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Latest Entries

LHC's Portal

Thursday, 26 November 2009 8:54 A GMT+01

Berne Zoo

Wednesday, 25 November 2009 11:47 P GMT+01

Second DFL interview on TLO

Wednesday, 25 November 2009 3:31 P GMT+01

The Two Ways Of Anonymity (revised)

Tuesday, 24 November 2009 7:40 P GMT+01

Writers and Accessibility

Sunday, 22 November 2009 7:12 P GMT+01

Cerne's Zoo

Sunday, 22 November 2009 3:58 P GMT+01

The Final Fanblade

Saturday, 21 November 2009 10:23 A GMT+01

Hadron Collider now! - follow it on Twitter

Friday, 20 November 2009 10:28 P GMT+01

Weirdmonger Wheel Collider

Thursday, 19 November 2009 7:31 P GMT+01

When I Was An Old Man

Thursday, 19 November 2009 4:58 P GMT+01

Enid Blyton

Tuesday, 17 November 2009 5:08 P GMT+01

Cerne Abbas

Tuesday, 17 November 2009 1:05 P GMT+01

Immortality takes on a new achievability

Monday, 16 November 2009 7:34 P GMT+01

David Welham's Bygone Seaside Theatre

Monday, 16 November 2009 10:18 A GMT+01

New Fanblade Fable (6)

Sunday, 15 November 2009 3:01 P GMT+01

Hadronic

Sunday, 15 November 2009 12:01 P GMT+01

A Fanblade Fable - by Bob Lock

Friday, 13 November 2009 7:58 P GMT+01

Rhys Hughes on Ligotti and Lovecraft

Friday, 13 November 2009 1:55 P GMT+01

New Fanblade Fable (5)

Friday, 13 November 2009 12:08 P GMT+01

New Fanblade Fable (4)

Wednesday, 11 November 2009 8:55 P GMT+01

New Fanblade Fable (3)

Wednesday, 11 November 2009 1:18 P GMT+01

New Fanblade Fable (2)

Tuesday, 10 November 2009 3:14 P GMT+01

A New Fanblade Fable

Monday, 9 November 2009 4:43 P GMT+01

The Fanblade Fables

Monday, 9 November 2009 2:02 P GMT+01

Basket of Coinages (updated for second time)

Sunday, 8 November 2009 4:00 P GMT+01

Nightmare's Moat

Saturday, 7 November 2009 7:58 P GMT+01

The Pillowghost Stories So Far

Saturday, 7 November 2009 2:16 P GMT+01

Is the Internet something one should resist or embrace?

Saturday, 7 November 2009 1:52 P GMT+01

'Cern Zoo' retrocaused itself?

Thursday, 5 November 2009 7:39 P GMT+01

ANONthology - authors revealed

Tuesday, 3 November 2009 9:07 P GMT+01

Cern Zoo Nicked

Tuesday, 3 November 2009 11:49 A GMT+01

The Hawler (part six)

posted Friday, 30 September 2005
At the centre of the Earth, there is a face – pock-marked, pox-mouthed – in three dimensions as faces should be if they front the heads that wear them. There is blood seeping from every pore, from every pustule … and the nostrils dangle a rubbery blood that bloats bigger and bigger without ceasing to be rubbery – neither exploding or imploding. And the tongue speaks through bubbles of blood hawled from a chestful of hard core: “For once this is no dream – this is fucking real – so deal with it!”


****
Mike took Susan’s hands. They had found each other yet again, destined, perhaps, to find each other time and time again. Each a romantic epiphany, but equally horrifically real in the implication of needing to find each other time and time again. This time they knew their children were lost and this accentuated the horror, coupled with a wondrous fruition and fulfilment if they could find them. People like John Ogdon, Crazy Lope, Greg the office-worker, Beth and Beth’s husband – Mike had forgotten his name, forgotten indeed that Beth’s husband was Susan’s brother, if in fact that was true. However, it was a search party, although ‘party’ was certainly the wrong word, too.

Mike tried to drag logic from the illogic of his mind, tried to explain something to Susan that he couldn’t really explain to himself properly – as they followed the others across the night landscape that lifted the city skyward.

“It’s like that TV programme, Suse, isn’t it – you know the one. Where they evict people from the house gradually. But this is the other way round, where people are voted into a scheme of reality which fits the reality as we see it…”

“Yes,” said Susan, neither encouraging nor discouraging his blurted rambling tones that cut the night air.

“…like now, tonight, it’s as if we’re fine-tuning everything, looking for new housemates, even children to complete the picture. But also do we know who is acting true to themselves, not emotions so much as nemotions…”

Mike’s wordy speculations were his method to avoid the critical repercussions of the search itself. Like doodling with philosophy as he might have fiddled with prayer-beads. Susan nodded. She’d heard Mike’s rambling thoughts before, very simply expressed on the whole but peppered with words she couldn’t understand like nemonymous, weirdmonger and big brother, although she had heard of the book “1984” and some other things that were relevant, having known them as a tribe consciousness rather than as a product of her own personal learning. Mike, she knew, was a hawler but, in her mind, she spelt it as ‘hauler’ and she didn’t know what it meant, but it seemed natural, nevertheless. The TV programme to which he referred was a mystery. He’d probably watched it when she was out working in Ogdon’s pub, a pub, thankfully, without a TV or a juke box.


****
Near to the open-walled market or underground station, there was a tall building, access to which was by lift – indeed a very complex lift system which Greg often used before he was made redundant from his job in that building. He used to entertain business clients and had to help them negotiate the lift system – changing on specific floors for different lift shafts of higher reach. Some shafts were more palatial and business-orientated than others, some so narrow they could only be used for brooms or very thin utility workers. The highest shaft reached the open air area, leafed over like a wood. From there, once, Greg was sure he could see the distant sea through the unusually clear sky into which the wood penetrated. He imagined a finer, less definable surface barely above the sea but otherwise imitating its waves and swells – a double skin in perfect unison, but the lower one liquid, the upper spectral. Perhaps the second one was the ghost of a giant flying carpet taking invisible human vessels towards Arabian Adventure or towards the darker motives of suicide than seaside.

Greg had surreptitiously left the search party. If a maroon-party is an elongated picnic, then a search party is a day’s hide-and-seek game which lasts endlessly into an equally everlasting twilight – except, in the city, twilight didn’t exist changing, as it did, from day to night with the flick of a seeming switch. Mike and Susan soon lost hope at the efficacy of their companions – and had not seen Greg sloping off to look at his old office block. Ogdon, Beth and her partner, together with Crazy Lope, were fiddling with dustbins and not really getting stuck into the search proper – their excuse being a lack of stamina. Only Mike and Susan themselves, the would-be parents of the lost children, maintained a hard workload of search. They did hide themselves, sometimes, to test out the others’ search capacities and were continuously disappointed when they kept on being undiscovered in whatever easy hiding-place they found. So if not them, what chance the children? As yet, nobody even knew the names of the children.

In one test hiding-place, Mike and Susan had stayed a little longer. They had stared into each other’s teary eyes and fondled their bodies between them … acting more like new sweethearts than seasoned spouses. They even believed, for an instant, they were themselves the children they sought! Meanwhile, time itself gradually dammed up against the tangible delay the two of them set up to test the other seekers’ ability to undam it.


****
Dixon of Mason & Dixon was said to have been born in a coal mine. The two children had been forgotten somehow. Just silly worded day-dreams had intervened with certain members of the search party as they took a well-deserved rest at dawn beneath the shrinking shadow of the liner in its dry dock berth, floating upside down amid their clouded thoughts, as if the brightening sky were its sea. One word kept coming to Mike’s mind and he couldn’t fathom how he fully understood its meaning without actually understanding it at all – and why it kept returning to his mind unbidden or untranslated. He wasn’t even sure it was a real word: côté. Looked French, but was it? This was the sort of effect of dreaming a word during a night’s sleep rather than the flickering tail of a day-dream at dawn, whilst the party rested from what – he now remembered – was a desperate search for two children. He looked at Susan who also stared dreamily towards the towering dry dock – and her eyes later told him that they had forsaken their duty by not earlier informing the Authorities about the children’s disappearance. Many others in the search party had by now wandered off in twos and threes. Greg was the last to leave, as he would soon be due at work in his office. He shuffled papers as he walked away quite quickly for fear of being late. The excuse for his night’s wanderings was now lost on him. If it were children that were missing, surely the police would have been informed. On that evidence (or lack of it), he knew that no children were missing at all. A logic that seemed quite straightforward, as Greg entered the lift to take him to the top floor. Business-life always avoided any thought of crazy dreams and, for the next eight hours, he would not have the luxury of using his imagination.

Much of the building – including the lift that slowly lifted him between the walls of its inner space – represented a reality that could bear no imagination to be applied to it … although many of its constituents such as the walls that were towards its top, certain parts of the basement boiler room and rooftop garden, some of its I.T. (for example) yearned to be less real so that they could be imagined into existence for some satisfying or evocative fiction work. But the building was there, tangible, safe as houses in a scheme of actuality, and, therefore, it failed in its ambition to cease existing so as to become a shimmering fantasy fit for the wildest imaginings. Greg had the same feeling about himself. He was convinced he was less real than Mike and Susan (for whose lost children they had all been supposedly searching) – and these two were dozing at the moment near the open-air market and they did not know Greg had left them to go to work. The others in the search party were also more real than Greg himself, but that left him with the mystery of why he had forgotten their names. This begged the question – were things (living or dead) more real with names than without? If so, Greg knew his own name was Greg which fact gave him a sense of well-being, although tinged with a subconscious regret at the loss of unreality that this entailed.

The power to imagine was perhaps the very Act of Creation in the first place.


****
Amy and Arthur slipped from beneath the carpet as the sun slowly lifted its upper edge above the market. Streams of office-workers emerged from the various wide entrances of the underground system – entrances so wide they almost blended into each other. They shaded their eyes as a shard of sunlight sharply sloped into a tall office block like a seaside aero-act. All grabbed their briefcases to their chests and hustled onward to their desks, fearful that, one day, they themselves would one day commit their own seaside act in some token of devastation … which was odd because, unless they dreamed it, they feared the devastation itself less than causing the devastation themselves.

Arthur helped Amy stand up – and they both shuffled upon the carpet, now using it as a lower surface rather than the upper one it had been when serving as a blanket against the night chill.

Instead of flying off on this carpet – as they would have done in a proper dream or an Arabian fantasy – they returned, as if by magic, to the room whence the carpet first emerged and where it had been downtrodden since time immemorial. Amy stretched and yawned, wondering how a carpet could ever have escaped from beneath the heavy legs of her bed. She had just been dreaming of the hawler – the first real image anyone had gained of such an entity, in dream or otherwise. It was as if each dream – each of everyone’s dreams in the city and of the city – had been straining at the leash, forcing itself to depict – gradually and painfully – the hawler himself. A wide-faced creature masquerading as a man that lurked at the coalface of some underground powerhouse, whose only duty was to gather up all the material chipped away each night by several miners (Mine! Mine! Not yours!) and transported to the surface for processing. The full description – other than wide-faced – was still unclear. Additional dreams – not necessarily Amy’s own – would be required before a fuller picture was obtained.

One irrelevant dream intervened, however, or it seemed irrelevant at the time – although the dream sickness as it developed and as it was better understood by dreamers and non-dreamers alike (and I think this was the first time it was pinpointed as a ‘sickness’ as such) did specialise, it seemed, in mock irrelevancy. This dream, then, was simply knowing – within the dreamer’s mind – that it was a horror film and that all the people in the dream were really actors, but they were unaware, apparently, of this fact. So when the dreamer him- or herself saw the birth of a baby ape, it was simply known – without equivocation – that this would grow into a giant monster. Indeed, looking through to the hall (to where the “baby ape” had fled), there were seen various people treating a gigantic human figure with some respect and unsurprise, not knowing it was a monstrous creature quickly grown from the “baby ape” and that it was pretending to perform on the stage in the hall as part of some talent competition. It towered above all the normal people. The dreamer fled from the hall – where these things had been seen – to warn the rest of the town of what was happening under their noses. Was waking, however, before or after being caught by the monster relevant?

(continued as part seven)

=====




1. Paul Dracon left...
Friday, 7 October 2005 2:38 pm

Born in a coal mine? Tough break!

I love this seemless weaving of philosophy, absurdity, and (what's the right word?) poignant characterization (not sure that's the 'right' word, but it's close!). In particular, I enjoy the musings on the nature of reality, and self-awareness; this topic interests me.