Writer :
Neil Wills |
Contact
Writer at : neilwills@cs.com |
Location :
Stamford, England |
Received :
19/02/2002 |
Cyberffluence
©Neil Wills December 2002
ONE
As one door closes another one opens.
When the first one closed on me the whole lot took their cue. Bloody
frenzy of slamming wood. Every hole in every wall sealed up and I was left
with a bunch of redundant keys.
Some might think I
deserved this, indeed, saw it coming but then that’s my wife. She’s
great with ‘I told you so’. Plans, ideas and half-formed ambitions
were atomised and scattered to the wind in the space of a few months.
Perhaps my chagrin has amplified the drama because, Ok, there were a
couple of doors left unlocked but, doors into cupboards allow only a
couple of steps before you hit a wall. Narnia doesn’t exist.
So here I am alone in the internet café. Can’t really afford the hot
chocolate with cream but, hey, in for a penny and so on. I pay with a five
pound note. Not that I haven’t got change. I have but, probably not
quite enough to cover the cost. I could scrabble about in the thin, torn
pockets of my suit but, that would lend credence to that which I deny.
Broke.
I’ll continue the illusion as long as possible. At least outwardly. I
suspect the waitress is aware of the truth. She smiles and adds an extra
dollop of cream unasked for. My gratitude wells up and almost trickles
out. Coughing, I turn away.
I approach the screen in the window seat. I should really be limping.
Crippled and hopeless. Cast into the world of the unwanted. I don’t even
belong there. Is there an under-under class I should apply to join? I
think of Groucho Marx’s disdain for any club which would have him as a
member. Yeah.
‘Are you alright’? A voice enquires. It hits me hard. Am I so visibly
pathetic? Do the Samaritans even stalk cafes looking for trade?
‘Do you want me to log you on’? The voice persists. I turn to see the
waitress smiling at me. I smile back and the bristles on my face feel
stiff. Unused to changing their positions.
‘No, I’m fine thanks. Just working out where I’m going first. You
know, stock market, investments or holidays. That sort of thing’.
Involuntarily I duck and weave my head with the words. I must look like a
wide-boy.
I did indeed used to be wide. My suit bears witness to this. Recently
I’ve deflated like a cheap inner tube. The weight has left me along with
my comforts. My eyes flicker to the side to see if anyone’s watching the
exchange. She speaks again. ‘Log you on’. I agree it might be a good
start. ‘Surf’s up’ she smiles. ‘Let me know if you want more
time’. ‘Thanks’ I say and watch her as she takes her leave.
I log onto my e-mail provider. As I wait for the algorithms to chatter and
the electrickery to function my stomach tingles. ‘Welcome’ I read.
That in itself is depressing. Computers are the play things of the
affluent. I’m effluent.
Luckily the boxes don’t differentiate. Politeness is written into the
codes. Nice. Guess I’ll hang out with computers then. See if I can
replace the woman at the DHS with a box. Come to think of it, the doctor,
the solicitor and the wife. Turn her into a box. Box. Put her in a box. A
spark of passion fizzes weakly to the front of my mind but I manage to
dismiss it.
I scroll down the list of messages and tick the box for delete all. Debt
counsellors. cheap print cartridges, casinos. Anti-virus software? No
need, I have a quilt for that. Thin and ragged with a 70’s geometric
pattern in brown and gold. Helps keep my kidneys warm.
No, as I expected. Nothing of interest. No invitations to interview. No
consultancy needed. My finger hovers over the mouse as I take a final
gander and then…. See it, saw it. Back and forth. Who has sent that? Who
knows my name?
Hey, TT. Open me up.
TT. That’s me TT. My abbreviation. Who knows that? My heart beats fast
at the thought of Docklands again. The light railway. The lift to the
heights of corporate technology. I am being called again. Tarquin Tebbit.
Your ship has come in. Triumphantly my finger stabs the button and my eyes
greedily devour the fantastic news.
Alouitious Haydock.
What?! What’s that mean? Who the hell is Alouitious Haydock? I scroll
down quickly looking for the detail.
IT director? Head hunter for technology group? Nothing. My mouse drags and
clicks in all directions. That’s all.
I stare out of the window until the door bursts open and a group of youths
fall in laughing. I’m not sure I want to share my space with 16 year
olds who have more money than me. My thoughts interrupted I read the
message again and exit without deleting. The cream has sunk into the
chocolate making each mouthful exquisite and I long for a fag. Pity
internet cafes are so PC. Reluctantly I leave, pausing only to smile in
the direction of the waitress. She isn’t looking. Effort wasted, I
wander and wonder to myself.
Throwing the quilt from the sofa I stretch out and turn the
state-of-the-art tv on. Digital in so much as I change the channel with my
finger, it flickers into life with a vitality to match my own.
My wife says ‘Things happen for a reason’. I reflect upon this as I
eat my coco-pops. These own-brands aren’t half bad. The brandy gives the
milk a fresher feel and helps disperse the curds. Shuttering light plays
across the bare walls as the cars pass by. Commuters hurrying home to
loved ones. Dinner on the table. Gentle conversation and wrestling with
the kids. A world of light years away. Things happen for sure.
Hey! Volvo. Recognise the light clusters. Wouldn’t be surprised if this
next one’s a ….Mondeo. Bloody right again. Should have a quiz show.
I’d win it hands down. Head down. Shoulders bowed. On my knees. Steady
Tarquin. Steady. Lighten up man. Get a grip. Things’ll change. Pop up to
the local and have a chinwag. See old ….. Well, mebbe not eh? Can’t
afford it anyway.
I wonder, do they still refund money on lemonade bottles? Been years since
I’ve done that. Always a nice little earner at 11. I’ll nip out later.
See if I can find some. Singles of fags or, ‘Five Park Lane please
hen’ I’d ask. Casual, confident in my Jock accent. Illegal but I’d
get them. Always.
TWO
White and sterile save for darkened windows into the inner room the design
is stark, functional with no deference to comfort.
Through the window light
is dimly seen. A matrix of neon green, violet and red boxes hang in the
dark. They are still but if you were able to look closely you would see
each line is moving, rolling and spinning around itself. From time to time
a section of colour flips out and dies. It is soon replaced and the
harmony of the shape restored. Occasionally a crackle breaks the silence.
‘OK Philo. Got the reclaim grid?’ A shadow moves. The beams are broken
as he walks through them. They reform after he has passed. Philo nods and
grins. It is plain he is enjoying himself. His baggy trousers are slung
low in the fashion of the time. His hooded head and sunglasses complete
the image. Surf or Nerd. There is no board visible. The voice speaks again
as Philo consults the metal tablet. Light faintly glimmers as his fingers
fly. ‘Philo we’re going at the low grade stuff today. We’ve had some
interest from our sponsors in usage patterns and tail off. They’re
looking at competition and the effects on the business usage and
cycles’. Philo taps his board again. ‘Alright Mr Vader’.
‘Philo. Don’t piss me
off with that old film crap. We’re paying you and your pal good money
for enjoying yourselves. Don’t push it’. Philo’s voice drops lower.
‘Sorry Mr Bader’. Bader’s voice assumes the calm timbre of the
scientist. His hand strokes a pad on the wall next to the window. The hole
is filled with a pale and gently moving mist. Colours flood the hologram
and paint in the delicate shapes and forms of a control panel. Briefly
seen through the diffused light Philo plays with the superimposed icons.
As he turns to the matrix floating behind him he hums a tune. With a
flourish and a gentle skip he presses the pad in his hand and watches. A
thin white light springs from the control and meets one of the segments
above him. Slowly it tracks the grid until a junction makes it veer away
on another route. Philo’s sunglasses reflect the patterned screen in his
hands. He mutters to himself. He turns to look at Bader through the
hologram. ‘Ready for burn’. With a gleeful smile!
he points his gloved hand at the screen. ‘Rock and roll’!
THREE
My coat is pulled close
around me as I glide from shadow to shadow. Like Zorro, light forms no-go
areas for me and the bag is awkward to carry. Shh! Bloody bottles. I grin
in spite of myself as I remember. Tanner a bottle. Inflation must’ve
increased that. I relish the thought, the jingle of coins in my pockets. I
am rummaging in the bags at the back of the building when I freeze. There
is a snap and rattle of chains not 5 feet from where I lurk. With a jerk
the door swings back and a trembling falsetto breaks the night. ‘Who’s
there? Come on I know you’re there. What do you want?’. I don’t
move. She won’t see me if I stand still. I have forgotten about the
light from the open door. Trapped like a rabbit I hesitate. Which way to
run? It’s pointless of course but I try. My legs flap at and slap the
rubbish bags which, like the shallows of the tide try and hold me. I
grimly struggle toward the alleyway. My shopping bag clanks and rattles in
my wake. I am almost there when I my l!
eg connects with the edge of something sharp and I fall beneath the sea of
waste. As I hit the ground profanity eases my pain. ‘Bugger.
Bollocking, buggering bollocks!’
Blood is soaking through the suit. Cost me £600 Two years ago. Shit. I
look up at the door but no-one is there. Thank God for small mercies.
I’ll sneak off and that’ll be that. ‘Bollocks’ I spit. Mostly at
my stupidity but also, at least a little, at the buggering, bollocking
world.
‘There’s no need to be quite so rude’.
Shit. I look wildly for the source. She’s right next to me. In the
shadow I can just make out the blonde edges of her halo. Clusters of curls
ring her head and her dark eyes study me intently. She reminds me of
something. Alien. Grace.
Calmly she stares at me. Not at all frightened now. She has bearded the
Monster.
FOUR
Philo lifted his hand in greeting as he trotted down the spiral, chrome
staircase. The chrome floors and chrome walls disrupted the shapes and
images of the punters hovering in groups around their selection screens.
Diggy rested high in his chrome armchair directing response to selections
and transactions. A mini holo hovered half a metre from his head. His
fingers pushed and pressed the coloured frames and icons and the punters
collected their holo-discs in their carriers.
As Philo advanced toward the back wall of the store he allowed his hood to
slip off revealing curly blonde hair. His baggy jeans and top echoed the
dress of some of the other shoppers but most of the kids wore the latest
carbon basket threads. The colours spun and changed according to the
settings embedded in the weave. He shook his head as he walked. What
d’you expect from airheads and kids? Philo ignored the critical looks
while acknowledging his fellow-travellers. The congnoscenti. They knew the
score. What was really important.
A door, as though
embarrassed to be seen in such a wall, grew faintly visible. He stepped
through onto the rubberised floor. Light was replaced by darkness and
music. Real music played by real people, artists. He paused, grinning, as
he soaked up the atmosphere. Rock and Roll.
In the gloom he could just make out the stages hovering a few centimetres
above the floor. On one, a white clad figure gyrated his hips while the
rhinestones on his wide belt glittered. An adoring group of youths jigged
and jumped in response to the image’s pointing finger. Elvis, clearly,
is not dead. And, as Philo glanced at another stage he saw that in fact he
had multiplied. From Viva Las Vegas back to Rock-a-hoola all at the same
time.
In the distance and through an archway he could see tables and the bar but
his interest was swayed to the flash of a start-up. As the stage began to
take form and the colours above it began to build he stood transfixed,
smiling broadly. In excitement he watched as the band began to perform. A
bit on the early side for his taste but still worth the watch. Quickly he
identified the girl responsible. She was new. Dark and slim with short
hair. She was very pretty, wore straight leg jeans and T shirt and boy,
was she into the music. Perhaps he might try 1969 for himself. Quickly he
moved to her side. Completely lost in her selection she ignored him.
‘Maximum R and B’ screamed the poster behind the group. The drummer
was mad for it.
‘Cool’ said Philo. She glanced at him then back at the stage. ‘Shh’!
He tried again. ‘Who is it’? She frowned and repeated. ‘Shh! I’m
listening. I’ve only paid for a shorty’. ‘Sorry’. Philo folded his
arms and watched. He was impressed by the energy and the wild banging
cyclical strokes of the guitarist. The singer’s hair shone and the sweat
stuck strands to his forehead. ‘Hope I die before I get old’. Good
lyrics thought Philo. The holo began to fade and the sound diminished
until all was dark again. Philo was relieved but also disappointed. He
could now ask her. ‘So. Who…’?
Brusquely she answered him
then looked him up and down slowly. ‘That’s right. Didn’t think
you’d like them. You look too ….er baby retro’. He glanced down at
his jeans. ‘Baby retro. I’ve never been called that. What’re you
then? Retro-Chick’? She looked scathingly at him. ‘Retro-Chic. New
boy. Get an education before you come in here again’. Her teeth were
white and neat and her lips glistened as she spoke. Nice. Before he could
riposte she pushed past him and strode toward the exit. Philo stared after
her. He removed his sunglasses and stooped to rub furiously at his calf.
The itch was starting again.
FIVE
I notice the large and heavy torch in her hand. I suppose just in case I
get uppity. ‘Get up’. her voice is smooth and clean. I like it. I nod
manfully but grimace as I try to rise. My trouser leg is flapping open.
The blood looks black in the half-light. ‘Come inside and I’ll see
what I can do. Do anything wrong and I’ll break your arm. Understand’?
I smile weakly and hobble after her. It’s as if the bag-sea parts for
her only to close for me. I still grip my bag of gold.
‘I’m sorry for startling you.’ I try. Just to break the ice really.
She is behind the counter switching switches and unboxing a box of
plaster. I see her place a bandage on the espresso machine. I hope she
isn’t going to heat it up first.
‘Want to tell me what you were doing’?
If I do, it might diminish any grandiose claims I may have later on in the
conversation. She lifts the torch and stares into my face. I mumble.
‘Gonna sell the bottles’. She looks up from behind the machine. Is she
smiling? Smirking? I’m not too sure but she continues. ‘Wouldn’t you
rather tell me the truth? It may stop me involving the police’. I cannot
bear to look her in the face. If my leg didn’t hurt so much I’d be
rubbing my toe back and forth across the tiles as I answer again, head
down. ‘Gonna sell them ….at the newsagents’. She snorts and I look
up. She is laughing which makes her blond curls fall forward. She reaches
up and throws them aside as she looks straight at me. Still laughing she
asks. ‘How much for each bottle you get’? I shrug and admit I don’t
know but we used to get a tanner each so with inflation …… She
interrupts me. ‘When did you last try’? I grin. ‘Thirty years
ago’.
Her hands are slim and well formed. Smooth and strong but delicate. The
nails well manicured sport clear varnish. Her cuticles are ….well, cute.
I like hands. And teeth. They hold my leg. The hands that is. She cleans
the long, deep, moon-shaped fissure in my flesh while I struggle not to
whimper. As she applies the bandage she looks up at me.
‘What do you do’? She asks. ‘When not recycling lemonade bottles or
sitting in cafes’?
Clearing my throat I go for honesty. I don’t think she’ll be taken in
by any concoction of mine. Maybe on a good day when I’ve a belly full of
food and a hefty consultancy contract in my pocket. Not today though.
‘I have my own company’. The hands stop. She stares at me then ‘What
does this …..company do’? Bugger! ‘To tell the truth, nothing. At
least yet. It does exist but I’ve yet to source the funding’.
….’Honestly’. She continues. ‘Were the bottles part of the funding
plan’?
‘No. They were to buy cigarettes’.
‘Can’t you get another job while you are setting up the business’?
‘I have one. I work at the concrete factory’.
‘Can’t that fund the project’?
‘That funds my wife. ….Ex wife’.
SIX
He set off for the selection tablets, hands thrust into his pockets. With
a backwards glance he saw she had gone. A sense of disappointment stayed
with him until the selector switches glowed under his hand. Responding to
the prompt he searched the lists until he found it. The headings were
split into decades. His finger stroked the 1970s icon and the index grew
into focus.
There it was. He’d
planned and saved for this for a while and now the time had come. The code
presented, he waited. With the customary fizz, the stage began to form in
front of him. He was aware of other shadows joining him. A familiar voice
called. ‘Philo, Hi’. The stocky shape of Tigger came into his
peripheral view. He would not take his eyes from the holo. Didn’t want
to miss a single second. The voice carried on ‘What we got today?
Something obscure, exotic’?
Philo acknowledged him with a short response.
‘BeBop Deluxe’.
SEVEN
The huge, steel-framed canopies tower over the dirty floors of the
factory. Panels of glass high up over the workers allow some light in.
They are streaked and filthy collecting a yellow film which in turn
attracts and clutches to itself any passing particle of dust. The sunlight
is choked. Shut out for good. Freezing winds out of Russia screech across
the North Sea and batter the towers of the installation. The sheds stand
open to the elements at one end like giant metal windsocks, inviting
bitterness and resentment to flourish. Us and them. The workers and the
office staff. Secretaries. Bosses. Toiling in the dirty, dusty, cement
covered landscapes. A Land of Mordor. Orcs. They make decisions affecting
us from within their cosy burrows. Hobbitt hegemony.
There is also me. I push my barrow around the site. Dirty white stained
boots splash through unevenly formed puddles of filth. The shift stretches
endlessly increasing the misery of physical labour. Wind batters me. Rain
spatters me. Closing matters to me. I am in sales. Was in sales. Want to
be back in sales. I am a ‘cubie’. I work in the laboratory testing
concrete strength. No white coat or comfy surroundings. Laboratory is a
misnomer. Dirty shed is more apposite. We test the concrete strength then
throw the cubes away. Mind numbing. The guys on the shop floor think
it’s cushy for the lab boys. We all think it’s cushy for the office
workers. Everyone thinks it’s cushy for the bosses.
The walls of the ‘rest area’ are papered with papers. Newspapers. More
exactly page 3s from newspapers. The toilet walls are evidence of time
warp which transports sinister, juvenile poets and artists in at night to
decorate.
I sit here and listen to talk of sport, women and, strangely, in this
filthy building, fish and birds. Aquarists and ornithologists talk with
passion of their recreation while others pore over the day’s racing
fixtures. A moment of portent is looming but I do not realise it. A word
half-heard reaches me through the babble and smoke. Where have I heard it
before? My mind scans back and forth through jumbled images looking for
the thread. Alouitious. What was that again? I focus upon the man with the
sports paper and tune in to his discussion. Five to one. I begin to lose
interest. They are talking of racing. I continue my solitary thinking
waiting for the whistle to blow. Inevitably the lonely howl signals us
back to the shop floor.
We lever our weary limbs
off the benches and head for the doors. The man in front is the sports
paper reader I had listened to. I can just see the black type-face jutting
from under his armpit. The word I can see is familiar too. A wild, stupid
thought occurs but the weight of my barrow chases it away.
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