937 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
937 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
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SARKO
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Sun February 20, 1994 Volume 1 : Issue 1 ISSN 1022-1069
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How much mass
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is needed
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to populate a world....
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CONTENTS, #1.1 (Feb 20,1994)
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001 <1.1a> Yue Lan - the 14th day of the 7th moon May 13, 1993 Shatin
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002 <1.2a> pointing and grouting the Wah To Bldg June 11, 1993 Shatin
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003 <1.0> "The vacuum whispers nothing" May 15,1993 Shatin
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004 <1.0> the Barrows May 15, 1993 Shatin
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005 <1.1> Tivot & The Bishop 1 September 2, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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006 <1.0a> "Short-haired goblins" September 2, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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007 <1.2> "transients and trolls" August 25, Ha Wo Che
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007 <1.0a> Tivot & The Bishop 2 September 2, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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009 <1.0a> "Whole Geosectors were left trashed" September 2, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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010 <1.0> "network layer packets" July 5, 1993 Shatin
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011 <1.2> "The machines were putting out another fire" Aug 25, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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012 <2.1> Tivot & The Bishop 3 September 2, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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Notes:
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Yue Lan <1.0> December 15, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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Prins <1.0> December 16, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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Cisterns <1.0> December 17, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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Collectors <1.0> December 19, 1993 Ha Wo Che
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Ma Kok Riots <1.1> September 23, 1993 Shatin
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Sarko is journal of works-in-progress published bi-monthly.
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Subscriptions are available at no cost electronically from
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sarko-request@mach.hk.super.net. Put "sarko-request" in the
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subject and anything you want in the body of the message.
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You can find me in Hong Kong by voice (852) 605-7212, fax
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(852) 605-7238 or by snail mail at: d.i.h. press PO Box
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1010, Shatin, NT, Hong Kong.
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Unless otherwise stated Sarko is copyrighted (c) Brad
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Collins. All Rights Reserved. This is not public domain,
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it is Literary Freeware. You are encouraged to copy and
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distribute these texts for non-commercial use as long as
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this notice is attatched.
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These are completely original literary works by Brad
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Collins, who bears all customary responsibilities for its
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contents and arrangement. The characters and events
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portrayed herein are fictional; any resemblance to other
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characters living or dead is entirely coincidental.
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---------------------------------------
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Yue Lan - the 14th day of the 7th moon.
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in the Barrows
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The gates of Hell would soon close,
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the ghosts having eaten their fill and sent packing
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for another year.
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Scattered piles of smoldering ash
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formed loose rings like necklaces round the cisterns,
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dotted with the remains of apples, oranges and oblong purple prins stuck thick
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like pin cushions with the burnt stubs of joss sticks.
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People, still squatting,
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fed money into the flames, the eerie
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flicker projecting dancing shadows and shifting smoke
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curling round the blackened limestone rustication.
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---------------------------------------
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pointing and grouting the Wah To Bldg.
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in the Barrows
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High above, the spiderwork was coming down, piece by piece
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as each pole is cut free, and hand over hand drops to
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clatter, muffled, onto a Mitsubishi flatbed bobbing gently
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in low pockets of mist hanging in heavy pools, growing dim
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in the fading light.
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The first stars of the evening were fading into place;
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another moonless night wrapping the weary figures moving on
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the bamboo in pale blue hues, masking their determination
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to fill the load and go home.
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The floods kick in, casting oblong arcs of illumination,
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giving the mass shape, welding the fragil geometry of pale
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bamboo and green netting to the building together whole,
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even as it's dismantled and left forever incomplete, a
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labyrinth with no map to guide its way in or out....
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For a few precious moments the scaffold balances, poised
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between worlds. A willful arresting of entropy is at work
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here, percolating the vast vanquished ether itself, both
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revealing and concealing something...as yet unnamed and
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terrible in its lack of actuality.
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---------------------------------------
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The vacuum whispers nothing. There are only clumsy blunt
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stumps where once there were passions, pains and stridings.
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No choice but to keep moving, keeping warm, keeping busy,
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never able to risk stopping long enough for the exhaustion
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to clear.... Every and all is bashed into submission by
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the sheer size of the thing. It's part of the service you
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see. Fiber-optic channels and runnels -- strung along the
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underground weave, cover the planet in an upholstery of
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glass, a data fabric of light.... The satellites and
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sublights -- and the spooky transmitters, talking through
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the stars... linking the layered gridwork of windows and
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orphans, of redundant dumps and feeds. It can all be
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spliced together from any one of a million couplings,
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interfacing the network of data, of intelligence, of brute
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mechanical muscle, of gossamer emotive resilience.... Gawd,
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ain't it all grand, the whole silly organism, and ain't it
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fried, fried, that no one can ever be alone again. Can't
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even plow yer 'ol lady without a voyeuristic universe of
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acronyms being in on it, the FRB, PLO, the BBC, CYO and the
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NKOA all having it down, down to the exact moment you blow
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yr wad -- temperature flux, calorie burn, fluid volume, the
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precise dimension of the wet spot.... No need for death
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rattles, faked climaxes, holding your breath, wiping that
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large snot on the underside of your chair -- it's all been
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recorded, measured, in infrared, ultraviolet and
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electromagnetic, in precise atomic clumpings and lumpings
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into and onto infinity. Big Brother? The Big lie --
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cause yes he's watching, recording, measuring every
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drop of saliva with a Pavlovian obsession, marking and
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mapping the position of every clipped toenail even as they
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fall.... But he doesn't care....
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---------------------------------------
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the Barrows
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The upper galleries were choked with the stench of a
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generational accumulation of organic detritus: goblin nests
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full of chicken and rat bones, looted rubbish and grey-green
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goblin shit, doper's shooting galleries speckled with drops
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of dry blood and broken droppers, under shifting drifts of
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used pump sticks and melt-blisters, suicides, in various
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stages of decomposure or mummification, depending on air
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currents or disposition, uncountable and undiscovered even
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by the rats. . . all composting and fermenting, feeding the
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wretched wraiths and barrow wight's insatiable desire to
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become tangible, forever wandering the lower galleries,
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taunted with the promise of substance. . . .
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---------------------------------------
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Tivot & The Bishop 1
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"Continental drift my ass," thought Tivot as he
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picked his way down a greasy wet back alley in the Barrows
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behind the not inconsiderable stink of Bishop's bulk,
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blazing a sweaty trail through the labyrinth of cardboard
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and mounds of sodden, rotting ruffage that smelled like
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shit in the stagnant heat.
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"Where the fuck do you get off talking about
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continental drift? Do you really think anyone actually
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believes you know what you're talking about?"
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"It's a known fact that girls go for, you know,
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intellectual types," Bishop said flourishing a finger as he
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kicked aside a massive chunk of snot green foam rubber.
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"Girls aren't that stupid.... continental drift....
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shit," Tivot said noticing a slice of mold-riddled white
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bread that had adhered to his leg like a lesion.
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High above the squat Soobish stonework rose a
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scatter of Mooter spires braiding thirty-floors into the
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humidity, interspacing and contrasting the sharp-cornered
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colourless Swathu granite and disintegrating concrete
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towers, encased in a rusting lacework of braces, brackets,
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pipes and ductwork, he resulting lattice becoming a
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corroding self-replicating loop. A makeshift patchwork of
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aluminum cans and discarded wire of varying gauges, shore up
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the equilibrium, providing grist to rust and molder,
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precipitating out as fine black particles, coating and
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coagulating with the acid rainwater then hardening to form
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the cement holding the barrows together, obscuring and
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maintaining the sophistry of conduits, cable-drops and
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railholes, protecting the anonymity of fiber strung
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haphazzard through and between buildings, masking surfaces
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with an absorbant non-reflective grease, keeping line of
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sight clean in the radio, micro-wave and infarred.
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---------------------------------------
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Short-haired goblins, (proudly sporting tunics and breeches
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crudely fashioned from mildewing yellow polyethylene weave
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bags looted from a supermarket in Ma Kok during last weeks
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blackout) and the odd lobotomized Mooter had begun to creep
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out of their daylight nests and warrens and were picking
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through the debris, dropping the already half-rotten fruit
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into canvas sacks, talons clicking and scratching the cobblestone.
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But it was all strangely quite. Even the obnoxious cackle of
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Goblins that normally echoed throughout the city at night was
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absent. The few gangs brave enough to come out this early,
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moved nervously with muted tension. Occasionally, one would
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break out in a short crack of laughter, throttled back into
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silence by their fellows before warily peering this way and that
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on the lookout for the odd malingering ghost, perhaps trying to
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get in one last snack before the gates closed.
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---------------------------------------
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transients and trolls, wearing shit-stained trousers
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and year old beards with more lice than hair,
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slept on corrugated divans, dozing in modal chemical states,
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as if the alley were a bunk house, molecular sparks
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zipping through their veins, burping and farting
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inflammable anthracite mineral dreams with erratic wait-states
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---------------------------------------
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Tivot & The Bishop 2
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An old mangy tomcat sat in a puddle of light, it's
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tail bobbed, lazily torturing a cockroach the size of a
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small rat while an old woman, clumsily stalked the cat with
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a rusty machete, her round leathery face punctured by a
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fixed toothless grin, crooning, "Mao Mao, Mao Mao" in a
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thick Swathu accent.
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"Fucking old bag.... " Tivot mumbled as they
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brushed past just as she brought down the blade in a smooth
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deft arc neatly lopping off the cat's head, its mouth
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stuffed full of cockroach legs.
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"Tivot, did you see--"
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"Fucking witch should be put down."
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"Tivot, she's gonna eat that cat."
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"Put down like a mad dog. The whole fucking lot of
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'em."
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Tivot picked up what looked for all the world like
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a giant plastic paddle from a gallon sized Hoodsie-cup for
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some fat little kid grown to gigantic proportions through
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the intervention of some mad scientist... and proceeded to
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scrape off the wet plaster-like slice of Wonder from his
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leg.
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"Can't be very safe," Bishop said.
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"Huh?"
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"That cat, can't be safe to eat--"
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"No-fucking-shit Bishop," tossing aside the paddle
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in disgust.
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Behind them now, a group of Goblins had
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materialized and were wrestling with the old woman for the
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dead cat. Laughing and poking each other in the eyes, one
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grabbed the cat head and threw it, hitting another Goblin
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on the nose who in turn threw it at the old woman. The cat
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head glanced off her ear, smearing the side of her head
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with cat blood, "Pok kai, maw kwai!" the old woman
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screeched, waving her machete.
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---------------------------------------
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Whole Geosectors were left trashed after the fracas --
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it'll be a knock down, kick 'em in the balls fight to the
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death brawl now. No room for measured responses or
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controlled escalation -- this is a war of alembic tensions
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where there is only the probability wave, a roulette wheel
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waiting for the magic wand to tap thrice. Tap, Tap, Tap
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Gotcha! Yr actualized sucker, bend over....
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There are tears in his eyes, as the poor bugger, rubbing
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his raw, red ass, slowly walks offstage, tiny prisms
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fracturing the light, matrixing and actually correcting his
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sight. Not just an optical correction but correcting his
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very soul....
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Suddenly, for the first time in his life he is sane. His
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vision clearing even as his ass is still smarting, tiny
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runnels of sperm mixing with the K-Y running down his
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sweaty chill legs, but he is sane!
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Like a mainline revelation the sanity hits home,
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momentarily frying his brain before stabilizing, to float
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high on an epiphanal cloud, starting to solidify,
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separating from the wave, taking .... form
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---------------------------------------
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network layer packets
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in the pipe
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with a beginning and an end
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---------------------------------------
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The machines were putting out another fire,
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in the Lam Kau Mow Primary School
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abandoned in the '93 riots
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just south of Ma Kok station,
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no one was told --
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the system was self-correcting
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the building woke in time, to document its own demise,
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each layer taking care of its own, cameras running
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their spectral hash, recording rats escapeing through
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corroded melt-sheets, sealing the windows, the grid
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shutting down in increments, thermostats encased in
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wire cages in classrooms, blinking dead as each
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circuit is consummed, each drop ticked off, each loop terminated as they melted, mapping the topology
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of the growing blindspot.
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---------------------------------------
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Tivot & The Bishop 3
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Even at this hour, the crashing tumble of mahjong
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tiles being mixed, filtered down from somewhere above,
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bringing the reassurance of annoyance, like the single thin
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stream of water breaking the tension in a diving pool,
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staving off stagnation, allowing passage between worlds.
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It was as if, if the silence were ever allowed to settle,
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it would solidify and harden, forming another impenetrable
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barrier that no amount of proximity could break, signaling
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the final isolation by the demiurge, that ultimate of
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control freaks, not understanding that it was loneliness
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that always kills first....
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The alley intersected with other alleys connecting
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to one road or another, framing brief illuminations from
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bright yellow lamps, the light capturing a jumble of
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orbiting tiggers high above the occasional lone figure
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pissing against a wall or gaunt, bare chested hawkers,
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wearing white cotton shorts and plastic clogs, tapping out
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a two-four beat with metal shears on the edge of boiling
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pots of fish balls and various shards of internal organs,
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shooting shadows to sweep and probe the alleys, forced like
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ghosts and the light propelling them, to travel in straight
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lines.
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All of this cloak and scamper was starting to wear
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thin with the Tivot who had just gotten word from Gothot
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that they had to pack up the dig (three months early) and
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move her precious rig, Yurts, power plants, alcohol and
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assorted sex toys that Gothot's entourage of Grad students,
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groupies, technicians and low-rent burglars had amassed to
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yet another god forsaken hole, probably without the grace
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of a decent pub.
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Tivot didn't have much respect for archaeologists,
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lumping them in with Tapeworms, Accountants and people who
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ate with their mouths open on his shit list. But then,
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nobody much cared what Tivot thought and Tivot had the
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sense to keep his opinions to himself and take the contract
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when it came along.
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The Gothot job had saved their ass, no question,
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but that was now a long time past and Tivot was getting
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antsy. He wasn't running no goddamn trucking service.
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Tivot was no company man.
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It was times like this that Tivot kicked himself
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for not getting a local interface. It's not as not as if
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it was difficult, any of a hundred shops he walked past
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|||
|
daily sold them. Tivot'd had a socket job when he was a
|
|||
|
teenager and it would have been easy to replace the hard
|
|||
|
bump, matching his skin behind his ear with a local
|
|||
|
splinter. He'd been on Canter nearly eight months and his
|
|||
|
splinter was only able to pick up one feed.
|
|||
|
The fundies up on the mesa, had set up their own
|
|||
|
feed, blasting the entire geosector with a constant barrage
|
|||
|
of preaching that gave Tivot a headache, and was designed
|
|||
|
to drown out or preferably burn out any competing net.
|
|||
|
He could have used a flasher, he had a lovely
|
|||
|
Motorola model he'd bought off of an AWOL dit on Elwell,
|
|||
|
which could have filtered out the fundie feed for him. But
|
|||
|
Tivot never liked having the thing hovering behind him,
|
|||
|
watching him like that all of the time.
|
|||
|
It'd been weird, that first few weeks after they
|
|||
|
arrived, not being able to get a feed on the street. Not
|
|||
|
hearing Hector mumbling to himself just under the
|
|||
|
threshold. Not having lookup or being able to close yer
|
|||
|
eyes and plug into the local e-drops to see what was
|
|||
|
happening down the street or knowing when it was gonna rain
|
|||
|
or any of a million things flashing across yer retina,
|
|||
|
competing with the outside world.
|
|||
|
It was so quiet, so empty and lonely outside the
|
|||
|
net. It was a quiet that Tivot hadn't known in decades, a
|
|||
|
quiet that once you got used to, became difficult to give
|
|||
|
up....
|
|||
|
"Are you sure this is where Barf told us to meet
|
|||
|
him?"
|
|||
|
"Yup, this is where he bought those rice cookers and
|
|||
|
ground dog meat last week."
|
|||
|
"Fucking Barf."
|
|||
|
"Why don't you lay off. It's been three, at least
|
|||
|
three years now, since-- "
|
|||
|
"Since he screwed-us-over is what. We almost got
|
|||
|
stuck on this shit-hole fer good. And why? Because of
|
|||
|
that dried up shit-fer-brains Barf and his get rich quick
|
|||
|
schemes."
|
|||
|
"Three years is three years Tivot. I think we
|
|||
|
should give 'em another chance. If the tables were
|
|||
|
turned--"
|
|||
|
"He'd be outta here faster than he could blow his
|
|||
|
nose!"
|
|||
|
"No. He--"
|
|||
|
"Faster than he could blow his nose Bishop."
|
|||
|
"Not, I mean Barf isn't like that and you know, I
|
|||
|
mean.... Three years Tivot. Let's hear him out okay? I
|
|||
|
got a feeling he's on to something. Did you hear his
|
|||
|
voice? He hasn't sounded so, that excited since.... It's
|
|||
|
been a long time, you gotta admit. And Barf does have a
|
|||
|
good idea once in a--"
|
|||
|
"The man has a whiffle ball for a brain!"
|
|||
|
"You're no great brain yourself Tivot."
|
|||
|
"Hah! This from a man who. . . . you and your
|
|||
|
continental drift!"
|
|||
|
"Go ahead, laugh. You'll see, the next time we're
|
|||
|
in a bar and all you can talk about is how big your--"
|
|||
|
"Fuck off--"
|
|||
|
"I, I'll start talking about plate tectonics and we
|
|||
|
will see, We will see who impresses the girls."
|
|||
|
"Yeah right.... Where the hell are we anyway?"
|
|||
|
"Dog meat. During the day this is the biggest dog meat
|
|||
|
market in Canter. You know Barf... he gets real
|
|||
|
sentimental. Ever since he found out that he was Korean--"
|
|||
|
"What the fuck does that have to do with eating dog
|
|||
|
meat?"
|
|||
|
"I don't know, something he read..."
|
|||
|
"Barf can't read."
|
|||
|
"He can too. He just doesn't... very often. When
|
|||
|
was the last time that you. I mean okay so he doesn't read
|
|||
|
very... maybe he heard it in a bar or something."
|
|||
|
"Or something. Korean my ass. Barf ain't Korean.
|
|||
|
He was born somewhere in the Jushrut."
|
|||
|
"Maybe his ancestors were Korean," he said as they
|
|||
|
rounded a corner, obscured by a congregation of stacked
|
|||
|
toilet bowls and Mooter stink troughs, stained in yellows,
|
|||
|
browns and greens.
|
|||
|
"Bull shit... I tell yeah, he's got a whiffle ball
|
|||
|
fer--" Bishop felt his foot splash slightly in something wet.
|
|||
|
"Oh shit!" A headless body lay sprawled in a broad
|
|||
|
expanse of blood and shards of brain and bone. It took a
|
|||
|
second before Tivot recognized the clothes. "It's Barf."
|
|||
|
"It can't be Barf."
|
|||
|
"He's dead."
|
|||
|
"No, no he's--"
|
|||
|
"You gotta have a head to--"
|
|||
|
"We could revive him."
|
|||
|
"He has no fucking head. He's de--"
|
|||
|
"He can't--"
|
|||
|
"Bishop, his head was burnt clean off," he said,
|
|||
|
grabbing his arm. "I know dead. Barf is dead." Tivot
|
|||
|
looked around the alley, his heart pounding in his mouth.
|
|||
|
But looking for what? There were only beer bottles, a half
|
|||
|
empty jar of cheese whiz, a small mound of mouldy pizza
|
|||
|
crusts and the frayed remnants of a cream coloured
|
|||
|
acceleration couch ripped from a Mooter transport being
|
|||
|
embraced by the widening pool of Barf's blood. The acrid
|
|||
|
smell of burnt flesh and ozone hung heavy in the thick
|
|||
|
still air. The alley, seamless slime-covered ceramic walls
|
|||
|
with bricked up windows or doors, extended up into the
|
|||
|
gloom. "We gotta get outta here."
|
|||
|
"We can't just leave him here. It's Barf," Bishop
|
|||
|
said, lifting one foot from the sticky puddle of Barf.
|
|||
|
"They may come back."
|
|||
|
"Poor Barf."
|
|||
|
"The bastard almost got us killed with him."
|
|||
|
"It's still Barf. Barf is still Barf Tivot. We
|
|||
|
just can't leave him for the rats. It's not. . . decent."
|
|||
|
"Barf musta been holding."
|
|||
|
"I didn't think Barf would ever die."
|
|||
|
"It musta been pretty big."
|
|||
|
"God, it burnt his whole fucking head off!"
|
|||
|
"Musta been holding something big to get popped
|
|||
|
like that."
|
|||
|
"You can't revive him without a head huh?"
|
|||
|
Tivot shook his head.
|
|||
|
They made their way down the alley, leaving bloody
|
|||
|
tracks that quickly dried brown in the hot dry air. Tivot
|
|||
|
stopped short of the end of the alley, peering cautiously
|
|||
|
into the near empty street peppered with piles of smoking
|
|||
|
ash. Several Floxies, in dark tattered robes, glided
|
|||
|
silently through the puddles of light, their brown fur
|
|||
|
looking grey in the gloom. A lone rice-paper banknote,
|
|||
|
having escaped incineration, fluttered and bobbed above a
|
|||
|
heat vent in the street.
|
|||
|
There were always eyes in the barrows. It was the
|
|||
|
eyes that got to you... glowing behind grates in storm
|
|||
|
drains, from between shapeless piles of rags, cardboard and
|
|||
|
plastic heaped in bricked-up doorways, from barred windows
|
|||
|
barely seen over the drip and between holes in corrugated
|
|||
|
eaves, flashing from turret slits and peep holes in
|
|||
|
haphazard barricades and fortified doors and gates, through
|
|||
|
a million cameras and e-drops that were little more than
|
|||
|
flat matt squares above doors, ringing utility poles,
|
|||
|
street signs and discarded bits of rubbish left for dead or
|
|||
|
just to look that way....
|
|||
|
"Tivot!" Bishop said in a stage whisper. It was
|
|||
|
finally beginning to sink in that they were in deep shit.
|
|||
|
"We're gonna die!" Bishop fell back against a wall,
|
|||
|
gasping for breath. "Tivot, whatta we gonna do? What if
|
|||
|
the net--"
|
|||
|
"This is the backwash stupid. They don't have
|
|||
|
hardware like that out here. Unless--"
|
|||
|
"We're gonna die Tivot."
|
|||
|
"It coulda been the local--"
|
|||
|
"Slugs? The fucking police?" Bishop groaned,
|
|||
|
dropping his head into his hands. "We're gonna die. Some
|
|||
|
flasher will drop outta the smog and pop us. I just know--"
|
|||
|
"Pull yourself together. We'll get out of this."
|
|||
|
"This is not good Tivot."
|
|||
|
"You hear me? We'll get outta this." Tivot took a
|
|||
|
deep breath. "We just gotta get outta here." Tivot
|
|||
|
squinted into the gloom, hoping it was clear. "Come on."
|
|||
|
"Where are we going?"
|
|||
|
Tivot hesitated, unsure of what to do. "The ship,"
|
|||
|
he finally said, "Screw Gothot and her fucking Pebble
|
|||
|
Boxes. We've got to get outta here before anyone finds
|
|||
|
Barf."
|
|||
|
"But we didn't kill him."
|
|||
|
"You got any better ideas?"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
---------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Notes
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
---------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Yue Lan
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When Muk Lin's, mother died she found herself traveling
|
|||
|
down the long road to hell. The road was lined with the
|
|||
|
ghosts of people who had died of hunger. Every time she
|
|||
|
tried to eat, the hungry ghosts turned the food in her bowl
|
|||
|
to fire. Her son was distressed that his mother was in so
|
|||
|
much pain and went to ask the priests in the temple for
|
|||
|
some way to help his mother. The priests devised a prayer
|
|||
|
called the Yue Lan Poon King , to be spoken on the 15th of
|
|||
|
the 7th month, and give offerings of food to ease the pain
|
|||
|
of the hungry ghosts.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On the first day of the seventh moon (late August or early
|
|||
|
September) the gates of hell are opened and the ghosts are
|
|||
|
free for two weeks to walk the earth. On the 14th day,
|
|||
|
called the Yue Lan Fesitval, ghosts receive offerings from
|
|||
|
the living. Fruit is offered and paper cars, paper houses
|
|||
|
and paper money are burnt, and once this occurs these gifts
|
|||
|
become the property of the dead. People whose relatives
|
|||
|
suffered a violent death are particularly concerned to
|
|||
|
placate the spirits, visiting the place where the person
|
|||
|
was killed to leave flowers and burn incense. People will
|
|||
|
not swim, travel, get married, move house, or indulge in
|
|||
|
other risky activities during this time. There are also
|
|||
|
lots of Cantonese opera performances -- presumably to give
|
|||
|
the ghosts one good night out before they have to go back
|
|||
|
down below for another year.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
---------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Prins
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
An oblong shaped purple fruit that looks like a waxy
|
|||
|
skinned eggplant with a taste and consistancy simular to an
|
|||
|
apple. Prins grow on high bushes and are thought to have
|
|||
|
be native to one of the Dauk worlds washward from Bambi
|
|||
|
along the belt.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The success of the plant in such a wide variety of
|
|||
|
ecosystems strongly suggests some kind of genetic
|
|||
|
alteration though this view is highly contended by a number
|
|||
|
of researchers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Prins are thought by many to appeal to ghosts and were
|
|||
|
quickly adopted as good luck symbols and devices for
|
|||
|
enticing ancestors into helping to the living pick a
|
|||
|
winning horse or help in selecting a lottery number. This
|
|||
|
can be seen especially during festivals like Yue Lan or Mid
|
|||
|
Autumn Festival, the fruit often is sold in markets at 4 or
|
|||
|
5 times the normal price.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is a very old story told to children throughout the
|
|||
|
Jushrut of a priest called Fan Lai Tai who had spent thirty
|
|||
|
years working as a government hooker before renouncing her
|
|||
|
crimes against humanity and became sort of a Johnny Apple
|
|||
|
Seed character, who traveled through the Jushrut and even
|
|||
|
up into the San Zi planting prin bushes near temples and,
|
|||
|
as Zappa said, spreading prins across the land using all of
|
|||
|
the frightening little skills that science has made
|
|||
|
available as a form of penance to the thousands of souls
|
|||
|
she had screwed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Carp, barbel and trout love prins.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
George Shea
|
|||
|
Lace and Lures
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
prins are to barbel as catnip to a cat
|
|||
|
no sooner does the bait hit the water
|
|||
|
and a veritable feeding frenzy ensues
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<09>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WWilma Mak
|
|||
|
Journal of the Jost Angling Society
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the use of prins as bait is banned by every
|
|||
|
fishing organization known to this writer
|
|||
|
as it is thought that prins are not a bait
|
|||
|
but a narcotic to marine life and is not
|
|||
|
used by any true sportsmen
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
---------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cisterns
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Webster's Collegiate
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
cis<EFBFBD>tern \'sis-tern\ n
|
|||
|
[ME, fr. OF cisterne, fr. L cisterna, fr. cista box, chest
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD> more at CHEST] (13c)
|
|||
|
1: an artificial reservoir for storing liquids and esp.
|
|||
|
water; specif: an often underground tank for storing
|
|||
|
rainwater
|
|||
|
2: a well like structure at the centre of Mooter villages
|
|||
|
which is thought to be a window into the world of the dead.
|
|||
|
3: a large usu. silver vessel formerly used (as in cooling
|
|||
|
wine) at the dining table
|
|||
|
4: a fluid-containing sac or cavity in an organism
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OED
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1: an artificial reservoir for water, or other liquid; esp.
|
|||
|
a water-tight tank.
|
|||
|
2: A natural reservoir or depression containing water, eg a
|
|||
|
pong 1606
|
|||
|
3: a pit at the centre of Mooter villages, thought to be a
|
|||
|
window into the Spirit World. <date>
|
|||
|
4: Applied to a cavity, or vessel in an organism 1615.
|
|||
|
Also fig and attrib
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Broken cisterns Jer. 2:13. A copper c. for the table
|
|||
|
PEPYS Diary 7 Sept. 1667. a c. of punch 1815.
|
|||
|
2. The dead hold conference in the village c. <Ref> <date>
|
|||
|
3. Lakes .. are real reservoirs, or cisterns of water 1796.
|
|||
|
Hence Ci<43>stern, v to enclose in, or fit with, a c.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Bible
|
|||
|
Ecclesiastes
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the golden bowl be
|
|||
|
broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the
|
|||
|
wheel broken at the cistern.
|
|||
|
Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the
|
|||
|
spirit shall return unto God who gave it.
|
|||
|
12:1
|
|||
|
<09>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
William Shakespeare 1564-1616
|
|||
|
Othello
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But there, where I have garner'd up my heart,
|
|||
|
Where either I must live or bear no life,
|
|||
|
The fountain from the which my current runs
|
|||
|
Or else dries up; to be discarded thence!
|
|||
|
Or keep it as a cistern for foul toads
|
|||
|
To knot and gender in! Turn thy complexion there,
|
|||
|
Patience, thou young and rose-lipp'd cherubin;
|
|||
|
Ay, there, look grim as hell!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<09>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Fargo Morris
|
|||
|
Time and Endings
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The mass, upended and hanging
|
|||
|
above the cistern where souls depart
|
|||
|
in the labyrinth that keeps us from hell
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<09>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Brill Cheung
|
|||
|
Barrow Song
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the warmth of the walls
|
|||
|
drawn from the lives
|
|||
|
of Floxie offerings, screaming
|
|||
|
at the bottom of the Cisterns
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At the centre of every Mooter village lies a cistern always
|
|||
|
with the exact proportions of 6x18x6 (one six being the
|
|||
|
height of the walls above the ground. -- the depth of the
|
|||
|
cistern is always thought to extend into hell, the depth of
|
|||
|
which no one seems to know) through which the dead are
|
|||
|
thought to keep a watch over the lives of the living in
|
|||
|
their ancestral home. Advice is often sought at Cisterns,
|
|||
|
as well as offerings given to the recently deceased to help
|
|||
|
their transition into death.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When a Mooter village is moved, or abandoned, it is
|
|||
|
possible to move this spirit window to another cistern,
|
|||
|
even if that cistern in on another world. The empty
|
|||
|
cistern is then no longer under the protection of the elder
|
|||
|
spirits of the village and can be taken over by any
|
|||
|
wandering spirit that wishes to take residence. For this
|
|||
|
reason, the Mooter shun any abandoned village or cistern.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
These beliefs remain quite strong even today, which
|
|||
|
explains the Mooter's reputation for being poor
|
|||
|
archaeologists but excellent archivists and historiians.
|
|||
|
In a strange way it makes sense. They can never go back,
|
|||
|
so they are careful to record everything so that they can
|
|||
|
take it with them.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Mooter cisterns are not meant for trapping drinking water
|
|||
|
and it is thought that those who drink the water from a
|
|||
|
cistern will fall under the control of the spirits that lay
|
|||
|
in its depths.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The cistern represents death something that traps and once
|
|||
|
inside cannot be returned, the antithesis of a well, which
|
|||
|
is the bringer of life. Death is a closed end, like a
|
|||
|
cistern.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Mooter word for Cistern means roughly, window of the
|
|||
|
dead.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
---------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Collectors
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Who washed her hands
|
|||
|
in the smoke,
|
|||
|
smoldering ash
|
|||
|
and the trace leavings
|
|||
|
of the dead
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20 Years in the San Zi
|
|||
|
Joseph Fong
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
in years of drought, the ash left after the festival,
|
|||
|
in LoTsuen and other parts of the Barrows, formed great
|
|||
|
drifts that clogged the air intakes on the collectors which
|
|||
|
would overheat and start to weave and bump into walls like
|
|||
|
they were drunk.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<09>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The burnout rate for Collectors in Canter has always been
|
|||
|
quite high. The number of Collectors for the territory
|
|||
|
varies between 120-195. As Collectors died, they were
|
|||
|
canibalized for parts and kept going with little more than
|
|||
|
tin cans and baling wire.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The mean life-span for most C Class Collectors during 24th
|
|||
|
wc(Wongsha Calendar) century was supposed to be about 25
|
|||
|
years. Canter seldom saw a Collector last a day over 10.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A common passtime, even a tradition, for youth in Canter
|
|||
|
was to play kick the can -- kicking a Collector to see how
|
|||
|
far you could make it slide on it's floaters before it's
|
|||
|
speed dropped within it's brake threshold and stopped or
|
|||
|
hit something.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Class C Collector Purchases ('230-240)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
28 Philips Hobo-T9
|
|||
|
14 Philips Hobo-T9
|
|||
|
18 Ma Yuen Fa-B URC (Urban Rubbish Collectors)
|
|||
|
8 Ma Yuen Fa-B URC
|
|||
|
52* Gunther Waldaw 441+ (For hostile urban environments)
|
|||
|
11 Philips Hobo-T13
|
|||
|
20 Philips Hobo-T13
|
|||
|
26 Gunther Waldaw 441+
|
|||
|
18 Gunther Waldaw 441+
|
|||
|
12 KaPok City Beauty KP-22
|
|||
|
102** Gunther Waldaw 441+
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
+ Drought years
|
|||
|
* The year of the Ma Kok Riots
|
|||
|
** Typhoon Tinker
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A wide range of the tiny Philip Hobo's (everything from the
|
|||
|
old S80 on up to the T13's which were the last model before
|
|||
|
the line was discontinued) were in use for almost 80 years,
|
|||
|
especially in the Barrows where the little yellow bricks,
|
|||
|
became integrated with peoples image of Canter
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
During the 230's new Hobos were being stolen, as soon as
|
|||
|
they were set loose. The new flash boxes were ripped out
|
|||
|
and sold in the shipyards to be installed on frieghters and
|
|||
|
other small ship passing through the yards.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The government responded first with a ineffectual campaign
|
|||
|
to catch the "Brick Kidnappers" which proved almost
|
|||
|
completely fruitless. Subsequently, Marta Exodus who was
|
|||
|
the head of maintenance at the Hui Lek Pui depot in the
|
|||
|
West Barrows, out of desperation, began taking the shiny
|
|||
|
new Hobo's, stripping off the outer bodies and began a
|
|||
|
program of "pre-trashing" them, denting and artfully
|
|||
|
scoring the bodies to make the new models virtually
|
|||
|
impossible to distinguish from the older models. As soon
|
|||
|
as this program began, thefts dropped by 85% in less than a
|
|||
|
month and remained low thereafter, it was simply not worth
|
|||
|
the effort to steal old units and new units just to find a
|
|||
|
the small number of new flashcans which were not terribly
|
|||
|
valuable in the first place.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Before the first Hobo's were bought, collectors were
|
|||
|
commonly (and are still often) called flashcans a common
|
|||
|
enough sight almost anywhere for nearly 800 years. However
|
|||
|
the Hobo's had a personality of their own and were commonly
|
|||
|
referred to as "bricks", "yellow bricks" or even "tin
|
|||
|
bricks."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
---------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ma Kok Riots
|
|||
|
Rice Cooker Riots
|
|||
|
Riots of '93
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A shipment Ka Pok Rice Cookers got switched with a run
|
|||
|
which used an odd chip set which were meant for
|
|||
|
infiltrating civilian data networks during the Martha wars
|
|||
|
in the mid '090's. The chipset was designed to insert a
|
|||
|
worm into local nets. The worm's primary objective was to
|
|||
|
manufacture events which would breed discontent and
|
|||
|
misdirection in the local population. The worm would also
|
|||
|
filter out all attempts to announce the existence of the
|
|||
|
worm and any negative information about the MLA (Martha
|
|||
|
Liberation Army) and even go so far as to skew all news
|
|||
|
events towards MLA interests.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All of the rice cookers had been sold, in the Sha Gok day
|
|||
|
markets in Lo Tsuen during a three week period in August of
|
|||
|
'93. It's thought that only two weeks later, most of the
|
|||
|
rice cookers had already been in contact with each other
|
|||
|
(sending messages disguised as rice cooker reply receipts,
|
|||
|
cooker repair requests, cooking schedule changes and rice
|
|||
|
supply orders sent over the net.) and decided to target the
|
|||
|
opening of a temple at Ma Kok in Shueng Hau. The feeds
|
|||
|
were altered so that anyone getting information through the
|
|||
|
net would be told that it wasn't a temple being built, but
|
|||
|
a crematorium and underground mausoleum.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Unfortunately incident coincided with the torching of a
|
|||
|
Majhong parlour in the same area by a group of teenagers
|
|||
|
working for a local protection racket. Again, the feeds
|
|||
|
were altered so that people believed that the torching was
|
|||
|
really the work of the police to quiet the protest over
|
|||
|
the mausoleum. The cookers then changed the profiles of
|
|||
|
the teenagers, making them look like squeaky clean, model
|
|||
|
citizens being railroaded by the police.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The riots that started as a demonstration in Ma Kok quickly
|
|||
|
spread throughout the barrows. Dozens of buildings in the
|
|||
|
east barrows burnt to the ground and some 150 people were
|
|||
|
killed by both police and rioters.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The riots lasted nearly two weeks and only stopped after
|
|||
|
the government was able to completely crash the net. It
|
|||
|
was months before the real reason behind the riots was
|
|||
|
discovered and the rice cookers hunted down and destroyed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
========End Sarko Volume 1 : Issue 1========
|