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Twilight World Volume 4 Issue 2

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Twilight World
 · 5 years ago

  

= TWILIGHT WORLD - Volume 4 Issue 2 (March 16th 1996) =======================


You can do anything with this magazine as long as it remains intact. All
stories in it are fiction. No actual persons are designated by name or
character and similarity is coincidental.
This magazine is for free - get it as cheaply as possible. It is also
uncensored - ban any sites/servers/people that hinder freedom of speech.
Please refer to the end of this file for further information.


= LIST OF CONTENTS ==========================================================


EDITORIAL
by Richard Karsmakers

IGNATIUS
by Stefan Posthuma

YOU PEOPLE
by P.J. Jason

AN EVENING AT HOME
by Roy Stead

OH YEAH III - THE THIRD ENCOUNTER (AND OF A CLOSE KIND)
by Stefan Posthuma and Richard Karsmakers

PHALCUS PHALANGOIDES
by M. Manwaring

TUPPERWARE PARTY
by Mark Oliver


= EDITORIAL =================================================================
by Richard Karsmakers


Another nicely jam-packed issue of "Twilight World" is ready to be devoured
by you. A larger variety of authors is featured once more, this time, which
is a development I applaude with all my heart. I'd once more like to
emphasise that, if you have a nice story lying around somewhere, you're more
then welcome to send it to me so that it may be included in a next issue of
this magazine. Please realise that the reason that so many of my own stories
are published in "Twilight World" is not because I want to be the number one
contributor but because, simply, you out there don't write enough to fill it
otherwise. I would not mind if this situation changed so "Twilight World"
would offer a bigger variety of fiction from different parts of the world,
different people, different viewpoints, different imaginations.
So put your fingers to the word processor and don't shirk submitting your
tales for inclusion in the multifariousness that is "Twilight World".

Please spread the word, and the file, and have fun reading!


Richard Karsmakers
(Editor)


= IGNATIUS ==================================================================
by Stefan Posthuma - sposthuma@graymatter.on.ca

Dedicated to John Kennedy Toole. He created the most brilliant character
ever. This is only a feeble attempt to approach the amazing personality of
Ignatius J. Reilly (book: "A Confederacy of Dunces" by J.K. Toole).


"BLASPHEMY!!" Ignatius yelled at the skinny young man standing in front of
him.
"How dare you inflict your hideous views on me! Go on and assault some other
innocent bystander. Leave me alone before I have you seized and lashed."
"But I only want to inform you about our view on life," sputtered the young
man who was dressed in a robe and had a bald, shining head.
"Why have you chosen me to spill forth your obcene and primitive religious
babble? Has your obscure sect chosen me as a victim? Am I to be slaughtered
in front of a blood-stainded altar to satisfy some ridiculous deity you
worship? Get out of my way, I have pressing matters to attend to."
Ignatius pushed the young man aside and headed down the station hall. The
young man sighed and tried to get another traveller to buy some of the
pamphlets he was carrying. The purpose of these was not exactly clear to him,
but he liked the fact that he finally had something to do. It had taken him
quite a while though to remember all the things he had to say to people.
Ignatius already regretted the fact that he had entered this station. Myrna
had thrown him out of her flat and told him to go stay with her friend for a
while. Since he didn't have enough money for a taxi, he had to take a tube to
the place. His valve made a strange movement when he saw the masses of people
assembled on the platform.
The foul wind coming from the tunnel told him that a train was approaching.
The mass of people started moving towards the edge of the platform and
Ignatius tried to manoeuvre his bulk safely towards a vacant seat attached to
the wall. But the train thundered into the station and he got swept away by
the crowd.
"Oh my God!" Ignatius yelled, "I will lose my delicate balance soon! My
physique is not prepared for such wild motions."
Some people gave him irrated looks. Then he spotted some open train doors
and changed course towards them. He heaved himself into the train and noticed
to his horror that there were no more empty seats. The doors closed with a
whirring sound and the train set itself in motion rather abruptly.
Ignatius was not prepared for this and lost his balance. His arms waved
wildly, in search of something to hold on to, but failed to grasp anything
steady. He did however, knock the hat off an old ladies' head before he
dramatically collapsed on the floor.
"Oh my God! I've been paralysed!" bellowed Ignatius as he lay on the floor.
His valve closed with a snap and his left paw landed on a soft and sticky
piece of chewing gum that was on the floor.
Some people started laughing, and in the back of the car, a subway attendant
started making his way through the carriage to see what was going on.
"Don't sit there and mock my misfortune. I've probably crushed some vital
organs and will spend the rest of my existence in a hospital bed. Somebody
help me before I fall into a state of shock! I need urgent medical attention.
Somebody signal for help!"
"All'ight pal, why don't you get up and stop yellin'," the attendant said to
Ignatius.
"Who are you? Are you qualified to perform first aid? I refuse to be
crippled by some incompetent quack. Now stop stalling and help me up."
Ignatius extended his left paw, forming a rubbery band between the floor and
himself. The attendant pulled a face and took a step back.
"What are you doing, you fool? Don't you see I am in severe distress?"
"You got gum allover yaself man," the attendant commented.
Ignatius noticed the pink mass on his hand now and turned pale.
"Disgusting!" cried Ignatius and slowly pulled himself up.
"Which brainless ruminant has dropped this revolting piece of chemical
tartar?" Ignatius hollered while holding his hand in the air like a
prosecutor would display the murder weapon.
"You?" he yelled at a spotty girl whose mouth was rhythmically moving.
"Hey fatso, I ain't dropping no gum in no subway. My momma won't let me,"
she replied between chews.
"OK mister, why don't you get that stuff off ya hand and keep calm," the
attentand ventured. He had always been told to try and keep people calm in
situations like these.
"Don't interrupt me while I am interrogating this juvenile jezebel. She's
the cause of this outrage..."
"Hey! Ain't nobody callin' me a jezebel!", the girl said and got up. She
kicked Ignatius in the knee and headed for the doors as the train was
approaching another station.
"Seize her!" Ignatius cried. He was getting very excited now, his head was
turning red and the white spots were forming on his hands again.
"She assaulted me in public! Somebody apprehend that teenage barbarian! I
will be maimed for life!"
The train entered the station and grinded to a halt. Again, the momentum
surprised Ignatius and he crashed into the attendant, who was not built for
this kind of onslaught; the two of them went reeling through the carriage.
They were stopped by a post, and the attendant quickly escaped through the
opening doors. Ignatius was left, panting and wheezing, leaning against the
post.
"What more do you have up you sleeve, Fortuna, you vicious trollop of
destiny," Ignatius mumbled as he sat down heavily on two empty seats. He
looked out of the window and saw a billboard on the tunnel wall of a young
girl dressed in a bikini, advertising some sort of sun-tan oil. His blue and
yellow eyes closed to shut out this demoralising display of decadence and
revolt.
"Prostitutes," he mumbled as he slipped away into a state of slumber.

Written somewhere between March and November of 1990. Couple of words
properised March 3rd 1996.


= YOU PEOPLE ================================================================
by P.J. Jason - pkjason@eworld.com


Smoke trailed from door jambs and rooftops, blotting out the sun; and the
brightest thing on the street was a paramedic in white overalls with a red
cross on his back like a bull's eye. He wrapped a bandage around the head of
an old black woman, weeping on the curb as a stretcher was slid into the back
of a police van.
Rumors spread through the hood. "They cracked that boy's head wide open.
Them white cops." The cops said the victim took out a knife and lunged at the
police woman. "L.A.P.D., cops, all of em, in bed with that Mark Fuhrman."
Three days of looting and violence passed quickly.
Mr. and Mrs. Lucce held hands and slowly dragged a squeaky shopping cart
over the blood stained street. Now Mr. Lucce's greatest fear was that one of
them would slip, break a hip and end up in the hospital for the holidays. But
when Mrs. Lucce saw Mr. Jenkins and his son outside their grocery store, she
smiled at her husband as she always did. The Jenkins were sunk low in their
lawn chairs, shotguns balanced on their kneecaps.
"Now what you folks doin' out in this mess?" said Mr. Jenkins.
"Ya want, I could run up some bread," said Jenkins junior, offering Mr.
Lucce a chair.
"No thanks," said Mr. Lucce. "Better you hold down the fort."
"Helluva night," said Mr. Jenkins, shaking his head as if it all were his
terrible burden. "But people in Los Angeles sick of these doings."
"But people gotta eat, don't they?" said Mrs. Lucce. "And all the stores
burned and closed out."
"Yes, we gotta eat," added the husband.
He swore he could still smell the proscuitto and provolone in the rotten
floor boards of Jenkins' store. Only now the floor was tiled. And he was
warned by Mrs. Lucce:"Don't mention it." These people overcame their
circumstances. They might take it the wrong way. It's just that Mr. Lucce
lived on the Boulevard so long, he remembered when Jenkins' Deli was Fiori's
Bakery. And why shouldn't he remember? Even with his eyesight failing, he
could still see the faded signs along this, his boyhood street: Dante's
Cafe, Laccio's Drugs, Alonzo's Paper Company-- all the Italians that once
lived in South Central.
"Yup, that's the truth. People gotta eat." said Jenkins junior, pulling Mr.
Lucce's shopping cart into the store just as a fire engine clanged around
the corner.
"But I don't get it," Mr. Jenkins said. "The burning and looting. They even
hit on the brothers last night. Now me and my boy are standing guard. They're
haters out there."
"They hate our skin, you mean," said Mr. Lucce.
Mr. Jenkins seemed busy sweeping glass away from his broken windows.
"So, why don't you let my boy run up something?" said Mr. Jenkins. "Really,
you people shouldn't be out on a day like this."
"You know my husband," said Mrs. Lucce, winking. "It's something to do with
floor boards and provolone."
"You mean he's still smelling my place?" said Mr. Jenkins. "But them folks
are long gone. Mr. Lucce, please, please... don't go sniffing around here
like you did the other day. Gives people the wrong idea."
"And people gotta eat," said Mrs. Lucce, her voice bubbly.
Just then, Mr. Hurley came into the store, his thumbs covered with soot.
Mrs. Lucce was laughing as she helped Jenkins junior fill a sack with flour.
"Good mornin', y'all."
"Good mornin' yourself," said Mr. Jenkins. "When is all this nonsense gonna
end? It's ruinin' business."
"And good morning to you," said Mr. Lucce. "I guess it's good we live in the
same building? Don't you think, Mr. Hurley? They're burning out the others."
"I suppose," said Mr. Hurley. "But I didn't expect to see you people. But
yeah, long as I'm super--"
"But some people are burning out their own," said Mr. Jenkins.
"Well, not me anyway. Not yet," said Mr. Hurley. "Boiler's gonna need some
fixin' though... Could be cold tonight."
"That's what you said last time," said Jenkins junior. "These poor folks
came in here lookin' for canned food."
"Yeah," said Mr. Lucce. He was standing next to the son who was hacking away
at a frozen chicken. "Lots of old people in the building nearly went solid in
the cold. Why don't you just get a new boiler?"
Mrs. Lucce gave her husband a sideways look. He should've known better,
pressuring people like Mr. Hurley whose difficulties probably began on some
plantation-- ages ago.
"How about a new boiler?" said Mr. Jenkins.
Mr. Hurley picked up his grocery bag. "A new boiler?"
Smoke filled the little store as the front door slammed shut. Mr. Hurley
didn't wave good-bye.
"Such a nice man," said Mrs. Lucce.
"Will that be all?" said Jenkins junior dragging the shopping cart to the
cash register.
"Maybe you folks better stock up. With this mess, you never know," said Mr.
Jenkins adding up the items. "Put it on the bill, as usual?"
"You're too kind," said Mrs. Lucce, opening her purse. "But we've imposed on
you people for too long." She handed over the last few dollars of the week.
"Besides," said Mr. Lucce. "It's the first of the month. The check should be
in the mail."
"Hell, if you need anything...just let us know," said Junior.
On the way home, Mrs. Lucce chattered. "The Jenkins are nice people." Mr.
Lucce nodded mechanically. He held open the graffiti splattered door for the
mailman, Mr. Dupee. But before Mrs. Lucce could drag the cart into the lobby,
Mr. Dupee gave her a helping hand.
"First of the month," said Mr. Lucce, anxiously.
Mr. Dupee dug in his bag. "Actually," he said. "With all the craziness,
there's been a delay."
"It's that bad?" asked Mrs. Lucce.
Mr. Dupee locked the boxes and looked at the old creatures. "It's getting
worse," he said. "It's going to snow."
"Snow!? In Los Angeles," said Mr. Lucce. Everyone seemed shocked as a lone
snowflake blew against the lobby door, scorched charcoal black. "Maybe I'll
take the dogs to the park."
"We don't have a dog," said Mrs. Lucce.

*****

It howled all night; and snow drifts banked over the hoods of cars. clouds
of steam rose from the hot ash smoldering under the ice covered streets. Mrs.
Lucce stuffed newspaper and towels into the cracks of her windowsills; an
icicle hung from the ceiling pipes. Mr. Lucce fell asleep in an arm chair,
his feet propped on a pillow in front of the kitchen stove.
This was totally nuts. Snow in California. Mrs. Lucce kept dialing the
weather channel. But the line was always busy.
Then the snow stopped and the sun was well above the smoky rooftops, the
mercury pinned to its bulb. Mrs. Lucce woke, fell asleep, shivered and woke
again. She was on the floor under a woolen blanket. Mr. Lucce's head was
thrown back, his mouth wide open, eyes closed.
"Danny? Danny?"
The oven went out during the night and Mr. Lucce's blanket slipped off. Mrs.
Lucce rubbed her husband's face until the pink came back.
"Damn boiler again!" he said.
"No lights, and no gas," Mrs. Lucce added. "Maybe the whole city is down?"
"No, it's them, I tell you. The gangstas."
"What are you trying to say"
"Oh, right. I forgot. Their circumstances, of course."
"It's because of our skin... you're saying?"
Mr. Lucce opened the refrigerator. The light was out. The milk was bad and
the eggs had burst. "People gotta eat?" His false teeth clacked. "My denture
glue? I can't even boil water."
"Danny, stop thinking about your stomach. You can't shut me out. It's
because of our skin, you think."
"No, everyone and everybody, they're just wonderful. And delightful.
Delightful and wonderful."
"Don't be stupid, you, I'll show you."
She picked up the telephone:
"Mr. Jenkins. Thank God. Our boiler, our oven, everything's out. Could you
have your son bring some hot coffee, and fresh bread?"
There was static at the other end.
"Mr. Jenkins?"
"I'm sorry. It's crazy, busy down here."
There was more static.
"Excuse me? Hello? Are you there?"
"Sorry--"
"Hello? Hello? Anyone there?"
"Hello, Mrs. Lucce. I'm sorry. Dad's busy, but if you can wait, I'll run up
as soon as I can."
"Oh, you will? How wonderful."
"What now?" asked Mr. Lucce.
"They're busy, but Junior will come up as soon as he can."
"Busy?"
Mr. Lucce looked out the window and saw a policeman turn the corner by
Jenkins' store. His footprints were the first and only ones in the freshly
fallen snow. "Busy, huh. Funny how snow sticks."
"What's the snow got to do with it?"
"If they're so damn busy, why aren't there more footprints outside the
store? Look out the window...."
"No, I won't. I won't look. I'm sick of your suspicions. You've ruined my
life."
"My suspicions. Maria, what do you think the looting and burning are all
about--you?"
"That has nothing to do with it."
"Right, I never heard you people this and that in Jenkins' store today. I
imagined it, like a lot of things."
"Oh you're just trying to get even because Jenkins won't let you sniff
around the place..."
"Right, that's another thing. Whose side are you on anyway? You just want
them to think I'm a good for nothing."
"Now you don't trust me either."
"No, it's them."
"Know what I think. We're going to end up in an early grave if we don't do
something."
"What?"
"Remember my sister?"
"She got involved with that crazy Russian, didn't she?"
"Right, she and her husband hired that writer to live with them for a few
months. He wrote a story about them. Remember? So they could see themselves,
they could see what was killing them."
"So, what are you saying. You want a Chekhov to come to South Central?"
"No, I don't think he's right for us. But what if we could get one of those
black writers, you know, someone who knows his way around, we could know,
once and for all, how they see us..."
"Look, you know what? At this point, I don't care what you do. I'm hungry,
it's cold and I have to eat...It's not funny anymore. Where's Junior?"
Mr. Lucce looked back to the window in despair, but his wife got the yellow
pages...She remembered a book she saw in the library. The Ways of White Folks
or something like that. Surely whoever wrote that would know a few
things...and she was surprised to find his number listed along with a
Chekhov's and a few other writers who had taken out a full page ad. And she
was even more surprised when he agreed to do it, gladly, promptly.
"It's done." Mrs. Lucce primped the pillows of her arm chair. She put on a
wool house dress and bright lipstick; and she insisted her husband wear a
heavy sweater, like a hair shirt, under his suit.
"But didn't you overlook a small detail," said Mr. Lucce. "How much is this
gonna cost? We don't have a pot to piss in."
"It'll work out," said Mrs. Lucce. "Don't worry. Just get ready. He'll be
here...now hurry."
When someone knocked on the door, Mr. Lucce hoped to find Junior and food.
Instead, it was the writer fellow, a hat pulled over one corner of his eye, a
cigarette dangling from his lips. He looked more like a detective than a
writer...and he smoked throughout his visit. Mrs. Lucce remembered that her
sister's writer actually spit blood into a handkerchief.
"You shouldn't smoke so much," she said to her writer. "It'll tear your
insides."
"I'm sorry," he said, squashing his cigarette into the ash tray. "This is
Southern California. How can it be so cold?" He put his hat back on his head.
"Lately, everything is upside down," said Mrs. Lucce.
"Actually," said Mr. Lucce. "My wife lives in a fantasy world. That's why
you're here. All this has nothing to do with our skin. Isn't that right,
dear?"
"She explained it all...on the phone," said their black writer, opening his
notebook. "Are others in the building without heat?"
"Well, we don't really know our neighbors. I mean, in the hall, we're
friendly, it's not that we have differences. And Mr. Hurley, the super, is
delightful."
"Right, the boiler's broken, there's no gas. Delightful and wonderful."
"The gas is out?" said the writer. "That's odd. I was only a few blocks from
here, and--"
"Case closed," said Mr. Lucce.
"Now one second," said the writer. "I made it clear to your wife. There are
two types of stories. The commercial one which contains the traditional hero.
And then there's the other one, which abandons the hero and villain in favor
of the social problem. Without making the characters social types, of course.
And did you explain the agreement to your husband?"
It was clear enough, Mrs. Lucce thought. Given they couldn't pay this
writer, he only wanted exclusive rights to their story. There might be a
movie in the old people, given they were the last white family in South
Central. Something like the last of the Mohicans. It had a romantic ring to
it. And one other thing: The writer insisted on complete access to every
facet, every detail, of the Lucce household--no matter how personal.
He read old love letters sent to Mrs. Lucce from Sicily during World War
11. He examined old IRS forms, and some 8th grade report cards. ("Mr. Lucce,"
one teacher wrote, "comes to school as often as Santa Claus.")
The writer even asked questions about their sex life, and showed them ink
blots. Then he found a rotten potato on a black ribbon hanging in a closet.
Mr. and Mrs. Lucce looked at one another conspiratorially. It was something
Danny's mother brought from the old country. The idea was: Spit on the
potato, put it in your closet; when it dried, so did someone's soul, your
enemy. The writer had a hunch that the black ribbon might be a telling
detail.
But he was too exhausted (and frozen) to pressure the old folks. He left,
promising to get the story to them by the day's end. But first, he'd
interview neighbors; and he promised to deliver their message to Jenkins:
Send food!
"What now?" asked Mr. Lucce, closing the door.
Mrs. Lucce looked out of the window as their writer turned the corner by
Jenkins' store. There was still hardly a footprint in the hardening snow.
"I better go down myself," she said, "even if I slip and break a hip." The
husband agreed to watch her from the window.
Mrs. Lucce dragged her shopping cart down the long hallway. Funny, she
thought, the lights were on. Still she hurried, afraid the Jenkins might
close for the day; so she left her cart at the top of the stairs, too heavy
to carry down in a rush.
"Am I glad to see you."
Surprised, Mr. Dupee looked up the stairwell at the cart. Then he turned
back to the mail boxes filled with green checks, checks which he stuffed into
his mail bag.
"You're surprised?" said the mailman. "But I thought you people would be
under the covers, staying warm?"
"We will, but first we need a little money. We gotta eat, but the gas is out
and the heat is off."
"That's what you people think about?"
"That's a funny way to put it, isn't it?" said Mrs. Lucce.
"You sure crack me up."
Mr. Dupee locked the boxes and was knee deep in snow when Mrs. Lucce
realized: The check! "You forgot the check!"
"There's a delay," he said, without turning around.
Mrs. Lucce climbed back up the steps. Then she got a whiff of cooking fat
and she heard what was bacon crackling in a frying pan, and a steam pipe
hissed behind a neighbor's door.
"Danny?" She found her husband hacking away at some frozen milk, sucking on
the ice chips.
"Where's the shopping cart," he blurted. "The food?"
"The cart? Jesus, I left it by the steps, but when I came back, it was
gone."
"Gone? You mean stolen?"
"I don't get it. I heard someone cooking, I swear, and the hall lights are
on and I think there's steam in this building and checks for everyone but
us."
"What am I, an idiot?" Mr. Lucce grabbed the phone. "This time, I'm catching
them." He put down the phone.
"It's dead," he said "They cut the line. What are they doing to us?"
Mr. Lucce looked under the kitchen sink.
"What are you doing?" said Mrs. Lucce, pulling a brown envelope from her
coat pocket.
"No, what are you doing?" said Mr. Lucce pulling out a tool box.
"It's something our writer sent with the mailman."
"I see. He got our number pretty damn fast, huh?"
Mr. Lucce grabbed a crowbar and got on a ladder. Then he banged on the
pipes, knocking the icicles from the ceiling. Mrs. Lucce took out a short,
but neatly typed manuscript.
"Shhhh, would you stop. I'm trying to read"
Mr. Lucce kept banging--clang, clang, clang
"Listen, would you listen to this!?"
"Why should I? The bastards." He hit the pipes again. "People have to eat,"
he cried. "Don't they know?" He swung his crowbar with all his strength.
Then his ladder slipped. He fell and his teeth were knocked loose and into a
corner of the room, with a hard slap, like a hockey puck.
Mrs. Lucce was busy reading:

They were the types who went in for black people--Danny and Maria--the
Lucces. Maybe they tried too hard to make friends, dark friends, and they
suspected...


Contributor's Note: P.J. Jason's stories have appeared in African Voices,
Fiction International, ACM (Another Chicago Magazine) , River Styx, Black
River Review, Wascana Review, Blue Penny Qaurterly, and Private Arts.


= AN EVENING AT HOME ========================================================
by Roy Stead


Doctor Gloucester sat in his room, reading a novel by Marcel Proust. It is a
very good novel, thought the good doctor, with not too many long words in it.
Idly, Gloucester thumbed the edge of a page, as though about to turn to the
next one. Then his thumb, sweat stained and tarnished by newsprint, paused
perceptively on the cusp of page-turning. The doctor hesitated a moment. A
bead of perspiration rolled from the side of his forehead, threatening to
wander along his nose then drip, slowly onto the page - as if to see what all
the fuss was about - but it, too, halted awhile to watch the doctor in his
deliberations.
Firmly, Doctor Gloucester slammed "A La Recherche de Temps Perdu" closed,
but not before the moist bead, its mind made up at the last, had had a chance
to zip down onto the page, providing a single greasy bookmark to remind
Gloucester where he had got to in the novel.
Doctor Gloucester glanced about him, and paused awhile once more, in
contemplation of what he saw. A War! he thought, A Bore. Such a bore is war,
a sore bore, yet not so torn as an apple corn. Which lies, forlorn as though
drawn upon a paper. Drawn, as they were, to the window, the doctor's eyes
took in the exterior scene.
A carriage went by. Another followed it.
Something wrong here, thought Gloucester, Something definitely wrong. But
what? But what?
*No horse!* the thought screamed out, but none heard it as none were there
to hear. *No horse!* it cried again, but louder this time. Again, none heard
its wail - but more clearly this time.
The doctor's eyes rose up, maintaining their position on his face as it -
too - was raised. This last was caused, as 'twere, by the movement of the
good doctor's head, which responded in characteristic fashion to a change in
the angle at which his neck was held. So it goes.
A cloud drifted by, as clouds have been known to do, as the doctor stared
from his window. A tendril of cloud caressed another cloud, pulling from it -
gently, oh so gently - a wisp of likewise cloudy material. A swirl, a
whirlpool in the skies, then gone, and only cloud remained.
The doctor stared.
A crick, a cricket, a cricket neck caused Doctor Gloucester to turn away
momentarily from the cloudy landscape, and his eye alighted upon a picture
beside his desk. The picture showed a herd of sheep, a flock of cows and a
shepherd's crook. Around the crook was draped a cobweb, fine as cobweb in the
early morning light. The doctor raised his arm, and thereby his hand, to
stroke the web, which broke.
A strand of cobweb fell, slowly, drifting to the floor of the doctor's
study. He watched it swirl, a whirlpool in the air, then land and come to
rest upon the bare floorboards which cushioned Doctor Gloucester's feet from
the bare air beneath.
*Oh shit*, thought the doctor.
A creak, a crack, a racket. A cracket of sound disturbed the good doctor's
contemplation of the webby fibres, and caused him to turn to the door. The
door was opening, slowly, its hinges shrieking as a hundred knife-wounds of
rust buried themselves to the hilt in their vulnerable metal bodies. A chink,
a chunk, a clank of light shone through, outlining three sides of the door as
it swung wider, wider, and wider still, in answer to the hingey cries.
Oh shit, thought the doctor.
The door now open, a figure emerged, and entered the room with a tray in one
hand and a knife in the other. "Who's there?" cried the doctor, his voice
betraying the terror he felt in his heart at the sound of the door, and the
clank of the light, and the screams of the hinge, "Who's there?"
And a voice, soft and low, whispered across that room, "'Tis eye."
The doctor stood up, the better to walk, and crossed 'cross the room, he
crissed crassly crossed 'cross that room, to greet with his voice the bearer
of tray and of knife - which the reader has yet to learn more of. The doctor
addressed that strange apparition with words from his throat, ushered soft
from his mouth, though hoarsened by sounds uttered early in panic 'gainst
that very shape, "Who is 'I'?"
"'Tis I, kindly doctor, who bringeth thy supper for you to partake of now
daylight has finished."
The doctor spun round, with a complex manouver, and glared at the window to
see the last streaks of the daylight descending like icicles melting beyond
the horizon and sighed, like a river, in pain at the passing of a friend.
'Who is 'I'?" he repeated, since last time he uttered those words he had got
no reply from the figure, bearing knife and a tray which it claimed was his
supper. That figure whose entrance had startled the doctor and caused him to
miss the moment of passing of day. "Who is 'eye'?"
The person who stood, a-framed in the doorway, looked on to the doctor and
noticed his face, and noted his expression, and formed her opinion of what
the poor doctor had done all that evening, and looked for the book, the
sweat-stain-ed novel, by Marcel Proust, which the doctor was reading, and
said to the doctor, "I'm Mary."
The doctor was shocked. Oh shit, thought the doctor.
Mary stalked forward, she storked t'ward the table, deposited tray and
placed there the knife, which she had been carrying, onto the tray. Placed
she it. Mary turned now to Gloucester, and stared at his face, expressions of
pity vieing for place on her features with shades of expressions of anger
that Gloucester had noticed the clouds once again.
Oh shit, thought the doctor.
The table groaned lightly.
Oh shit, thought the doctor.
Then, Mary walked to the doorway, and turned to the doctor, "Goodnight," as
the door was closed from the outside, leaving doctor alone with the tray and
the table. And the knife. The window was open. Doctor Gloucester left it
open, reached for the knife then stabbed his hand downwards to capture a
cockroach that crawled 'cross the table t'ward the tray which bore his
supper. Gloucester raised the cover and unveiled his meal.
Oh shit, thought the doctor.

(c) 6/4/1991 Roy Stead


= OH YEAH III - THE THIRD ENCOUNTER (AND OF A CLOSE KIND) ===================
by Stefan Posthuma and Richard Karsmakers


"Oh, come on, relax."
Cronos Warchild wanted to retort, "That's easy for you to say, chum, *you*
haven't got a suction device hanging in your mouth and a piece of drilling
equipment homing in on your molars," instead of which, however, he heard
himself uttering something like, "Hmmmm hmmpff dribble ow sshidd."
Why was it a universal property of dentists to try and start a conversation
with someone of whom the vital bits of his speech production apparatus were
temporarily invalidized?
He hated his annual checkup, which is why this was his first one. He already
regretted not having regularly undergone them, for now his dentist had
started to actually physically drool when Warchild had opened his mouth to
display the oral disarray that had prompted the visit in the first place. He
could have sworn there were Thanatopian Credit signs in the man's eyes before
they were quickly blinked away. The man had looked familiar in a way many
dentists tend to. Cronos was quite sure he had met the man before - he just
couldn't remember, no matter how hard he tried.
"Ssssjjjggrrrrrr," the suction device intoned.
Warchild decided he didn't like the drill, and the sedative stings even
less.
"Now this may hurt a little," a positively gorgeous assistant had shushed
when the revealing of small syringes had caused frenzied fear to creep on
Cronos' face.
It is said that the pain limit can be relocated to a rather more favourable
position in the presence of female beauty. This is a lie. On top of the
discomfort of two pairs of hands working their ways in his orifice he merely
felt an additional feeling not unlike cramp elsewhere.
Now what had the dentist whispered to that absurdly pretty girl just before
that? Warchild had not forgotten his hearing aid this time, as a matter of
fact he had even had new batteries installed. Dura-something - he had liked
the rabbit commercial. Now what was it again?

"Better give him something extra. He's a big dude. A regular dose might not
work, and there's plenty of work to be done."
The Thanatopian Credits had been in the man's eyes again, just for a while.

Cronos felt them turning him around. And around again. They swivelled the
dentist chair a bit. A drill homed in on his eye. He wanted to cry but found
it impossible because of an excess amount of tools lodged somewhere. A
mirror, previously located on a wall at a sufficient distance, suddenly
started to move around the room. At just a few instants after the mirror had
started moving, Warchild's personal tiny universe folded in on itself,
collapsing into a tiny speck of blackness at the end of which there wasn't a
spotlight.

"Oh, come on, relax."
He had little other choice. Four boys had tied him to a pillar and the only
thing his current position allowed was plenty of relaxing, be it in a
vertical position. He tried to move a foot but gave up when it turned out to
be of no avail. He blinked an eye. Even that was hard, what with all the
make-up that was clumsily painted on it.
Now all he had to do was wait. Wait until the boys had decided to leave him
be, and then wait until school opened again after the holidays and some
stunned janitor would find him.

"I know something funny," one of the boys had whispered to him. He had come
to life there and then. None of the really popular guys in his class had ever
found him worthy of confidential information. Nobody had whispered anything
in his ear. He wished it had been a girl, but for now a boy would have to do.
Male to male bonding it was called, he thought. Anyway, it was better than
nothing.
He had waited breathlessly until the confidential revelation would follow.
It had caught him totally unawares when it had turned out to be, "Me and
Tony and Jack here are going to tie you to that pillar overthere and then
paint you with girl's make-up."

He had been lucky. They hadn't used reinforced tungsten scarfs to tie him.
With any luck, halfway through the holidays he would have wrenched himself
loose and then try to stumble home.
He wondered if there were any school buses driving in the middle of summer.
No, probably not. He'd have to walk the way home. But he'd been worse off
before. He didn't know exactly when that had been - his memory refused quite
desperately to let the event escape from its psychological hiding place - but
he was fairly sure it was true. Anyway, what was 80 miles to a healthy young
lad?

A stinging pain invaded his consciousness. He thought he heard someone
shouting angrily, "I told you he needed more. Give him another shot!" There
was a pause. "What do you mean, 'where'? Anywhere will do. As long as it's
lots."

He saw a familiar face. It made him feel more comfortable, but as if the
emotion had to be punished the face changed into that of Jack, then Tony,
then that of Merle with its familiar already retreating hairline. He tried to
blink them away but they wouldn't. He tried to reach out but his hands went
through the images, touching nothing.
Then, suddenly, there was his father. He was holding a knife and fork and
looking rather too hungry. The image was hit on the head by someone else. He
wanted to see who this kind benefactor was, but somehow everything stayed
hazy.

"Oops," someone said. A girl's voice expressed wonder somewhere on the other
side. "Perhaps you shouldn't exactly have given him *that* much of the
stuff." A girl started to sob uncontrollably. "And certainly not *there*."
The sobbing increased.
There was a dramatic pause. If thinking processes could ever make sound,
this was deafening.
The girl was padded on the back in consolation. Then a man said, "Perhaps I
have a solution."

"Mother?"
In reply he heard not the expected gentle sound of her voice he so much
longed to hear, but a cold wheezy windy sortof breezy sound that he
considered void of all emotions. When he opened his eyes he heaved a deep
sigh upon discovering himself in a situation encountered rather too often for
any one lifetime: Stranded on an unknown planet without any clothes on. This
time, as opposed to all previous times, there was a faint sense of relief; he
felt confident his American Express Travellers Cheques were still in the
pocket where they belonged.
Only the pocket was probably somewhere altogether far away.
He could even muster the enthusiasm to utter a heartfelt moan, or even a
curse. Life had its strange little twists and turns, but why was he always
the one to get the wrong end of its twisted stick? He was getting sick of it.
He erected himself. A good thing was that there wasn't anybody around to
arrest him for indecent exposure, but the bad thing was this also meant he
couldn't rob anyone off their clothes. His body was trained to block out
cold, but the rather minute size of a certain bit of his anatomy betrayed it
more than adequately. It destroyed his sense of dignity and on top of that
quite literally nullified his manly pride.
His head didn't feel like the proverbial half-peeled orange with squash
balls bouncing to and fro in it - all things considering he felt pretty
excellent, actually. It seemed to prove that last night had not involved a
battering or alcohol consumption. Only the matter involving bodily coverage
would have to be resolved soon. Hiding from sight his private parts rendered
one hand useless, something that could prove quite a disadvantage should this
turn out to be yet another dog-eat-dog world.
He observed his surroundings. Things were looking up. His Travellers Cheques
were most likely still in his pocket, he didn't have a brainsplitting
headache *and* he hadn't been dumped in some desolate, filthy, scum-ridden
back alley. He found himself looking at two eyes frozen wide open, partly
hidden by the snow that had fallen on what seemed a mound of rubbish quite
literally in the middle of nowhere.
A metallic sound became apparent to the inner workings of his hearing aid, a
little world on its own filled with electronic parts and sticky bits of
cerumen. Cronos had often wondered about it but never quite understood its
workings at all. Anyway, that was not important.
What was important, at least at this time, was that the device revealed to
the mercenary annex hired gun a kind of slow repeated laughter that seemed to
emanate from somewhere in the suspicious-looking mound.
With his free hand he wiped some snow off the top of the mound and was
momentarily startled by the sight of some rather more unsightly parts of the
frozen corpse, its toothless mouth twisted in a dying scream of agony. In its
hand the corpse was clutching a small device which Cronos momentarily mistook
for a Gargantuan Organ Disruptor pointed at what he desparately tried to hide
with his other hand. After fighting down the waves of nausea that ran from
his groin via his spine to his brain, he pried the device loose from the
frozen fingers and inspected it in more close detail.
"Ha Ha Ha," the device droned.
Cronos squinted his eyes to be able to read the fine print on the bottom of
the device.
"Cyrius Cybernetics Laughing Gas Dispenser with Pro-Logic Audio-Feedback
Unit," it read.
Warchild stifled a giggle and pocketed the thing, after which he cursed and
picked it up again. It was then that he noticed the small nozzle on the top
with a even smaller button next to it. Even he knew that buttons were
supposed to be pressed - unless they were labeled 'self-destruct' in bright
red capitals - so he planted a meaty thumb on the thing.
A faint hissing sound followed by a funny smell tickled Cronos' olfactory
senses after which he suddenly realized the absurdity of his situation and
decided to have a good laugh at himself. In fact, he knew that this one had
to be a real holler, a tear-jerker of monumental proportions.
He started laughing.

"It is a Class E ice planet, sir, average temperature -20 degrees celcius,"
the android said, "Lifeform readings negative, and no Federation records
present in any of the databases."
"Very well, Mr. Data, perform another scan when we pass the system," the
captain instructed.

Snow twirled around the vague shape that was kneeling on a small mound,
clutching its belly while convulsing heavily with what seemed to be
uncontrollable laughter. Loud wails of it erupted from its mouth, and tears
formed glistening trails of frozen ice crystals down the face of Cronos
Warchild, naked, freezing cold, alone in the middle of nowhere, and laughing.

"I won't stop," the voice said, reassuring. It was the voice of one with
infinite time, one with no desire other than to continue what was being done.
Warchild tried hard, but failed vigorously. He was finding it difficult to
breathe, his entire body writhing and aching as yet another powerful boost of
laughter coarsed up and down his body. He was beginning to laugh the laugh of
the insane, the piping high semi-roar of girls, whatever, but nothing vaguely
male or heroic or mercenary-ish.
"I assure you I won't stop," the voice repeated. Its owner seemed to enjoy
doing whatever it was doing, which was moving a feather up and down one of
Warchild's bare soles, his victim tied down entirely and immovably with
boyscout knots. There were some bystanders, laughing for entirely different
reasons.
Cronos' reaction was void of anything but laughter. He would have laughed at
the crucifixion of Christ, hollered in the face of Ashtaroth, smilingly given
the finger to Cthulhu and hooted at Armageddon itself. There was no stopping
it. *They* had found his weak spot. For three years he had succeeded in
hiding it most cleverly from his tutors and fellow students, but somehow they
had found out about it.

The dragon moved closer to him. He tried to evade its mighty claws and its
reeking, fiery breath, but the animal would not relent. He took a few steps
back, suddenly finding himself up against a wall.
If dragons could grin inanely, this one would have. It waited until it could
close in on its victim. There was nowhere for the culprit to go. Supper time!
"Feed me!" the dragon said in some inexplicable language of its own. It had
loved that film. "Supper time!"
Quite suddenly a light struck the intended victim. The dragon was bound to
have a weak spot. All creatures great and small had weak spots. He had one
himself, and if the dragon had it too he was saved for sure. From his pocket
the victim - none other than a Knight of the Round Table - took a quill. He
would probably no longer be able to write with it a letter to his loved one,
but at least he would remain alive to buy another one.
Nobody can stand tickling. Not under the soles of their feet. He doubted
whether Atilla, Hitler, Napoleon or Caligula would have had such success in
their conquests had they not known boots and had been forced to walk across
short grass.
Triumphantly he extended the quill. The dragon wondered.
Warchild had been most rudely interrupted from his dreams of valiance by an
odd feeling. A fellow student looked him right in the face, guffawing. It was
Merle. He had hated Merle for a long time but, in the way this tends to
happen to many persons you don't like - including the person you ritually
exchange addresses with when on holiday - both their careers had quite
spontaneously unfolded in a similar way. Fate was like gravity - it sucked.
"Now we know your weak spot, Charwild," an almost demonic voice had said,
"Next time try not to talk in your sleep!"

The android gave his scanner displays a typical puzzled look and turned
around to face his captain.
"Captain, the scanners seem to be picking up signs of a humanoid lifeform on
the planet surface."
"But I thought you said there weren't any lifeforms on the planet."
"Its lifesigns are weak, sir, they only just showed up on the scans."
"Additional information?"
"Hard to tell, sir, the intense snow storms and other atmospherical
circumstances make it hard to be more precise. The conditions do allow for
use of the transporter, however."

To relieve the tension, Cronos let go of another shrieking gale of hard core
laughter. It was beginning to hurt. He doubted if he would ever again be able
to hiccup without a pungent ache stabbing through most of his abdomen.
"I am quite happy to continue indefinitely," the voice confided in him.
Warchild didn't doubt it for a second. Assistants at the Proximity Sigma
Mercenary Academy were famous for few things but their relentless stamina was
one of them. He made a mental note, between a few violent convulsions, to
teach Merle a lesson when - *if* - he ever got out of this predicament.
A part of his brain frantically signalled him to faint. He hated fainting.
Girls faint, men didn't. He was brought up with traditional values. But, then
again, perhaps this time it wasn't such a daft idea anyway. Perhaps the
tickling would stop.
*Oh, mommy, why wouldn't the tickling stop?*
Almost blotted out completely by Warchild's laughter, a voice said, "That
will be quite enough."
The world came in focus again, and the echoes of his own laughter wore off
as quickly as the violent feather-induced itch under his left sole. The
assistant jumped to attention.
"Sir!"
"At ease, sergeant," the man said. It was a decorated soldier, wearing a
rather fancy uniform that betrayed a high rank. Warchild had never been good
at learning ranks, but he reckoned this guy was pretty high up the fascist
ladder. He connected the face with a
name...salmon...haddock...carp...*Trautman*, that's it, Colonel Trautman, a
man almost his father, the main Academy's supervisor and director of daily
affairs, probably the only individual convinced that, deep down, cadet
Warchild had things going for him.

Cronos looked up through a haze of tears when some people materialized
beside him and the snow-covered mound. There was a weird sound. He couldn't
make out any details, nor even the actual amount of individuals that suddenly
considered it necessary to be present.
"It's life, sir, but not as we know it," the android said. He looked at
Warchild quizzically. His yellow eyes scanned the mercenary. Had he been
capable of human emotions, he would have experienced something not unlike
pity.
"You wouldn't believe the things *I* see," another man emphasized, a black
guy with a permanent infrared vision device attached to his head, "just a
large blue shape with a tiny red sort of *worm* in the procreational area."
A woman giggled girlishly and took out her tricorder. It uttered a few
beeping sounds and then became utterly quiet. Apart from telling her that
there were the faintest traces of an alien gas present, its display read,
"DEAD."
"To our standards he isn't even alive, Geordi," she concluded.
"But he's moving," Geordi said.
"Death and mobility aren't necessarily mutually exclusive," the android
remarked, "for example, it is a well known fact the Muier Shipbiter, the
large flightless tracking bird of Altitude Pleiadis, travels back to its
place of birth by means of involuntary post-mortem muscle convulsions induced
by electrical patterns emanating from the brain decomposition process."
The android uttered a meaningful pause for dramatic impact, totally failing
to sense the fact that all people present thought he was a smart-arse, then
added, "The largest recorded distance covered by this wholly unique means of
vertebrate propulsion is 67.62 earth miles."
"What do you think of this, Commander Riker?" the woman inquired, indicating
Warchild.
Cronos deemed that instant perfect to demonstrate once more the extent of
movement his apparently dead body was capable of. Another fit of laughter
shuddered his being.
"Well, Dr Crusher," the Commander replied, a man who had so far observed in
silence, "perhaps it's some kind of hibernating species."
"Hibernating and laughing at the same time?" a Klingon intoned. He wasn't
amused and was nervously fingering his phaser. In Klingon society you didn't
laugh in the presence of others. As a matter of fact he found this humanoid
blatantly insulting, dead or not. Back home he would not have restrained
himself.
"Riker to Enterprise," the Commander said after hitting himself on the
chest.
"Go ahead, Number One," a voice came from nowhere. It was the kind of voice
you would attach a bald head to.
"We found a life form here that may be in need of medical aid," Dr Crusher
said, ignoring the Klingon's snort.
There was a pause.
"OK," the voice out of nowhere spoke.
"Six to beam up," the Commander said.
There was a strange light effect, as if in some cheap SciFi series, and an
equally strange sound. Once that had ceased, the only sound was that of the
wind, breezy kindof windy.
In the middle of nowhere there was a mound next to which lay a partly snowed
in Cyrius Cybernetics Laughing Gas Dispenser with Pro-Logic Audio-Feedback
Unit, but it was beyond the corpse to be able to laugh about it.

The Klingon escorted Cronos to the bridge. By now the mercenary annex hired
gun had totally recovered from his icy ordeal. He was comfortably warm again,
neatly dressed in crisp clothes and feeling decidedly less giggly than
before. He was a bit disoriented though - the last thing he clearly
remembered was lying in a dentist's chair and being severelyy sedated. Now he
was walking beside a taciturn Klingon on what seemed to be a Federation
starship.
They reached the bridge. A door opened automatically, they went through, and
the door closed behind them. It was the kind of door Cronos expected to
drone, "Thank you for making a simple door happy," but it didn't.
They went inside, where he was lead to a balding middle aged man, and a very
familiar-looking balding middle aged man at that. Several bells rung as the
recollections took a solid shape inside the vast emptiness that formed
Cronos' mind.
"Merle!" he yelled.
"Er...How do you know my real name?" the captain hushed to Cronos, an
embarrassed and perplexed look on his face.
The android swiveled in this chair. "I checked this individual's genetic
patterns to the old Federation Colonies DNA databases and found a 99.8% match
on Ambulor Eight where he has spent a prolonged amount of time in the
hospital for the Very Very Splattered. Despite appearances, he's human - one
Cronos Jehannum Warchild."
"Captain, I sense utmost confusion and a violent sense of revenge in this
man," a dark-haired woman with huge black eyes counselled agitatedly.
The Klingon immediately drew a phaser and started forward, an
unprofessionally eager look on his face.
Cronos launched himself at his nemesis, intending to reduce him to a mass of
quivering flesh. He was stopped rather painfully by a phaser blast from a
grinning Klingon. It slammed him up against a panel. A few lights blinked, a
few beeps beeped.
"Incidentally," Mr Data added, unperturbed, "according to these records this
hospital is supposed to be run by a nurse who looks like an identical twin of
Gloria Estefan."
Unfortunately for the couple of thousand people aboard the starship, the
phaser shot had hurled Cronos Warchild against a large red button with the
text "PLEASE BE SO KIND SO AS NOT TO PRESS THIS BUTTON, FOR IT WILL SELF-
DESTRUCT THE SHIP".
Perhaps Cronos Warchild had finally taught Merle his lesson. Unfortunately,
however, there were hundreds of people attending the same class, one of them
being Cronos himself who was too unconscious to alter anything.
A siren threw in a few wailing words.

"THIS WAS NOT IN THE SCRIPT," a voice boomed.
A hushed silence fell over the bridge.
Cronos scratched his head as he sat up and looked around himself.
"I WILL NOT ALLOW IT," the voice continued. A huge face appeared on the
viewscreen.
"Mr. Roddenbery!" the crew exclaimed in exalted chorus.
A gaffer walked up to the large red button, irritated, and pushed it once
more. The siren ceased its incessant wailing.
"SCOTTY, BEAM THIS MAN OUT OF HERE," the mysterious voice now commanded.
"Excuse me, Mr. Roddenbery," the android began, "but there is no record of a
Scotty, Mr Scott or anybody with the first name Scott aboard the
Enterprise..."
"Shut up, Data," the captain snapped.
"Mr O'Brien, beam this...this...Neanderthal out of here," he added.
"Aye, sir," the transporter chief responded, "which coordinates?"
"Anywhere will do," the captain said, suppressing an evil grin, "basically
any random planet. As long as it's far away from here."
"Aye, sir," O'Brien said. Finally a command that left room for some
creativity.

Cronos found himself standing on a grassy plain, a shimmering sun hanging in
the sky. It was silent, eerily silent almost, and as usual he was completely
baffled, utterly confused and most muddled for a very long time. Thoughts of
Merle drifted through his mind but he didn't know exactly why or how.
Before he had a chance to completely recover, though, another bizarre thing
started happening. Small mounds of earth began to appear all around him,
muddy hands extending from some of them. Soon, earth-smeared heads started
popping up everywhere. Some time later Cronos found himself surrounded by a
large group of extremely soiled men and women. They were all quite naked,
although most details of their features were in some way covered by mud and
bits of fungi. They had all crawled from their own individual little holes in
the earth and were now eying each other vibrantly, the tension in the air
building up around a now totally dumbfounded Cronos who had absolutely no
idea what was going on. He had never been anywhere where people sortof pop
out of the ground where you stand.
Warchild stammered something.
"Daa...baaaa..."
This seemed to trigger the strange group because at that moment they all
started fondling other muddy individuals and engaging in acts of rather
explicit sexual nature. These were explicit enough for Cronos to turn
slightly red around the cheeks. For the first time since his waking up on the
ice planet did he realize that he in fact did himself have a sexual organ
located in the lower abdominal area.
He wandered around aimlessly for a while, making sure not to step on any of
the writhing bodies around him, trying to make sense of it all. After a while
he found a solitary woman lying on the ground, naked and covered in streaks
of dirt, her forms exposed to a befuddled Cronos who never really knew what
to do in this kind of situation. He sat down next to her and decided to find
out what was going on.
"From what hole are you, handsome?", the woman asked huskily.
"Errr...well...", Cronos didn't really know what to say. He never before had
his home planet Sucatraps referred to as a hole.
For a brief instant visions flickered across the insides of his eyes. There
was the utterly enticing Klarine Appledoor. After two moments she was
squashed by the rather less slim form of Penelope Sunflower, his almost-
betrothed. And, of course, there was half a nanosecond worth of Loucynda,
enough to see the sturdy and rather rusty locks around the chastity belt were
resisting time bravely. He always had that when he was around women. He
either started acting like a total git or simply shut up and entered
recollection mode.
His lack of words, however, merely seemed to flatter the woman, encourage
her. Maybe she was an expert at body language, or maybe the rapidly shifting
folds in the crotch area of Cronos' trousers told her all she needed to
known. She peeled a piece of dry mud off a breast. Cronos had no idea the
removal of sand crust could be this provoking. A few of his inner glands
started to excrete their produce.
"What is all this?" Warchild asked.
"Isn't it obvious?" the woman responded rhetorically.
"No."
"This is the moment we've all waited for," the woman said. Her eyes went
into a musing distant-gaze mode when she told a story involving the burial of
41 infants in the rich and nurturing soils of the Mother Planet where their
collective minds would dream about Unabridled Sexual Nirvana for 17 years
until finally the Exhumation Phase of their Life Cycle would come upon them.
She revealed to him the Doctrine of the Nine Utterly Holy Phases - Cloacal
Birth, the Burying of Infant Eggs, Life in Entombment for Seventeen Years,
the Unearthing, the Shedding of the Sands, the Mating (a.k.a. Passionate Time
of Ultimate Bliss), the Smoking of the Cigarette and then, after a short but
exciting Life, the Revelation of the Truth in Death. A pretty fulfilling
life, so she assured him.
To Cronos she appeared to be human, but she was talking about eggs and
cloacas - and what was this thing with the cigarette? He was about to ask
when she grabbed him in her arms. The two of them looking like the covers of
cheap love novels, only this time the male held by the female.
"O noble hunk," she whispered wetly in his ear, "be my Sacred Partner in the
Ritual of Ultimate Joining!"
He thought about it for a while, but not for long. The woman peeled another
piece of half-dried mud off her anatomy. This time it revealed part of her
right buttock. Warchild hadn't realised half a square inch of buttock could
look in any way alluringly. Well, he concluded, this particular piece did.
The woman, her lips moist with desire and her eyes undressing him
unceremoniously, now interpreted Cronos' muteness as reluctance. She had to
fight for him. Perhaps he was playing hard to get. She liked that in a man.
It's never any fun if they throw themselves at you. She liked getting "no"
for an answer. They always meant "yes" anyway.
"I have four sexual organs, you know," she revealed, "and that's not even
including the cloaca." She turned around a bit and showed a few of them.
By now Warchild got the general idea. In fact, the part of his body that had
been shrivelled hopelessly during his ice planet experience was now claiming
most of his blood and sending waves of unclean thoughts through his mind.
Perhaps a blood vessel in his brain sprung, or an adrenalin gland went into
Warp 9 mode. Things went strange.
"Videodrome!", he yelled, tore his T-shirt off his body and jumped onto the
ecstatic woman. That is to say he aimed to hurl his body at her but somehow
it failed to hit its target and impacted a rather unforgiving piece of
bedrock. Debbie Harry vanished off his mind and was replaced by a screaming
pain racing through his nervous system. Yet a certain part of him was poised
for serious action and the sudden impulse of the cold and gritty rock was
enough to cause a rather intense climax of the most pinnacle kind. A blurred
vision of tissues and washing machines came to his mind, but it was quickly
replaced by a detailed vision of microwave ovens and food blenders.
It was orgasmic, fatamorganic, spirallomatic and truly mind-evaporatingly
huge. The Dingo stared at him with yellow eyes, and a brightly lit church
from Vienna appeared before him. Kiss the guitar, feel the Fields of the
Nephilim. Someone's got to suffer. Pain looks great on other people, that's
what they're for. He was sick of all the people, the angels getting on his
nerves. Sweet dreams, his soul screamed. He cannot live, he cannot die,
Sumerland is where he wanted to go. It was the depth of his soul made real.
Afraid of waking up, he stayed deep down in the lands of forever...call it a
day. What a bastard of a blinking cursor staring at him. Sleep...forever...
Last thing he remembered was a rather cute Tiger Quo

  
ll looking at him,
wondering what he was doing. He didn't know where the little animal had come
from, and actually didn't even realize it was one. He decided to give in to
what his body wanted him to do.
With an erection that would have made any London Knight proud and a girl
next to him that was ready'n'willing to go to the end and have him mount her
in each of her many bodily openings, he fainted.

The thing most prominently present in his mind was the face of Merle. Or
Picard, or whatever he called himself now. It morphed to and fro into a
hungry face of his father. In the back of his mind he heard his mother
pleading with the man, but there was no stopping him.

His father was whetting a stainless steel kitchen knife of huge proportions,
eyeing him rather unfatherly.
"It has to go!" the man bellowed.
Cronos tried to hide behind his mother but his father shoved the frail woman
aside and advanced on him with a grin of very demoniacal proportions.
"Come here boy," his father whispered satanically, "it might not even hurt."
"Drahcir!" his mother uttered, "please be careful!"

Cronos had hated the idea of circumcision ever since.

"OoooOoooOiooooOooooOiiiioOOoOOoOoooOO..."
Cronos felt a tiny tongue licking his face.
"OOOoooOooOoiiiioOOOiiOooooOOOooiiiioOOO..."
He opened his eyes and was confronted with the rather cute Tiger Quoll that
seemed to like him rather a lot.
"OOoooOooOOoiiiiooOOooOOOOooooOOooo..."
The strange sound seemed to arise from one end of a long pipe. Attached to
the other end was a strange looking man with scruffy black hair, his body
covered only with a primitive loincloth and multi-coloured paint. The pipe
seemed to be some kind of bush-native instrument.
Cronos sat up straight and uttered an inquiring, "Huh?"
The Quoll, disappointed, began licking its own genitals instead. The man
removed the pipe from his mouth and started to speak with a heavy accent.
"Hey man, whatya doing 'ere?"
Cronos looked around him and noticed several empty holes. A few of them had
been filled up again and covered.
"Dunno, actually. Where is everybody?" he asked.
"They buggered off to bury the eggs and then...well...let's just say I'm
'ere to clean up the mess," the man said.
"Mess?" Warchild wanted to know.
The man said nothing, merely pointing in another direction. Cronos' head
swivelled - without as much as a heroic "swoosh" - and beheld a pile of dead
people he had missed so far. It would have been nice for this story if he had
recognized the girl with whom he had had the near-hit experience, but he
didn't. There were just lots of legs and arms, some totally worn out bodies
and asinine grins on a lot of faces, some still with smouldering cigarette
butts dangling in them. A breeze took the smell of death and Saigon Brothel
Backrooms to him.
Disgusted, if only because he hadn't been part of the events necessary to
produce the distinctive scent, he looked away.

Reality isn't half as real as you think it is, and just when you think
you've come to grips with it everything changes. In books all things happen
in neat patterns where great minds have thought out excellent plots to let
their characters experience the most exciting of exploits. Cronos Warchild,
mercenary annex hired gun, was about to have something happen to him that was
of no relevance to his current situation whatsoever. Which is half the fun of
writing, sometimes, though not necessarily of reading.

Somewhere deep within the reaches of space a cell twisted and turned. It was
a warped cell, deadly in its own disctinctive and very weird way. Without
apparent reason it decided to pick out a random life form in the multiverse
and hit it on the head.

"They surely went out with a bang, didn't they?" Cronos asked.
The man nodded and started playing 'Advance Australia Fair' on his
instrument.
"OOOoooOooOoiiiioOOOiiOooooOOOooiiiioOOO..."
Cronos was not a very smart man. We know that, because it has been mentioned
countless times. Nonetheless he had a strange innate sense of tact, which now
told him the man had no further use for him. He'd better make himself scarse.

Somewhere deep within the reaches of space, though now infinitely much
closer, there was something that *had* a use for him. Though it, and he,
didn't quite know yet, at least not consciously. It hurled itself at an ever
increasing speed toward a squarely built form, even though neither was yet
visible to the other.

What to do now? The huge pile of smiling corpses wasn't a likely partner for
jest or conversation, not even a friendly fight.

Infinity is all relative, just a matter of perspective.

What sounded like the loudest explosion conceivable to the ears of the
rotating cell - had it had them - was virtually and quite totally
indistinguishable from utter silence to the Mercenary Annex Hired Gun. Within
the instant of collision, however, profound changes occurred in both of them.
The cell suddenly found itself in a void we know as Cronos' brain. It wasn't
the best place to be in, but at least it was confined whilst still allowing
room for plenty of motion. At least it was *safe*, and *they* wouldn't know
where to find it. Hopefully.
Cronos suddenly found his cranial contents doubled. Whereas previously his
brain had been almost solely dedicated to movement, a few incoherent thoughts
and the production of apparently sentient speech, its newly acquired extra
capacity was entirely paranormal.
Cronos had never known paranormality was a bacterial disease flung on you by
a discontent universe, and he probably never would. What matters to the
current discourse, however, is that this was exactly what had happened.
Warchild looked at the man that had almost finished playing the Australian
National Anthem. Instead of a man, however, his mind saw a boy. A frightened
boy that looked around it in panic.
It shouted.
"*No, father!*"
The man looked at Cronos. Had his multi-coloured paint fainted, perhaps, and
was the stranger looking intently at that?
"*No!*"
"Leave that boy alone!" Cronos bellowed. He meant business.
The man looked around him. He saw no boy to leave alone. The stranger was
surely acting irrational.
Then the boy was gone, just like that. Warchild walked up to the man and
shook him at what, for lack of a better word, were the lapels of his
loincloth.
"What have you done, insane man?!" he shouted. His eyes looked around
rapidly, "where is the boy?"
"Wuh...wuh...wuh...what boy?" the man stuttered.
Warchild suddenly looked at the right ear of the man, or perhaps somewhat
beyond. He cocked his head. He could have sworn he heard some music. It was
peaceful music, with flute and soft synthesizer. His mind told him, not with
words but equally effectively, "Gandalf. Gandalf's 'Fantasia'."
"Fuck off, idiot!" the man said, recognizing the wild look in Cronos' eyes
gone all soft.
Warchild sat down.
"'He' tells me not to use those words," Cronos said with the patient and
infinitely peaceful voice of a religious nut.
"Who?" the man said, irritated, "the boy?"
"No...no..." Cronos responded, dreamily, "'he' told me."
The man displayed an "Oh no, it's Jehovah's witnesses" look. He patted
Warchild on the shoulder.
"He's a good boy," he said, soothingly, with his other hand swinging the
Aboriginal instrument. It was made of wood lovingly fondled and spoken to for
countless generations. He hoped it would survive the intented maltreatment.
There was a skull-jarring 'thud'. A cell was hurled off back into space.
"Oh no, now they will be after me again?" Cronos wondered fleetingly as
unconsciousness once more embraced him.
"*Genuine fake watches!*"
The exclamation had a difficult time reaching Warchild's awareness.
"*Genuine fake watches!*"
He opened his eyes. He had expected to be on a totally different planet
without any clothes on and, indeed, he wasn't. Life isn't like that. However,
seeing as a city seemed to have been erected about him, he reckoned he had
been out for a while. He stared almost directly into the empty eyesockets of
a few grinning corpses, butt-ends stuck between perpetually grinning skeletal
teeth blowing softly in the wind. Now he thought he could recognize the girl
whom his near-hit relationship had been based on. She had lost quite a bit of
weight since he'd last seen her.
Why had the builders left the pile of corpses in their city? Had they
considered it an artefact of sorts? Why had they left him? Was he an artefact
too?
"*Genuine fake watches!*"
Warchild tried to move but found that he couldn't. He frantically scanned
his memory for explanations. Was he paralyzed? Cast in concrete? Rendered
motionless by some arcane wizard's spell?
In reality everything can be much more simple. He was dead. At least he
showed all the signs of it.
"*Genuine fake watches!*"
The voice was a lot louder now. It just repeated relentlessly. Cronos tried
to crane his neck but couldn't. Instead he craned his eyes as much as he
could and saw the type of guy you would expect to pop up at spectacularly
gory accidents in the street, selling sausages.
"*Genuine fake watches!*"
"Hey," Cronos tried to whisper, but nothing passed his lips. He tried to
shout but that proved of no avail either. Nobody heeded him, and there was no
way he could cause people to.
He was beginning to feel just as genuinely uncomfortable as the watches were
fake.

"Genuine fake crowns!"
The man turned around to look at the mercenary annex hired gun.
"Definitely genuinely fake!" he cried, eyeing Cronos rather more closely.
"I don't understand," a voice said, and there was a female voice that said
something in the background. Cronos blinked his eye a few times. The watch
salesman grew blurry.

There was a distinct smell. The kind of smell you always try to prevent your
dentist from smelling but that instead the man himself breathes up your
nostrils when examing your orifice in the most minute detail, every agonizing
minute it takes.
"He appears to be coming to," the girl now said, "good thing you did with
the water and the feather."
"Forget that," a man's voice said, "or we'll get sued until we're both
cross-eyed. C'mon, give me that sucker."
Cronos blinked his eyes again. He was quite sure someone had just put a
suction device in his mouth. Instinctively he waited for the inevitable
conversation to develop.
His sight was adjusting to the light. The first silhouette it saw was that
of the ravishingly gorgeous dentist's assistance. What a silhouette! It was
actually the first time in his life he had woken up with that kind of view.
"Ha," the dentist said, sounding happy, "it seems we are waking up? Have we
had a nice nap?"
Cronos wanted to say, "Actually, no, I had a bit of a nightmare where I
sortof got dumped on planets by the likes of you, where I had an almost
perfect encounter with someone of a different and highly compatible gender
but somehow everything went wrong. I don't know how much time I spent in your
damn chair with half your sucker collection dangling in my mouth, but if you
think I'm going to pay for this you've got another thing coming. And I hate
the way you're talking to me as if I'm some half-arse imbecile. I would,
however, like to have a go at dating your positively lovely assistant,
though, if you don't mind."
He tried hard, especially with the last bit, but all that came out, as he
looked at the almost totally bald head of the dentist whose face he now quite
suddenly remembered, was, "Hmmmm hmmpff dribble ow sshidd!"

Original written from the last week of May up to June 23rd 1994, with the
bulk of it done on June 4th and 5th. A change/addition or two made in March
1996.


= PHALCUS PHALANGOIDES ======================================================
by M. Manwaring


It's said that Daddy-Long-Legs have the most lethal venom of all spiders,
but they're not deadly to man because their fangs are too weak to pierce
human skin. My mother told me that my aunt was found dead from a spider bite,
and the only spider they found in the vicinity was an innocuous-looking
Daddy-Long-Legs. Consequently my mother purged our house of all possible
offenders - mashing, spraying or stomping on all potential eight-legged
culprits. To this day I don't know if the spider was to blame.
Forgive me, I digress. For me, time is a particularly finite resource and
speed is crucial. The point I am trying to make is that this apparently
harmless spider was accused of murder and summarily put to death due to
circumstantial evidence. Like myself.
I say that because I, too, am to be executed for crimes I didn't commit. My
name is John Harcourt - perhaps you've read about me in the newspaper, or
seen the shamefully biased reports of me on television. Until two months ago
I was an anonymous school teacher, unmarried, approaching middle-age (as my
increasing gut and decreasing hair will testify), living in a modest flat in
an equally modest suburb of this city. That was until I met Frank, bought a
bed, and watched helplessly as my life destroyed itself around me.
Life as a teacher isn't - wasn't - too bad, really. It's boring, after so
many years; but I played golf once in a while. My lifestyle, by its sheer
lack of the interesting or bizarre, convinced them that I must be abnormal
and therefore guilty of all the things they said I did. But that's neither
here nor there. I'm running out of time, so back to it.
I don't have any 'girlfriends' (another piece of evidence used against me)
but I sometimes plucked up enough courage to ask a lady out. This was usually
successful for one date only - for some reason they never agreed to go out
with me more than once, which is still a mystery to me. I'm very quiet, you
see, and perhaps women don't like that, and my tiny flat wasn't at all
glamorous at the best of times. That was, until I met Frank and his bed.
The bed was completely amazing. It was larger than king size and really far
too big for my tiny bedroom, but at the time it didn't seem to matter. When
Frank spoke of it, nothing else mattered - nothing except having that bed. It
was a four-poster, draped with pale blue silk which fell gracefully from the
frame of the top forming a soft canopy. The mattress was deep and incredibly
soft, and Frank told me it was a woman-magnet, and after all, Frank would
know. He owned a small furniture shop only two blocks from my flat, and
though I'd not spoken to him before that day I had often ridden my bicycle
past the window on my way to school. He was almost always there, a woman
draped on one arm (sometimes one on each) using his salesman smile to
convince them to buy his wares. Frank told me there wasn't anything on earth
he couldn't sell, including himself. On this particular day, I was riding
past when I noticed the bed in the window. No, not so much noticed it - was
entranced by it. It filled the entire display area with its decadence, and I
couldn't help but stop and stare at it. I was captivated by the deep warm red
of the wood, the way the smooth lines of the carved head-board followed the
delicate curves of the grain. I had to have it, and completely forgetting
that I had a classroom full of sixth grade boys waiting for me, dropped my
bike and went into the shop.
As I said, the bed was far too large for my flat and it was monstrously
expensive as well. However I had a small sum saved for a rainy day and now it
seemed that I knew why I'd saved the money. I bought the bed, of course, and
returned to my flat to eagerly await its delivery.
Mrs Hughes, my landlady, was almost speechless when she saw the size of the
thing I was proposing to put in the flat. After a lengthy struggle amidst the
cries of 'don't mark the walls' and 'if you break anything, you'll have to
pay' from Mrs Hughes, we manoeuvred the bed into the tiny bedroom, where it
took up all the available space, and more. I had to move my set of drawers
and portable TV out into the cramped living room/kitchen area, but it didn't
matter. I had the bed, and a feeling of triumph completely inappropriate to
the occasion made all other matters pale into trivialities.
Even though it was only ten in the morning, I couldn't resist the urge to
climb between the cool blue sheets and rest my head on its pillows once the
delivery men and Mrs Hughes had made their exits. As I sank into the
incredibly deep, soft mattress, totally naked (my cotton box-print pyjamas
uncharacteristically absent) my mind seemed to cloud over and my body
demanded sleep. I gazed up at the billowing canopy of silk above me and
drifted off.
I don't know how to begin to describe the nightmares I suffered that night
and for the seemingly endless nights following. I don't often dream of women,
but in that bed I seemed to dream of nothing else. My sleep was filled with
visions of myself with beautiful, elegant women. I'd be having dinner with
them, dancing with them, and I'd eventually bring them home, to my flat, to
the bed. Then the dreams changed; my dream-sight became clouded and the
images distressingly chaotic and confused. There were flurries of white and
blue and red, and then I'd wake, drenched in sweat, exhausted, to find the
mattress bare, the sheets and pillowcases (sometimes even the pillows
themselves) missing. When this strange occurrence first took place, I
searched the flat convinced there had been an intruder, questioning Mrs
Hughes on the off-chance that she might have changed the sheets while I
slept. Mrs Hughes, of course, knew nothing and replied that I was suddenly
acting very strangely.
I searched unsuccessfully for the missing bedding, eventually shrugging it
off as something I must have done while sleep-walking, although I'd never
suffered from somnambulism before. They would turn up, sooner or later.
I ran out of bedding after the third or fourth night of this, and began to
borrow from Mrs Hughes, hoping that the missing sheets would somehow turn up.
They didn't, and soon I had also used up all of Mrs Hughes' bedding. Out of
necessity I bought another supply. I noticed that the mattress was no longer
as comfortable as it had first been, and as I searched for a reason I
discovered a line of stitches on the side of the mattress where it had been
repaired along the length of the bed. I resolved to see Frank - I'd try to
convince him to take it back and give me a refund. No, I said, it hadn't
turned out to be a 'woman-magnet', and I'd not had a single good night's
sleep on it. He soothed me, flashing his salesman smile, assuring me that I'd
get used to it, sooner or later, and I believed him. On leaving the store, I
mentioned (in passing) the missing bedding, and his salesman smile faltered
slightly. I assumed he thought I must have been going a little barmy (he
wasn't the only one) and thought no more of it.
Two days later I returned to the shop, two days more exhausted and minus two
more sets of linen, hoping that Frank would simply take the bed back. I
didn't want my money, I just wanted the damn thing out of my flat. I cycled
up the road, only to find Frank and his furniture gone. A 'For Lease' sign
hung over the door and when I enquired, the agent claimed to have no
forwarding address.
Alone again in my flat, I stood at the bedroom door and stared at the bed.
What could I do? I couldn't bear the thought of sleeping on it again - every
morning I woke exhausted, every muscle and sinew aching, some parts of me
bruised and stiff. I'd lost weight and my usually neat appearance had
degenerated to the point where Mrs Hughes was threatening to evict me for
making the place look disreputable. Of course the missing linen didn't help,
and every now and then I caught her giving me strange sideways looks when she
thought I wasn't watching. Once, she made a cryptic comment about all my
late-night comings and goings. Soon she was complaining about the smell
coming from my flat as well, although I can't say I ever noticed anything. I
didn't understand most of what she said, and assumed she was trying to find
excuses for getting rid of me.
I stared at the bed for a long time before deciding what to do. Eventually
the solution to my problem came to me. I left my flat and walked out to the
back garden, where Mrs Hughes' husband kept his tools in a tiny shed. I took
an axe back to my flat and began to work on the bed. I'm not a very physical
person, and the wood was strong and stubborn, but after a few minutes I was
in a chopping frenzy and in a short time I had reduced the bed to kindling.
The silk made a strangely familiar and satisfying sound as it ripped, and
after the work was done I sat in the midst of the rubble, axe in hand,
surveying my achievement. Eventually the thundering in my ears faded, and
above it I heard Mrs Hughes banging on the door, demanding to know what I was
doing, making all that racket. Pleased with myself and eager to show her my
handiwork, I let her in and proudly led her into the bedroom. At first she
stared, and then she began to scream.
They found the sheets buried in the garden. They were covered in gore, just
like the mess they found in my bedroom. Half the original contents of the
mattress were there, too, tufts of filling matted together with blood. They
took the bodies away, seven in all, and then they took me away, too. They
claimed at the trial that I'd killed them and stuffed them in the mattress,
just like my mother claimed the spider had killed her sister. They said they
tried to find Frank, but they never managed to, of course. I don't think they
really tried.
It's nearly time now - I can hear movement down the corridor. My cell's
quite comfortable. The mattress isn't quite as thick as the one I'm used to,
of course, but my sleep is deep and dreamless, for which I'm thankful.
There's a Daddy-Long-Legs in here with me, you know. His name is Frank and he
keeps me company, two condemned souls together. I think I'll take him with me
and keep him in my pocket - I wonder if you can electrocute a spider? I
suppose I won't be around to find out, so that's another mystery. Well, I've
written it all down, and it's time to go. I'm rather looking forward to it,
as a matter of fact. The trial was so wearisome, and waiting for death has
taken its toll on me. When they sit me down I'll be strapped in, of course,
and the priest will lean over and ask me if I have any requests, any final
questions before I go.
Yes, I'll say. Is it true what they say about Daddy-Long-Legs?


= TUPPERWARE PARTY ==========================================================
by Mark Oliver - marko@mulberry.com


Charlie had been transformed from one of those nasty buzzing pests, a black
garden fly, into a charade playing house fly. Mr. Black captured the fly
after Charlie landed and planted his mandibles into the back of Mr. Black's
hand.
"Lucky Charlie," Mr. Black said now, "You don't have a worry." Mr. Black had
put Charlie into a large Mason jar that his former partner had left behind.
He was careful to poke holes of proper size to allow ventilation but still
prevent escape. Charlie had grown to an obscenely obese fly and was now
covered with the same dirty black hairs that always seemed to be growing out
of Mr. Black's cheeks, chin and nostrils.
"Here you go Charlie my friend," Mr. Black said as he gently poured a
spoonful of cool coffee down through one of the holes in the top of the lid.
"Happy birthday to you," he softly sang. "Happy birthday my little girl."
Mr. Gray set his lunch pail down on the desk and took off his boots. He hung
up his spring jacket on a nail behind the door and squeezed a look at himself
in a tiny mirror above the sink. "Morning," he said to Mr. Black. "Anything
exciting happen that I should know about?" Mr. Gray's wife works as a nurse
in a local psychiatric hospital and had always envied the time of report when
the night nurses bring the day shift up to speed. It seemed much more
exciting than just grunting at each other and he always tried to get anything
out of his co-worker; challenge was something he lived for.
"Mrs. Morning is having another Tupperware Party."
"Oh?"
"Imagine that, eh?"
Both men cracked a smile at this familiar exchange.
"Anyone going to show up this time?" Mr. Gray asked.
"Oh the usual gang of Tupperware Junkies I suspect."
"That would be ole Invisible Sam, Jessie Vapour, and Flora Boards?"
"You got it, sir." Mr. Black picked up his magazines and headed out the
door. "Ooh, some of the tenants called about the slow drainage in their sinks
and tubs again. I meant to drop by a few of them and check them out, but it
was pretty busy last night."
"Ya I know," Mr. Gray smiled and shook his head. Mr. Black was famous for
his insignificant contribution to the maintenance of the building. He always
had the office nice and warm, however, if not the sweetest smelling, first
thing in the morning.
Charlie nodded and lapped. Nodded and lapped. The Eight O'clock coffee,
sugar and milk would have normally been a great find, but now it was just the
same old same old. Even the cleaning process no longer possessed the
cathartic effect that it used to. Charlie strained his plump body and tried
to kick up the wing speed for a little levity. Lift could not overcome drag,
and Charlie's grapelike fullness bumped softly against the inside glass.
Despair and sadness descended upon him and the giant multilobed eyes which
once served his freedom so well could now only reinforce his captivity in a
thousand images of bondage and imprisonment. Charlie nodded and lapped some
more.
Mr. Black drove his old Pinto to work and parked in his usual spot. His head
was still pounding from the effects of overindulgence. His wallet and hopes
had once again taken a beating at the hands of the Nevada Ticket and Scratch
& Win seductresses. He did however manage to budget ten dollars for a copy of
AutoTrader and the latest issue of Snatch magazine; to help the hours go by
at the office. "Evening," Mr. Gray said .
"Oh, ya." Mr. Black sighed and went to the washroom to hide his reading
material until later on when it got quiet. "What's up tonight with you?"
"Going home for some hot cooking and good loving," Mr. Gray said and
simultaneously patted his head and rubbed his belly. "Nothing much happening
here tonight.
Mrs. Morning got her groceries delivered, UPS brought her another box of
Tupperware and residents on first are still having troubles with their
drainage."
Mr. Black grunted as he slipped his giant key ring onto his handtooled
monogrammed belt. "Well, have a good shift my friend," Mr. Gray said and left
whistling down the hall.
"Will-do. Will-do."
Mr. Black opened the back window and let in some early evening air. He
pulled Charlie's bottle out from behind the stack of scrub sponges and placed
him on the desk. Even though more and more people are smoking Player's Lights
these days, Mr. Black stuck with his old standby DuMaurier. He smoked not so
much for the flavour, buzz or habit, but rather for the simple excuse to
carry his matches around. 'Don & Marie July 14th, 1982' they said on the
cover. He had had two hundred books made for their wedding then but when
plans collapsed at the eleventh hour, he was stuck with them. So he took up
smoking and carries them wherever he goes. The gift store owner always looks
at him a bit strangely when he orders more, but that doesn't bother Mr. Black
in the least. What does bother him was not seeing his daughter. He hasn't
seen her since he and Marie's last big fight, two years ago this day;
Jessica's 13th birthday.
A long fluorescent tube was burned out in the superintendents office, some
ashtrays were to the point of overflowing in the visitors washroom, the main
level carpeting needed vacuuming. "What the hell did he do all day?" Mr.
Black wondered.
Jessica and her mother had kicked him out of the apartment following his
attempt to bring in a couple of his buddies from Eddy's Sports Tavern. One of
the thirteen year old girls screamed when one drunk grabbed her rear. Marie
threw a pop bottle at the man who in turn threw himself through a wall.
Police and ambulances were eventually called and when the dust settled, two
men including Mr. Black were arrested and all of the girls were in tears.
Jessica forgave her father the next day, but Marie refused to allow her to
contact him. A court order was issued to Mr. Black not to initiate contact
and he was placed on suspended sentence for two years.
"Damn it," Mr. Black said and headed back to the office after fixing up the
messes.
The phone was ringing and his message machine was blinking. "Black here," he
answered. He was hoping that it would be his daughter.
"Mr. Black," an elderly voice said, "is that you?"
"Yes of course. What can I do you for?"
"I'm afraid my toilet has overrun, Mr. Black. I fear I may need your
services."
"Which suite are you in please? I'll be right there."
"I'm having a Tupperware party tonight and this just won't do, you know."
Mr. Black hung up the phone and grabbed a snake, plunger, mop and bucket. He
didn't need to hear anymore about suite numbers. Mrs. Morning was in Suite
109. Just inside the back door. "A few more minutes won't spoil it for the
guests," he laughed to himself and closed the bathroom door behind him. After
the work he had already done tonight, he didn't want to wear himself out
without a break first.
Sarah Hamilton was seven years old. She lived with her parents on a farm
outside of Matawa, Ontario. Her brothers were all older and worked with her
father raking hay, and feeding the livestock. Her mother kept house, but
always found time for Sarah between ringing out clothes or kneading the
bread. Sarah's mother gave Sarah a large sketch pad with several thin sticks
of charcoal for her birthday. Sarah sat outside with her new gift and stared
wide eyed at the large maple tree in her back yard. Her brothers had built
and since abandoned a beautiful tree fort some thirty feet up in the lofty
branches, safe from dogs, skunks and little sisters. Sarah sat staring up at
the tree fort and dreamed of living there, free from the world's noises and
busyness. Free from chores, free from school, free from rules and
restrictions. She would be as free as the birds and animals who are the
fort's neighbouring tenants. And even though she would grow up, marry, have
children, be widowed, and move into what most would consider to be a
claustrophobic cage of an apartment, Sarah Hamilton Morning would always
remember that feeling of freedom that she dreamed of on that summer's day 65
years ago.
Mr. Black entered Mrs. Morning's apartment pushing his cart full of tools
and accessories.
"Good Evening, Mrs. Morning," Mr. Black said, "what seems to be the trouble
tonight?"
"As you can see my good fellow, there is a terrible problem with my toilet.
I'm afraid that it has overfilled the pot and spilled onto my flooring. I'm
having a Tupperware Party tonight and I'd hate for the water to distract."
"Of course, Mrs. Morning," Mr. Black said and set about clearing up the job.
A simple snake down the drain soon cleared the problem for the time being.
While he was mopping up the spillage, an unusual feeling of conversationalism
overcame him. Maybe it was the depression of losing contact with his
daughter, or maybe it was his curiosity that got the better of him after the
last seven years of hearing about it. What ever the reason, Mr. Black cleared
his throat and smiled at Mrs. Morning.
"You sure do have a lot of Tupperware Parties, Mrs. Morning," he said in the
friendliest tone possible for him. "How have they been going, anyway?"
Charlie the fly climbed up the side of his jar and stuck one hairy leg out
of a tiny sharp edged air hole. The wind from the open window rolled across
the top of the jar and the breeze caused the sensitive follicles to bristle
with excitement. It was a far cry from the past of free flying buzz attacks
on loose dog's snouts, but it would have to do now. Charlie dropped back to
the bottom of the jar, not bothering to walk along the dung stained walls
anymore.
"Coffee? Mr. Black." Mrs. Morning smiled at his question. She had realized
long ago that she was something of a curiosity amongst the staff and
residents alike. What with her reclusive lifestyle, her once a week
deliveries of groceries, and the occasional special courier delivery from a
certain company specializing in air tight plastic containers . Mrs. Morning
had often thought about the paradox of the Tupperware dish; how something
that creates a positively and purely stagnant environment, void of any
newness of air or moisture, no revitalizing stimuli or invigorating elixir -
how can an environment of critical and severe deprivations foster such
amazing freshness in its captive product? It is by it's own cloister, capable
of sustaining vitality. Preservation though limitation. How? Why? Mrs.
Morning loved her Tupperware and everything it had come to represent. And so,
as she smiled at Mr. Black's question regarding her parties, she felt it
unnecessary to explain it to him in so many words. She handed him his coffee,
black, and opened up the door to her studio.
"You see, Mr. Black. When I throw a Tupperware Party, this is where it
happens."
Mrs. Morning gestured around the room with her hands in the air. Surrounding
them both on all sides of the small chamber were beautifully hand painted
water colours. Images of butterflies on dandelions, candy apples and
balloons; landscapes of impossible waterfalls crashing over rocks of
impossible size and structure. Everywhere you turned, Mrs. Morning had
displayed her impressions of freedom and freewill. Pictures lay about of old
barnyards and hay mows, sweet strawberry fields lying upon hilltops in the
mist, finally, one small painting caught the eye of Mr. Black. It was a self
portrait of Mrs. Morning as she was when she was seven years old. She
appeared sitting in a giant treefort emanating from within a majestic maple
tree. She was wearing a smile on her face and a straw hat in her hair. Mr.
Black began to cry.
"So you see, Mr. Black," Mrs. Morning said, " even though I am old and am
not visited; and I live in a tiny place where the toilet leaks, I am not
fully here. Most evenings I am disappeared. Most evenings I am at a
Tupperware Party far away."
Mr. Black stared at the small girl in the image. He saw his own little girl
sitting there too. He missed her terribly and the tears were coming so fast
now that he could no longer focus on the painting.
"Thank you Mrs. Morning," he managed and tried for the door.
"No. Thank you. For your time, and for joining me at my party."
Don Black pulled the phone from its cradle and dialed his daughter's number.
The two year suspended sentence was nearly over, and regardless, he didn't
care anymore about bars, cells or anything else. He needed to speak to his
little girl. He needed to tell her that he loved her. He needed to see her
again. The phone began to ring and his heart began to beat again. Soon, very
soon he would live again.
Mrs. Morning tidied up her place after Mr. Black had left. He forgot his
equipment but she knew he had more important things on his mind right now. It
was getting late for her, so she decided to call it a night. She rinsed out
her brushes and packed up her sketch pads. She gathered up her many paint
cakes and placed them all, protectively and lovingly, inside their own
separate Tupperware dish. Safe and sound inside. Just like she was.

Copyright Mark Oliver February 1996

Mark Oliver lives and writes in Brockville, Ontario. He eats three squares a
day and never has leftovers.


= THE NEXT ISSUE ============================================================


The next issue of "Twilight World", Volume 4 Issue 3, is to be released mid
May 1996. It will be uploaded to the FTP sites mentioned further down.
The next issue will feature, probably, the following stories.

TRACKS
by Michaela Croe

OBVIOUSLY INFLUENCED BY THE DEVIL TOO - THE SEVEN GATES OF HELL
by Richard Karsmakers

And more, most likely.


= SOME GENERAL REMARKS ======================================================


DESCRIPTION

"Twilight World" is an on-line magazine aimed at everybody who is interested
in any sort of fiction - although it usually tends to concentrate on fantasy-
and science-fiction, often with the odd bit of humour thrown in.
Its main source is an Atari ST/TT/Falcon disk magazine by the name of "ST
NEWS" which publishes computer-related articles as well as fiction. "Twilight
World" mostly consists of fiction featured in "ST NEWS" so far, with added
stories submitted by "Twilight World" readers.

SUBMISSIONS

If you've written some good fiction and you wouldn't mind it being published
world-wide, you can mail it to me either electronically or by standard mail.
At all times do I reserve the right not to publish submissions. Do note that
submissions on disk will have to use the MS-DOS or Atari ST/TT/Falcon disk
format on 3.5" Double-or High-Density floppy disk. Provided sufficient IRCs
are supplied (see below), you will get your disk back with the issue of
"Twilight World" on it that features your fiction. Electronic submittees will
get an electronic subscription if so requested.
At all times, please submit straight ASCII texts without any special control
codes whatsoever, nor right justify or ASCII characters above 128. Please use
*asterisks* to emphasise text if needed, start each paragraph with a one-
space indent, don't include empty lines between each paragraph, don't use an
extra space after a period, and use "-" instead of "--" (that's the "Twilight
World" house style). Also remember the difference between possessives and
contractions, only use multiple question marks when absolutely necessary (!!)
and never use other than one (.) or three (...) periods in sequence.

COPYRIGHT

Unless specified along with the individual stories, all "Twilight World"
stories are copyrighted by the individual authors but may be spread wholly or
separately to any place - and indeed into any other magazine - provided
credit is given both to the original author and "Twilight World".

CORRESPONDENCE ADDRESS

I prefer electronic correspondence, but regular stuff (such as postcards!)
can be sent to my regular address. If you expect a reply please supply one
International Reply Coupon (available at your post office), *two* if you live
outside Europe. If you want your disk(s) (if any) returned, add 2
International Reply Coupons per disk (and one extra if you live outside
Europe). Correspondence failing these guidelines will be read (and perused)
but not replied to.
The address:

Richard Karsmakers
P.O. Box 67
NL-3500 AB Utrecht
The Netherlands

Email r.c.karsmakers@stud.let.ruu.nl
(This should be valid up to the summer of 1996 at least)

WHERE TO GET "TWILIGHT WORLD"

The current list of FTP sites where "Twilight World" may be obtained is:

Server www.hials.no (This server specification changed January 1996)
Directory pub/twilight.world/
ftp://www.hials.no/pub/twilight.world/

Server etext.archive.umich.edu
Directory pub/Zines/Twilight_World/
ftp://etext.archive.umich.edu/pub/Zines/Twilight_World/

Server ftp.southwind.net
Directory users/p/python/tworld/
ftp://ftp.southwind.net/users/p/python/tworld/

And the following html page can be referred to, too:

http://arrogant.itc.icl.ie/TwilightWorld/

The latest three issues can be requested with me personally if you email and
ask.

PHILANTROPY

If you like "Twilight World", a spontaneous burst of philantropy aimed at
the postal address mentioned above would be very much appreciated! Please
send cash only; any regular currency will do. Apart from keeping "Twilight
World" happily afloat, it will also help me to keep my head above water as a
student of the English Teacher's Course at Utrecht University. If donations
reach sufficient height they will secure the existence of "Twilight World"
after my studies have been concluded. If not...then all I can do is hope for
the best.
Thanks!

DISCLAIMER

All authors are responsible for the views they express. Also, The individual
authors are the ones you should sue in case of copyright infringements!

OTHER ON-LINE MAGAZINE BLURBS

INTERTEXT is an electronically-distributed fiction magazine which reaches
over a thousand readers on five continents. It publishes fiction from all
genres, from "mainstream" to Science Fiction, and everywhere in between.
It is published in both ASCII and PostScript (laser printer) formats. To
subscribe, send mail to jsnell@ocf.berkeley.edu. Back issues are available
via anonymous FTP at network.ucsd.edu.

ESCENE is a yearly electronic anthology of the Internet's best short fiction
and authors from existing electronic magazines. It is available via the World
Wide Web and in ASCII, PDF and PostScript formats via anonymous FTP at
ftp.etext.org/pub/Zines/eScene/>. Contact series editor J. Carlson at email
address kepi@halcyon.com. The URL is http://www.etext.org/Zines/eScene/.

EOF


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