in this gathering, she could see that people were – in their ways – simply trying to be happy by playing the game. She began to dig holes in herself with a psychological cutting spade (the kind that Qkwee-Qkway used on the whales that never satisfied Ahab).
I am too good for these people.
But if I am too good for these people, then who am I not good enough for and who do I fit with? And if there are either of those sets of people then why am not with them? And I meant, who am I not too good enough for? And now I can’t think in words because I’m not good enough for those either, not like these people who are using words with other, and the thought of them using words with each other is enough for me to a staircase with my father in a bed, with a drip at the bottom of it, and I am falling off and down and into his bed where he is not-dead.
She takes a drink from the table, a glass of red wine, poor red wine by her standards and wipes away the thinking by drinking a long draft like Penelope waiting for Odysseus to come and make sense of her life. Of course, he’s still talking about war and horses with the boys; in his way. She pours some more poor wine and wonders if she should change dealer, well coke dealer at least because it seems to be losing the battle with the Ritalin and Moggies that she had taken before.
I want an evil man who thinks about doing wrong to make me feel fine. I’ve got a good man and a jeroboam of self-pity because I can’t be as good as him, and he forgives me. So I want him.
The president and the prime minister are saying dreadful things in the news over Christmas. The exploding mountain with the particle accelerator that held Higgs Bosons among other things isn’t easy to explain to the general public, even the general public with a passing knowledge from New Scientist or Scientific American or a website or ten thousand.
The media is making a mess of it, cock-up has taken over from conspiracy and all sorts of total nonsense is bleeding into early evening bulletins and “ready for air” webTV specials starring Eric Roberts. Even kids’ new spots are highlighting the man made volcano (which it wasn’t, there was no lava flow or magma stings, no Herculeanums below) as yet another reason to hate big business.
In the pub are three of the most highly educated physicists and mathematicians (Jones doubles up) the world has ever known, ergo they are all under the age of 28 years. The pub is on the campus of Georgia Tech in Atlanta. They were on a tour in Curlew that ended ten hours before it went pop. They are right royally pissed off and preparing to get drunk but first they have to argue about technical matters such as whether the satellite uplink that was supposed to be running every second of everyday to back up data on the run, was really working. They think it was one of those things that the governments told them. But they also think that it’s exactly the kind of thing that governments would do in order to rip the kind of data that you would consider to be personal.
Adam Smith was their hero.
Thomas Hobbes was who they believed in.
But they still took holidays and dressed differently enough to their seniors to make them look softly independent. By understanding physics, they also seemed to understand why their bills should be paid on time, and their cars serviced; their diets were regulated and they rode mountain bikes over distances of less than five miles. Drinking was a rare, and celebrated, event, celebrated in memory like the first time over and over again. So they began with beer, lite beer, building to the darker strengths and finally into bourbon – a manly, non-European drink. All through the escalation they talked about how many coincidences had invaded their lives since they had managed to secure tenure of some sort at Curlew.
“And the first three digits with the first alpha of my pass in were the same as my driving licence with a single, unifying digit subtracted…”
“And the key sequence for the Fermilab logon is three digits removed from my mother’s birthday, which was three digits (in the other direction) off the date of her death…”
“And the long and lat positioning for my room at Curlew is the same sequence exactly as the directory number I had at Oxford”
These coincidences bounce around, being carried away in fragments by the other alumni and staff who orbit them in an abstract and apparently unconnected manner as they drink. From time to time over the five hours during which they move from respected heads containing impenetrable truths to specularly vapid males with heads full of conspiracy, they work out that something was very up indeed.
“There was an inevitability about it when you trace the numbers down”
“The numbers are noise, the conspiracy has nothing to do with the numbers, the numbers were put there to put anybody off the scent.”
“The numbers are the human error of it all. They were put there subconsciously by a group of individuals who felt some kind of guilt… it is random noise – as random as it is possible to get – we are supposed to be presented with the existence of the scent by the numbers.”
The private hospital room is much, much better. He has ordered three televisions and a laptop, some books on string theory and a selection of sub-teen girls magazines. The Fat Man is called Abraham Roquez Durer and he is eating spinach and beef calzone, ensuring that nothing drips into him by draping several cotton towels over his torso. He is leaning on three pillows that are already at an angle due to the tilt of the bed. He is watching Ren & Stimpy, CNN and Asia Pacific News BBC World News. He would be dictating a memo into a digital voice recorder that will turn his words into bits and bytes and email them to the ghosts back at the main office in Oregon. But he can’t because he is concentrating on excavating the calzone.
He was born in Ireland, in Waterford, thirty eight years before and uses the accent when he needs to. His parents relocated to Brisbane when he was twelve years old. Being uncomfortable in the Queensland heat, he remained inside their waterfront house until he was eighteen, when he moved to Sydney as fast as the cash he’d made share trading on the Internet would allow. Once in Sydney, he had found a three bedroom flat just off Broadway with a view of Centrepoint and air conditioning. He enrolled at the University of New South Wales where he discovered that no one was as intelligent as his mother or father. He set out, with more money earned on the Internet, serving stolen hardcore images using the university’s bandwidth, to organise a group of impressionable peers into a proto company publishing street magazines about bands, and DJs; cafes and raves. Many of the events and people they wrote about didn’t exist outside his head. He told his “friends” and “partners” in the company that these random pieces of information would bring people together; their readers would head to Randwick or Liverpool or Surry Hills looking for “Sensei-sational Time Kicking Trace Nite” and find nothing other than themselves, they would “get it” and begin their own parties.
His friends believed him and came up with more and more outstanding and outrageous characters and events – even interviewing a character called Slamma Mamma on three occasions about why her events always seemed to be cancelled. He sub-let some of his friends to poster areas of Sydney with real information about real events. All the while he spoke of revolutionary sociology and life-changing human dynamics. He quoted Ken Keysey quoting Neil Cassidy quoting Jack Kerouac quoting Buddha. He siphoned off the money to property accounts in Canberra, Bali, Darwin and Melbourne.
With his degree course finished, he opened a fully fledged office in Alexandria (which appealed to his sense of classical history) and then left to visit Europe for two years. This was no big deal as by then he had parted company with his closest female co-partner and discovered the cool of the blond, china-faced woman. She ran the office with indifferent fear, sacking and encouraging others to hire, moving the focus (on his order from a hotel in Paris, a room in London or a train travelling through the Balkans) from street magazines to research work for record companies, software houses, TV companies and street magazine companies. By the time he returned, there had been two walk outs by “senior” staff and a layer of managers who knew the short term score had been appointed, all fresh from overseas or interstate.
He congratulated her with a bottle of white wine, a case of low tar cigarettes and $6,576.55 into her hand from his pocket. He told her to take two weeks off, try to smoke less grass and be back with five new ideas. Then he sat in a glass office overlooking the central atrium of the Alexandria office and went through the spreadsheets with the kind of tooth comb you’d use with a corpse you had murdered. He didn’t want to actually move anything, or even show that he’d tidied the figures, it was simply that there was money there that would serve a greater good if it was in bricks and mortar. This entailed ensuring that at least three of the new management layer found their ways out of the company.
This was a simple enough strategy to realise seeing as they’d only know him as legend or email. He called meetings at five in the afternoon on Friday, turned up late for them or cancelled them. He pitted them all against each other by pretending not to know names, ignoring emails, making speculative phone calls to voicemail. He ferreted through directories and changed documents. He had a ball and kept making money.
One sticky moment came when one of the management drones, a chap called Dams who was researching the financial history of electricity companies in NSW, had flipped in his office. Abraham had redefined this guy’s workload five times in three weeks, cancelling projects and taking staff to vaporous lines of enquiry. He’d got the guy to sack his closest colleague at nine AM on a Monday morning.
Now the guy, who had a name and a wife and was starting to engender some loyalty (asking for pay rises for ghosts), had broken up like a barnacle ridden fishing boat in the wrong sea in the wrong weather.
“Just what is your vision for this company? I thought I understood it, but I can’t get it?”
The fat man hated visions; visions were the bailiwick of martyrs and insane, female European religious figures. His company was there to make money not realise visions.
“I have no vision, this isn’t about vision,” his face grew red, his eyes dilated (not just his pupils, but the entire cavity including the vitreous body and probably the optic nerve all the way to the back of his head over his brain stem), he ran his hand over his exsanguinated forehead and stood up, “this is about reacting. If you have the money to pay our tax bill then you can have any vision you want. Your job is to get work done, understand the audience (by which he meant “client” by which he meant “mark”) and present information on time that will make us money. This isn’t a crusade, this is a business!” He was shouting outside of himself, inside he was watching and waiting for the guy’s good manners and understanding of business ethics to proffer a resignation for him. He was thinking about the other guy he had poached from the day before at short term more money and long term less. He was thinking about lunch at an Italian restaurant in fifteen minutes alone with the newspapers and a calculator.
“Well fuck you, you fucking cunt. You are a fucked up… you fuck with people,” the guy stood up and faced Abraham off over the desk, slamming his flat hand on a printed email from his soon-to-be replacement so that some of the cheap toner came off the cheaper paper onto his sweaty hand.
“Fine and fucking dandy. No vision. But no figures either, the spreadsheets make no sense at all. How can we budget for anything when the spreadsheets are all utter bullshit? I am bewildered, honestly although I don’t expect you to understand that you fat fucking thief!” He was screaming now, and had Abraham’s lapel in his hand. Spit was spraying from his mouth and his skin had washed pale as the anger became too actual for the blood to reside anywhere other than in his arms and legs. His heart was attempting to maintain some parity with the needs of his adrenal gland.
Abraham saw the signs and started shouting for help. No code words, a simple au secours to the blond woman, who immediately called a private security firm preferring not to contact the police.
They’d pre-agreed this some years before in a fun game of watching the angles.
What really pissed him off was that he hadn’t pre-empted the reaction of this particular guy. He was slipping and this meant that he had to exert some physical force in order to retain the power position. Well, okay so he didn’t have to, but it was fun in its own way. He didn’t seek out situations wherein he could indulge in bashing people, however, if one presented itself, he was well prepared to smack the hell out of anyone who put him to the challenge. This was made even easier by the fact that everything else in his persona suggested that he was an abject coward.
This situation was trickier than a standard slap and run. If it did get to court, the fact that he’d beaten the guy half to death with a relatively inexpensive piece of office furniture combined with the fact that the guy had been recruited by a highly respected head hunter who would be more inclined to provide character references than shut up, could mediate against him. On the other hand, it might not get to court in the first place.
By the time they woke the next day was already half over. The primary focus for the conversation among the three physicists was optimal hangover cures. There was some argument about whether optimal meant losing the bulk of the hangover quickly enough so that one could be basically functional, or it meant losing the hangover completely. Obviously, losing it quickly and completely was the answer, but they squabbled anyway.
What she said added to my later tears but there were so many of those and their reasons flowed into each other so easily that I can’t distinguish their flow today.
“Carry me quickly to the last place you remember us being happy together”, was the last thing Séan Curran had written. There it was on a leaf of grimy note paper that I took from the undertaker the day we all buried Curran. Too late. As ever.
On the other side of the note he’d written, ‘To You All of Ye, You Know Who You Are!’.
He was buried in the one suit he owned. A grey, woollen single-breasted job at least twenty years old. He’d popped the note into its inside pocket before going out into town for his last night. The undertakers found it on the Tuesday before the Wednesday burial. As ever, too late for Curran.
The thing with Curran was that he was forever leaving notes about the place. The beginnings of poems and stories, rehearsals for suicide notes. Oftentimes you simply couldn’t tell exactly what he meant.
He had worked for years on the railways doing a variety of jobs. He was tall and slim, dark, he wore spectacles and what used to be known as stout boots. He was an atheist and a small drinker but only on Fridays. I met him on the railways. I met him in the pub. I wouldn’t say we became friends but we certainly became brothers-in-books.
I’ll miss him when it’s all sunk in. When it’s all been soaked up. See, I’ve distanced myself from the process. That’ll happen all by itself. At least I hope so.
Curran emerged from prison a ruined old man. He told me that after several chats with the chaplain a Swiftian descent into religion had caused his loss of faith in God. That said, it also gave him a firm sense of belonging.
“Now”, he wrote, “I have the Pope and all the cardinals on earth!”
He came directly to my home to remind me of our times together. He impressed on me that, before he went into prison, my wife Mary should have been his wife.
Mary, Curran and I had revolved around each other before he had taken up what some called crime and others called patriotism. I’m now convinced that Mary had taken up with me purely out of heartbreak. I adored her with all the adoration I had. I loved her with all my stinking heart. But today, before his funeral, it rankles me that Mary and Curran loved each other.
I always thought the reason that my late wife, Mary, was my wife and not his was because I’d listened to her talk all about Flann O’Brien one pub night. He’d disagreed vehemently with what she said because she’d folded Myles na gCopaleen into her dialogue.
“Different names. Different people!” I remember him yelling, and her laughing.
“Different names. Same man. Different tones”, she replied quietly enough.
Boy, how he’d sulked. How he’d fallen for her.
It turns out that she married me because she thought; she hoped she would love me and there’d be less conflict in the marriage. She told me this in the cancer ward. She felt she had to. I agreed.
What she said added to my later tears but there were so many of those and their reasons flowed into each other so easily that I can’t distinguish their flow today.
She was my friend and we had this glorious house. We had two children, both abroad and doing very well. I talk to her ghost about Curran. I’d like to imagine they’re now chatting to each other, and now she knows the truth.
It’s a relief that I no longer need to hide the fact that Curran murdered her father on his doorstep. He’d told me that when he came to see me after he got out of prison.