Friday, 23 January 2015

Flattened

Dogs Say the Darnedest Things the Moment They See Something To Chase: A Selection

Dogs Say the Darnedest Things the Moment They See Something To Chase: A Selection

 

"What the. Something moved! It has to be food! Oh, let me go, c'mon, let me at it, I have to get there now! Let me go!"

"Hey! Something! A squirrel or something! If only I was free! C'mon, let me go, let me at it! I want that thing!"

"What the. In the leaves! Something's there! Could it be a cat? I like chasing cats! If only I was free to chase!"

"There! Maybe it's a cat! I want to be free to chase it! It's definitely a cat! Whiskers and everything! What the."

"I have to go, there's something there! I have to know what it is! I know it's something! Let me free, please!"

"Hey, wait. There's something over there! O my bondage! I could catch it, I swear I could! It might be a squirrel!"

"What the. In the leaves! I have to get there now! It has to be food! C'mon, let me go, let me at it! Over there!"

"Something's over there! Maybe it's a cat! I know it's something! I could catch it, I swear I could! Over there!"

 

*

 

Maiming Dogs For Fun and Profit

 

Tired of the nine to five? Tired of your commute?

"Oh these dirty streets!"

"Oh this pollution!"

Maybe you're just looking for a change.

Well, look no further!

The rescue dog industry may be looking for someone just like you!

We'll set you up.

You'll be your own boss!

Know an uncle with an abandoned shack he never goes to?

Do you have cottage property?

All you need is a quarter acre!

We'll set you up.

We'll get you going.

Breed rescue dogs today!

"'International Industries' set us up lickety split, and we sold our first emotionally-damaged pooch in our first month!"

"You should have seen the look on the yuppie's face: He was crying as he was paying good money for Limpy, but it was a happy kind of crying!"

That's right. Our programme includes a steady supply of normal dogs, templates for alternative newspaper ads, and suggestions for physical and emotional crippling techniques!

"I was never good with a knife, but 'International Industries' showed me the way!"

"Who knew loud noise could do such things?"

Write to us today! Get started in this growing lucrative industry! Be your own boss! Order today!

 

*

 

"The culprits are still at large and anyone who has any information at all is requested to call the Crimestoppers unit. In traffic, everything looks good. The 401 had some trouble around the DVP but everything else looks good. Weather now. It'll be around ten below zero tomorrow, with a wind from the west. That's about it for the news tonight. Good night."

"Okay, and out. Catch that?"

"Yeah, we're done. Phew!"

"Not bad. It's to air. Wait. Robert has something. Looks pissed."

"Fuck! You call that professional?"

"I."

"You're wearing plaid. You know how that fucks up the rasters?"

"Rasters?"

"You've got no backdrop. I can see cars going by behind you. And is that a cobweb there?"

"Oh. I didn't notice it before."

"This is major television, man."

"I'm just a temp."

"You mispronounced artesanal."

"Really?"

"You never check your collar? It's higher on the left."

"Sorry."

"Too late to change anything I guess."

"Can I go now?"

"What?"

"I want to go play some poker."

"You're very disappointing."

"Well."

"Have anything to say for yourself?"

"I stepped in, and I did your network news. The information got through. Look: every dollar is up here on the screen."

 

*

 

I'm so beautiful but I got to die someday

 

The station's where I am, awaiting death-

Black train. I've nothing in my pockets to

Protect me from the future and its verbs,

No adjectival talisman of white

To light my way inside the carriage car.

A rabbit says its prayers with every leaf,

The deck of cards decides its order day

By day, and in my hand I hold the pins

That represent my moments joyous true,

So few my nails can press into my palm.

The train's unseen but coming one fine day,

An unexpected blast of black will dark its way

And I don't need a ticket or a chit.

It comes for everyone eventually,

No matter what your body or your mind

Decrees. The days tick off talk tock tick tock

No matter what you do or don't, regard-

Less of your faith, your future, and your fate.

It's true, so here I wait in ignorance

Of destiny or destination, here

I wait to shed or not to shed, aye that's.

What else to say, I wonder? Consolate?

The numbers come and go, and smaller every day,

They fall from trees like leaves, like leaves of grass.

 

*

 

Pre-op. Morning.

"Nice light this morning."

Suzy opened her eyes. Not a dream. A woman, dressed like a nurse, was looking out the window. The woman turned: she was holding a mason jar filled with fluorescent orange and a paintbrush. "Good day," she said.

Suzy, lightly sedated, said, "Who are you?"

"I'm here to mark you where they're gonna cut you." She flourished the brush and whistled.

Suzy noticed the scratchiness of the sheets under her. Her left hand was stiff.

The nurse continued, "So let's get you naked."

She rolled Suzy onto her side and untied her gown, then dropped her back down. She pulled at the sleeves and Suzy was naked. The whole process took three seconds.

The nurse dipped her brush. "I'm feeling like ... a cheetah today!"

Suzy felt cold slashes on her torso as the nurse speedily outlined a cheetah. Suzy looked down at the cheetah, which was a very nice cheetah indeed.

"I thought this was about my leg."

"No, it's got nothing to do with your leg. That was a misdiagnosis."

Suzy rang the nurse-buzzer.

The nurse said, "Why did you do that? You've ruined everything."

She hurried out. Better luck next time.

 

*

 

In the 1920s, at Harvard University Student Union Services, the following conversation took place.

"Hello, I'm new here, where do I sign up for accommodation?"

"Wait a sec. What was that past word?"

"Accommodation."

"Here at Harvard, we pronounce it 'accommodation'."

"I'm sorry for my mistake."

"'Mistake' you mean, right?"

"Are you making fun of my regional accent?"

"No, it's just that I've never heard anyone talk quite like you."

"Well, you talk funny too. The way you sat 'heard', that's very funny, you know."

"Okay, we talk differently."

"Hah! 'Differently.'"

"How far away are you from?"

"About a thousand miles."

"You know, I'm going to start talking a little like you, and you're going to start talking a little like me."

"Finally we'll sound the same, I suppose."

"What causes this? I guess it's any technology that shrinks space."

"I know folks who are picking stuff up from the radio and records."

"Everything will be flattened."

"And there's no way to stop it. 'Flattened.' Heh."

"We won't know who we are anymore. Yes, 'Flattened.'"

"'Flattened.' The flavours of the world will be bland."

"And travelling to other places; that'll 'flatten' stuff too."

"What are we doing? 'Flattened.'"

"'Flattened.'"

"'Flattened.'"

 

*

 

It was a nice night out there downtown. Me and my buddies, we'd been drinking all day more or less; I'm bragging a bit--over the course of the whole day I'd had maybe six beers, which isn't that much at all over a whole day, is it?

I looked out at the corner of South Broadway and West Sixth. Couple tourists there. It was after one; they're lost, I knew. What crackers would be walking around downtown L.A. at one if they weren't lost? Okay, Jones, I said to myself, why not? I wasn't doing much.

"You guys look like you're looking for some place?"

The he--he was drunk--said, "I think we missed our stop."

"So do I. Where you trying to get to?"

The she, she said, "The Omni."

So I led the along, they'd missed it by a couple blocks, I took them back to their hotel. We chatted along the way, I poor boyed it, said I'd been drinkin' all day. Which, as I said, was technically true but not entirely true.

"There it is, right there."

He said, "Great! That's great." He dug in his pocket. "Can I reward you?"

"Sure."

Twenty bucks.

 

*

 

The New Tamburlaine: A Novel

Book Two

PART TWO

Chapter One

1.

 

Sure enough, the scratch walked into Frederick Stout's bedroom after precisely an hour. (Precisely an hour back then meant anywhere from fifty to seventy minutes approximately. Anyway, it was dark and Stout couldn't waste a light to look at the clock on the mantle. He didn't care much either way. The scratch had told him it would come, and here it was.)

The scratch said, "I bet you're wondering where your girl is."

"Who? Dixie Dee? She's been and gone."

"I'm talking about the other one."

"Hmm, now that you mention it, I do recall there was some other woman involved. But I can't remember: is this my country estate or hers?"

The scratch scratched its chin. "I think it's yours. Yes, you're rich and she's poor. You've lured her here, like Lovelace lured Clarissa."

"Ah. So, am I as bad as Lovelace?"

"I don't know. I haven't read ahead. If there's anything to read, of course. Quick! You'll see her in the morning. I wanted to get in that bit of commentary before talking nonsense. She'll be there if there's any there to be. If life continues."

 

*

 

And God said:

1. Move your third letter to the left of your eighth letter.

2. Reverse the positions of your letters seventy-seven, seventy-eight, seventy-nine, and eighty.

3. Put the second half of your sequence into alphabetical order.

4. Transfer all your RNA-centric 2'-deoxyoligonucleotides three base pair to the left (from your point of view).

5. Reach 10,000 named species and estimate how many remain, then check the Mariana Trench and open your eyes, open your eyes.

6. Answer me: are there more stars in the sky or grains of sand on Laurence's Beach?

7. Pack up your troubles in your old kit bag and smile, smile, smile.

8. Again, move your third letter to the left of your eighth letter.

9. Wisen up, listen up, keep in the front of your mind the fact that one day you will meet Me and be held accountable.

10. Draw a map of all the places you've never been and to which you'll never travel.

11. Palmeres, seken straunge strondes to ferne halwes, kowthe in sondry londes.

12. Predict the date and time of your death and mail your prediction to Me. The farthest guess will win a prize (to be decided).

 

*

 

Marx: "So what we'll have is a special kind of society, see? This is just a rough draft, people, but in my kind of society, you can hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, and write poetry in the evening, all without become either a hunter, a fisher, or a poet."

1st Proletariat: "You're gonna force us to write poetry?"

Marx: "You're missing the point--"

2nd Proletariat: "Can I eat all the ice cream I want instead?"

Marx: "You don't--"

3rd Proletariat: "He means instead of writing poetry."

Marx: "All right now--"

4th Proletariat: "Morning's better for fishing. Any dope knows that."

Marx: "Shut up."

5th Proletariat: "Can't very well write poems in the evening if you're maimed by a bear in the afternoon."

Marx: "Shut up!"

6th Proletariat: "Ice cream!"

Marx: "I said, shut up!"

7th Proletariat: "Where we gonna sleep?"

8th Proletariat: "Yeah, what about when it rains?"

Marx: "Both of you, shut up!"

9th Proletariat: "Hey, who cut your hair? Was it the hunter, the fisher, or the poet?"

10th Proletariat: "Looks like it was the poet to me!"

Marx: "Shut up! Shut up!"

11th Proletariat: "I like sleeping in."

Marx: "Goddamn peasants."

 

*

 

On Enough Said

 

"Can't believe you can't see it."

"You're crazy."

"C'mon. It's California. Some hot broad, a masseuse, hint-hint, meets a man and a woman at a 'party', starts fucking them both, and it turns out the two people were married to each other. Straight out of the valley."

"You can pull this trick with anything."

"And also she's fucking a friend of her daughter. It all makes sense. They've just taken out the fucking and put in dialogue."

"So you're saying this story has been kicking around L.A. for years, right?"

"Okay, well, why not? Properties kick around that whorehouse for years before they're green-lit. The story was probably made up by a Screw freelancer in 1972."

"Do you have any, like, evidence for this?"

"None! But it completely explains the plot, which is really tepid. It would have worked as a half-decent porn movie. The masseuse is fucking her three clients, and a poet, and some guy into video none the less, and a barely legal teen. Plus there's two parties slash orgies."

"You've got a dirty mind."

"All those references to threesomes! And the barely-legal gets deflowered: all doable!"

"Well, I still think Taboo was better."

 

*

 

Idly at work he was bored and someone crossed him mind. A cute girl, from the depositions department. He wondered if he could find her photograph on the Internet. Just for fun.

R yes

U where's she

B saw her

Y today

R from behind

E nice

Y who knows

N what'll

O come up here

L probably nothing

D she's private

S maybe maybe

and he hit enter and then he hit images.

There were a lot of pictures of Ruby Reynoldses--and one of them was the one he had in mind.

Whaddaya know, twitter. She's on the twitter.

For fifteen idle minutes he read her twitterings, in backward chronological order. And he was SHOCKED.

(Now understand he'd barely spoken to her.)

Every message was minutiae. Ideas about clothes, her cat, her living alone, the books she rated, more about her cat, even more about her cat, crocheting, and that was about it. For weeks and months and years....

Boy, was he disappointed. I wasted brain cells on this bozo?

He got back to work. 'Twas the end of that.

About a year later he saw the headline Nine dismembered male corpses found in cat fancier spare bedroom.

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