218 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
218 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
![]() |
|
||
|
_
|
||
|
| \
|
||
|
| \
|
||
|
| | \
|
||
|
__ | |\ \ __
|
||
|
_____________ _/_/ | | \ \ _/_/ _____________
|
||
|
| ___________ _/_/ | | \ \ _/_/ ___________ |
|
||
|
| | _/_/_____ | | > > _/_/_____ | |
|
||
|
| | /________/ | | / / /________/ | |
|
||
|
| | | | / / | |
|
||
|
| | | |/ / | |
|
||
|
| | | | / | |
|
||
|
| | | / | |
|
||
|
| | |_/ | |
|
||
|
| | | |
|
||
|
| | c o m m u n i c a t i o n s | |
|
||
|
| |________________________________________________________________| |
|
||
|
|____________________________________________________________________|
|
||
|
|
||
|
...presents... Clockwork
|
||
|
by Obscure Images
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> a cDc publication.......1991 <<<
|
||
|
-cDc- CULT OF THE DEAD COW -cDc-
|
||
|
______________________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The rain was falling in an erratic pattern, as if it were confused. It
|
||
|
was that kind of day. The waterlogged clouds were dark gray, and so was the
|
||
|
day. She looked out from the glass door for a moment before leaving the warm
|
||
|
house. "Oh shit, I'm going to be late again," she thought. On further
|
||
|
reflection she found that since she was late every day, she was right on time.
|
||
|
Logic like that just can't be beat. Fortunately the walk wasn't very long, a
|
||
|
good thing since the portfolio on her shoulder was as heavy as hell, and it
|
||
|
kept digging into her shoulder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The classroom was already full when she walked in. The teacher ignored
|
||
|
her as she dripped across the room. He had tried to make an example out of her
|
||
|
at the beginning of the semester, but it seemed to make her worse, so he gave
|
||
|
up. She found her usual table in the back of the room empty, fancy that.
|
||
|
Greetings were exchanged with the people sitting around her as she began to
|
||
|
unwrap herself. First went the big green army surplus coat. It was severely
|
||
|
ugly, but it was wool and kept her warm. After owning it for several days she
|
||
|
bonded with it, and was thoroughly in love with it. The next thing to go was
|
||
|
the big furry wool scarf, once again aesthetically unpleasant at first glance,
|
||
|
but it too grew on her. She took off her hat and shook the long brown hair
|
||
|
free for a moment, but quickly tied it back in a ponytail. The hat, which to
|
||
|
her friends looked like a train conductor hat, was placed back on top of her
|
||
|
head, toot toot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To the people, her friends, who were sitting around where she was
|
||
|
performing her biweekly ritual she looked sort of like a robot, but not quite.
|
||
|
The thing is that she would take off the coat and scarf and do the hair/hat
|
||
|
thing and then sit down and wait for the question. It was always asked by
|
||
|
someone, it was part of the ritual, the day wouldn't be right if it was
|
||
|
neglected. The ritual progressed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hey Rebecca, how's your day going?" asked Dave, putting the wheels into
|
||
|
motion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Really shitty, actually. I slept through my English exam, and I am way
|
||
|
behind in all of my other classes."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ritual, in the orthodox form, was complete. The robot metaphor seemed
|
||
|
on the surface to be quite astounding. It was almost the same response to the
|
||
|
same question every time. It was only on very rare occasions that the mask
|
||
|
slipped, a smile formed on her pale white face, and everything wasn't shit. It
|
||
|
never lasted very long though. Something about the way she was made the good
|
||
|
times so much better. It was the thing that kept her friends from abandoning
|
||
|
all hope for her. Weathering the periods between the good times was the hard
|
||
|
part, even the strongest rock will get worn down by the sea. Along the years,
|
||
|
several rocks were eroded away, much to her dismay.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Worlds seemed to build themselves up and then crash down around her. A
|
||
|
game of cosmic cruelty, it seemed to her, a celestial clown holding a carrot in
|
||
|
front of her and yanking it away just as her hand closed. Things always seem
|
||
|
to look different when you are outside looking in.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The class passed by, idle chatter and ritual complaints filled the air
|
||
|
while the students worked on their projects. The time seemed to slow down to a
|
||
|
stop, each minute grinding away in an improbably long amount of time. Rebecca
|
||
|
didn't care, she was working, it kept her away. It was only after she stepped
|
||
|
back and looked down at the work on her desk did the wheels drive forward
|
||
|
again. The work was shit, it wasn't a surprise to her, she assumed it would
|
||
|
turn out badly all along. The others were saying that it looked great, they
|
||
|
were all just lying to protect her feelings. There was no time to do it again,
|
||
|
so it would have to do.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The teacher dismissed the students, and the room was suddenly active with
|
||
|
the rush of people scurrying to pack up and leave, to get back to the dorms
|
||
|
before they stopped serving dinner. Rebecca packed a bit more slowly than the
|
||
|
others, there was no need to beat a clock back to her apartment because the
|
||
|
food would wait. She didn't feel like eating anyway; the constant nausea put
|
||
|
an end to her appetite. On the way out, one of her friends, a rather dopey
|
||
|
looking overweight longhair stopped in her way and asked her if she wanted to
|
||
|
do something that evening. She told him that she'd really like to, but she had
|
||
|
an incredible amount of work to get done, and she wasn't feeling well. He
|
||
|
looked disappointed, but mumbled some sort of feigned jovial remark and
|
||
|
shuffled away, big heavy shoes thumping down the hallway.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It wasn't a lie, not really anyway. She really did have a lot of work to
|
||
|
do, and she really wasn't feeling very well. It was just another part of the
|
||
|
ritual. The worst part about it was that at one point in time they were very
|
||
|
close friends, with a fairly strong emotional bond. There was something to be
|
||
|
said about him at any rate, he never seemed to give up trying. She couldn't
|
||
|
really decide at the moment whether or not it was an appealing trait.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She trudged back to her room in the boarding house, throwing her
|
||
|
belongings to the ground as she walked into the room. She paused to remove the
|
||
|
jacket, scarf, and hat before flopping down on the mattress she slept on. A
|
||
|
battle raged on inside of her mind, one side fighting to get her to do all of
|
||
|
the work that she had to do, the other fighting to get her to forget about the
|
||
|
work and sleep. This time the side of sleep won the battle, so she took off
|
||
|
her clothes and climbed under the blankets and went back to the land of sleep.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Several hours later, she woke up feeling hungry for the first time that
|
||
|
day. After dressing and brushing out her hair a bit she wandered into the
|
||
|
basement, where the kitchen was, and cooked something to eat. Bill was down in
|
||
|
the living room watching something on the television while he drank his cheap
|
||
|
beer. By the end of the evening there would be 24 half-full cans of beer
|
||
|
sitting around on the floor. When Rebecca walked in with her supper, there
|
||
|
were only 2 cans on the floor, so Bill was still coherent. They talked while
|
||
|
she ate and he tossed her a beer, which she happily drank while they chattered.
|
||
|
The time went by quickly and before long there were quite a few cans on the
|
||
|
floor as well as 5 or 6 empty ones on the table by Rebecca.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She wasn't too drunk. It was more of a heavy buzz though she hadn't had a
|
||
|
drink for a while so her tolerance was rock bottom. She wasn't drunk enough,
|
||
|
however, to forget that she had work to do, yet she was drunk enough not to be
|
||
|
able to do it. She gathered her stuff from the kitchen and made it back up the
|
||
|
stairs to her room where she lay back down on the bed and played a tape in the
|
||
|
box next to the bed. The tape faded out as she fell asleep again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The morning kicked her in the stomach with a steel-toed boot. She barely
|
||
|
had time to get to the bathroom before coughing up a stream of vomit. She was
|
||
|
still half asleep as her stomach twisted itself up through her mouth. It was
|
||
|
another morning time ritual, unpleasant but unremarkable as well. When the
|
||
|
heaving stopped, she picked herself up off of the floor, went back to her room,
|
||
|
and came back with her toiletries. After brushing her teeth, she showered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The day was officially started. Rebecca sat down at her desk, not feeling
|
||
|
much like having breakfast, and began to work on the neglected homework. By
|
||
|
the time the work was done, it was time to go to one of her classes. She
|
||
|
debated to see if she really wanted to go to the class, but since she'd missed
|
||
|
the last one she had better go. Before leaving her room she dressed for the
|
||
|
outside: a plaid flannel shirt over the t-shirt she was wearing, a red doughnut
|
||
|
thing to hold her hair back in a ponytail, a bright polyester print skirt over
|
||
|
the black long underwear, the girl-style combat boots, and then as she left,
|
||
|
with her school bag clenched momentarily in her teeth, she put on the old coat
|
||
|
and hat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Another dismal day outside, but then again everyday is dismal here,"
|
||
|
Rebecca thinks as she wanders across campus to where her class is. As she
|
||
|
passes through the quad someone says "nice hat" to her. She replies, "Fuck
|
||
|
you." The rest of the walk is uneventful, and she made it to the class just in
|
||
|
time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The girl that she sat next to in the class was someone that Rebecca
|
||
|
usually tried to avoid. She was the kind of girl that belonged to a sorority
|
||
|
and took business classes. Her hair was tied back in a ponytail, except for
|
||
|
the bangs, which were hairsprayed straight up, like a wall of hair. This was
|
||
|
the kind of girl who was in college, but nobody was quite sure as to how they
|
||
|
got there. As far as most of the male population of the school was concerned,
|
||
|
these girls were easy fucks, so they might as well be around. Most of the male
|
||
|
population of the school were especially hard up for sex. In any case, the
|
||
|
presence of Rebecca around one of these vapid young women was somewhat akin to
|
||
|
holding a match to their wall of hair. Some people never seem to learn when to
|
||
|
mind their own business and this girl was one of them. To her, everyone's
|
||
|
business was her business.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Excuse me, are you feeling all right?" asked the girl to Rebecca's right
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What?" asked Rebecca, feeling a sinking sensation in her stomach
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Are you feeling ok? You just look, you know, really pale."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm feeling fine, why don't you mind your own business."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well geeze, I'm so-rry," she replied with an offended look.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I really hate assholes like her," thought Rebecca as her mind drifted
|
||
|
away from the teacher at the front of the class. Instead her mind focused on
|
||
|
the piece of paper she'd been using to take notes on. Before long she found
|
||
|
herself drawing intricate little designs in a strange spidery style. By the
|
||
|
time the teacher finished talking, most of the page was covered with the
|
||
|
designs along with various words and letters which were drawn in the same sort
|
||
|
of style. She ripped the page out of the notebook and crumpled the paper up.
|
||
|
The class ended and she packed her things up into her bag and went to another
|
||
|
class.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next class was much the same as the class before. Rebecca turned in
|
||
|
her homework and then sat down towards the back of the class. The darkness
|
||
|
began to creep into her mind. The robot wanted out. She couldn't be there any
|
||
|
longer; she abrupty picked up her belongings and left the classroom, tears
|
||
|
beginning to form in her eyes. The gloomy walk home was made worse by the
|
||
|
chemicals in her brain. People turned into faceless puppets, the scenery
|
||
|
became distorted with everything at weird angles. The thoughts ripped through
|
||
|
her mind, she had to be home. She walked faster with every step, breaking into
|
||
|
a run in a few seconds. Her home was within sight, but it didn't seem to help.
|
||
|
The robot was malfunctioning.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The landscape pulled back around her until she reached her room. Once
|
||
|
inside, she lay down on her bed and curled into a ball, hoping to ride through
|
||
|
the storm. Eventually she was exhausted from the panic and fell asleep, into
|
||
|
safety. The morning came quickly and the robot was working again, at least for
|
||
|
the time being. She got up from bed, threw up in the bathroom, took a shower,
|
||
|
and went off to another day's worth of classes.
|
||
|
_ _ ____________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
/((___))\|Demon Roach Undrgrnd.806/794-4362|NIHILISM..............517/546-0585|
|
||
|
[ x x ] |Paisley Pasture......916/673-8412|Ripco II..............312/528-5020|
|
||
|
\ / |Tequila Willy's GSC..209/526-3194|The Works.............617/861-8976|
|
||
|
(' ') |Lunatic Labs.........213/655-0691|Condemned Reality.....618/397-7702|
|
||
|
(U) |====================================================================|
|
||
|
.ooM |Copr. 1991 cDc communications by Obscure Images 07/20/91-#171|
|
||
|
\_______/|All Rights Pissed Away. FIVE YEARS of cDc|
|
||
|
|