843 lines
48 KiB
Plaintext
843 lines
48 KiB
Plaintext
ÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜ ÜÜÜ ÜÜÜÜ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßÛßßßßßÛÛÜ ÜÜßßßßÜÜÜÜ ÜÛÜ ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÜÜÜÜÛßß ßÛÛ
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ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßÛÛ ÜÛÛÛÜÛÛÜÜÜ ßÛÛÛÛÜ ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÛÛÜÜÜÛÛÝ Ûß
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ßßßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ÞÝ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßßÛÜÞÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßßÛÛÛÞß
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Mo.iMP ÜÛÛÜ ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÝ ßÛß
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ß ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ÜÛ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß
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ÜÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÜÜ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÞÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛßß
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ÜÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÛÛÛÛÜÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛ ßÛÛÛÛÛ Ü ÛÝÛÛÛÛÛ Ü
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ÜÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ßÛÜ ßÛÛÛÜÜ ÜÜÛÛÛß ÞÛ ÞÛÛÛÝ ÜÜÛÛ
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ÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßÛÜ ßßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÜÜÜß ÛÛÛÛÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÛÛÛÛÛß
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ßÛÜ ÜÛÛÛß ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßßÜÜ ßßÜÛÛßß ßÛÛÜ ßßßÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßß
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ßßßßß ßßÛÛß ßßßßß ßßßßßßßßßßßßß
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ARRoGANT CoURiERS WiTH ESSaYS
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Grade Level: Type of Work Subject/Topic is on:
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[ ]6-8 [ ]Class Notes [Creative Story on a ]
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[ ]9-10 [ ]Cliff Notes [Person called Derek ]
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[x]11-12 [ ]Essay/Report [who's high and has alot ]
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[ ]College [x]Misc [of problems. ]
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Dizzed: 09/94 # of Words:8231 School: ? State: ?
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ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>Chop Here>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
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DEREK
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Derek lifted the large plastic tub, which he had just filled
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with ice, level with the counter, dumped the ice into the
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stainless steel container, and sighed. He looked at his watch:
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10:25, it said; almost mid-morning, and five eternal minutes left
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until his fifteen minute coffee break. Fuck it, he thought, I'll
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take it now. He bent down low with a much-practiced 'bowling'
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motion and sent the plastic tub whizzing down the tiled corridor
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into the dish room where it hit the surly dishwasher on the
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ankles.
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"'Bowling For Busboys'!" he yelled (out of habit, mostly,
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since it had been a while since he had found the consequences of
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that action really amusing), and paced off to the staff room.
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"I'll bowl ya!" he heard the irate dishwasher yell, but the
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dishwasher always yelled that, and Derek had long since ceased to
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notice: he was already reaching for his cigarette pack. With
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quick, practiced movements he withdrew one of the long tubes from
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the cardboard package. With one hand he placed it in a precise
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position in his lips while the other hand was occupied with first
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replacing the package to his shirt pocket, then digging out a
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half used pack of matches from his too tight jeans. He was
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extremely conscious of the fluidity of his movements; lighting
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the cigarette with the match was the hard part, and he wanted to
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look as cool as possible, smooth and flowing, for all the eyes he
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perceived to be on him. He managed to execute the task to his
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satisfaction as he entered the staff room above the restaurant,
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but only Karen was there, finishing a butt of her own. He didn't
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give a shit about Karen and there was no one else around.
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He felt a frustration welling up inside that seemed
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incomprehensible. He thrust himself into one of the tattered
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chairs which his employers had so graciously donated to
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facilitate his comfort, and blew out a long stream of smoke from
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his lips, like a visible sigh. Karen eyed him with wary
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curiousity, but Derek was busy inspecting the floor. He could
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hear the clank and clatter of dishes from the dishroom, and the
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slamming of doors and calling of orders as the waiters and
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waitresses bounced off of and around each other like atoms in a
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solution. He realized he had to go back out there and face that
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frantic pace again in only fifteen minutes. Unconsciously he
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looked at his watch and saw that five of those minutes had
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already passed. "Fuck," he said, without thinking about it.
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"Whatsa matter?" asked Karen as she cracked her gum. She
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could stand the silence no longer; it made her uncomfortable.
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"Nuthin'," Derek lied, but it wasn't anything he could have
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spoken to her about. It was a subject which seemed to be most on
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his mind but least on his lips, and when he tried to articulate
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these things he simply stopped talking: there were too many
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things he wanted to say, all of them at once, and he couldn't
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decide where to start. That seemed important: deciding where to
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start. He feared that if he started in the wrong place his
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listener might get the wrong idea, or make the wrong conclusions
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about himself. It seemed like everything he wanted to say needed
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to be qualified. So he said nothing, or very little. "I dunno,
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just restless, I quess. Don't really want to be here either."
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He chuckled, but there was no humor in it.
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"Yeah, I know what ya mean. There's a good movie on T.V.
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I'm missing," said Karen, cracking her gum again, and chewing
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enthusiastically.
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That's not what I meant, bitch, he thought. Derek hated the
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tube. To him the T.V. was an insidious invention: it was far
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too powerful a tool in the wrong hands, and too easy an excuse
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for not doing anything yourself. Derek thought that "The Glass
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Teat" was a perfect name for it. Still, there was a good side to
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it: it helped tie together the world in a network of
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communication, which was valuable, provided the communicators
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were trustworthy. But Derek felt that most of them weren't.
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Most of T.V. was blatant propaganda, and people like Karen just
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lapped it all up, like kittens to milk, or junkies to junk. But
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he didn't feel like explaining all that to Karen just now. Most
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of those thoughts were coded as symbols in his brain, and
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drumming up sentences to clothe those symbols with meaningful
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dress was too much like work. So he said, "No, I mean I'd rather
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be somewhere else entirely, like another country, or something.
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I'm tired of this..." he waved his hand around in an "all-
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encompassing" gesture.
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"Yeah, I like to travel, too. We went to California once,
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saw Disneyland. 'Course, I was just twelve. But I'd go back
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tomorrow, if I could. I remember..."
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Derek tuned out Karen's voice as she droned on and on about
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all the things she saw at Disneyland, how her brother was such a
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pest and got chocolate ice cream all over his new white shirt
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with a picture of Goofy on the front, and how the Matterhorn was
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such a scary ride, why, she almost fainted, and on and on, and
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Derek felt that Karen didn't have a clue what he was talking
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about. He didn't see how anyone could consider going to
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Disneyland "travelling", or the United States as a different
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country. It still had a familiar atmosphere: the language was
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the same, the religion was the same, the cars were the same.
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Even the T.V. was the same. The goals were the same, the same
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ethics, the same books, same records, same, same, same. Derek
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felt that Karen would be horrified by the thought of going
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anywhere unfamiliar, like Mexico, or the island of Celebes.
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"I don't know about the States," said Derek carefully, for
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he believed in being diplomatic unless he held a person in
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complete contempt and there were others around who felt the same
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to back him up. "I was thinking of, like, maybe, Mexico." He
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said Mexico as if it was some improbable place that he had just
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dreamt up out of his head.
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"Oouu!" her face crinkled up, "I hear it's dirty, and
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there's all these beggars, and they'll rob you blind."
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"How do you know that?"
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"Well, that's what I heard," she said, indignant that he
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would question her. "I don't know. But they always look dirty
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on TV."
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Derek leaned back in the ratty chair and folded his arms
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over his chest, the dim clatter of dishes downstairs echoing the
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random and hazy pattern of his thoughts. Abruptly he looked at
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his watch and his shoulders slumped in disappointment: he was
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five minutes overdue for his return to work. He muttered an
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obscenity and, without so much as a look at Karen he went back
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downstairs.
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II
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Derek walked out ten minutes early into the fine, warm and
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breezy afternoon day. He felt bad leaving all his co-workers
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behind in the hot and stuffy restaurant, but not bad enough.
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Outside he finally felt like he had enough room. He took a deep
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breath and smiled as he exhaled. The rush hour was swiftly
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approaching, but as yet there was only a faint cloying smell of
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exhaust fumes so he took in another lungful and savored it. In a
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little while he would be on the bus, and by habit his breathing
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would become shallow and rapid; he hated some smells, especially
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chemicals. Other people's rancid sweat also topped the list,
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along with musty attics, restaurant kitchens, paint, powerful
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perfumes, stale beer, and old, full ashtrays. But machine
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exhaust was the worst, and had been ever since his Dad had caught
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him, long ago in his childhood, squatting behind the car while it
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was running, sniffing the wondrous sweet vapors.
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"Hey!" Dad had yelled. "What the hell are you doing!? You
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want to get brain damage?!" Derek hadn't been old enough to know
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precisely what brain damage was, but he understood that it was
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BAD; it wasn't often that his Dad yelled like that. From then on
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he tried to make sure that whenever he smelled car exhaust he
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held his breath, even if it meant having no breath to hold.
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A truck went by, and Derek breathed cautiously, but the
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breezes washed the fumes away. He continued to his bus stop,
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smiling. I could walk home and enjoy this fully, he realized.
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He knew of a couple of long-cuts that would take him through some
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nice residential streets, past a well kept park by the river with
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lush grass and tall, fat trees. If he stopped in the park for a
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sprawl in the grass it might take about an hour to get home to
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his apartment. Besides, he needed the exercise: his shape was
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gaining even more than his usual paunchiness. Even though he
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despised the food he worked with, he could not seem to help
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nibbling throughout the day.
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But he felt tired. He'd been on his feet all day, and maybe
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that was enough exercise. No need to abuse oneself, is there?
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He got to his bus stop next to the oversized department store,
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perched himself on the steel tube railing which divided the
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parking lot from the sidewalk, lit a cigarette, and waited for
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his bus.
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III
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Derek got off the bus two stops early and walked the rest of
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the way home down the busy street which ran past his house. He
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did it as a sort of penance for not walking all the way home, and
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ended up not enjoying it a bit. The street was a major artery
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for traffic bound for home across the river, and was bottlenecked
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by the small width of the old steel bridge. It was jammed, as
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usual, with a variety of traffic: executives on their way home
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in their air conditioned self-contained personal transport units,
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isolated from the very world they controlled, and looking as
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though their thoughts were unfathomable; toughs in hotrods
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playing the latest Heavy Metal bands, or classic Led Zeppelin;
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prim librarians with nouveau-hornrimmed glasses (faint strands of
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Bach and Mozart), followed by a nondescript fellow in a battered
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Datsun from which Mahler's Symphony #2 blared forth. Some old
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red-faced guy driving a matching old red pickup fitted with racks
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for carrying plate glass tried to go around a stalled car before
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he looked, and the successful saleswoman in the expensive
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Oldsmobile would have had to slam on her brakes, but she hit the
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gas instead and her heavy iron beast (roaring) leapt into the
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side of the old red glass-truck. Shattered glass misted the air,
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rainbow colors which swiftly fell to the pavement and became
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dangerous garbage. The toughs in the hotrod jeered, "AwwwRIGHT!!
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Didjew see that, man?! Haha!" The old guy in the old red pickup
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hit the horn getting out of the cab and it stuck on, braying like
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an injured mule. Been meanin' to git that fixed, thought the old
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guy. He went around his truck to where the big powder blue Olds
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tiger had taken a bite out of his rusty red mule to survey the
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damage. This wasn't his first accident, no sense in getting too
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worked up. He knew it was his fault, too.
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The saleswoman's shriek surprized him. She couldn't get her
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door open, and she was trying hard to roll down the window. As a
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result, her first few words were muffled:
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"...dam son-of-a-bitch, waddaya tryin' ta do, huh?! Y'wanna
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get everybody killed?! I'll sue you you bastard!..."
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Derek tuned out the rest as best he could and wished
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fervently that he had walked all the way home. I will, he
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thought fiercely. I promise I will walk home everyday, he swore,
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as if standing up to himself and putting his foot down. Unless
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it is bad weather, his brain quickly added. Derek cursed. It
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seemed that everytime he made a vow to himself a host of imps,
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and even some more powerful devils, crowded into his headspace
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trying to make exceptions and prove him wrong. There were even
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times when, in disbelief, his conscious mind sat back and watched
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while the imps, like perverse puppeteers, twisted his tongue into
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saying things he had no right to say (such as criticizing others
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and judging the depths of their spiritual depravity), or forced
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his feet towards the drugstore where he could buy another pack of
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smokes, even though he kept telling himself that he really wanted
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to quit. His conscience could implore and beg, but it was only a
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quiet, still voice, easily ignored.
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Derek clenched his fists in frustration; he ground his teeth
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in desperation. He longed for an answer: how do you make
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yourself do the things you really want to do? or make yourself be
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the way you really want to be? Is there an answer? Derek didn't
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know. It seemed like everytime he thought about stuff like that
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it made his head whirl. He didn't even feel like he could talk
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properly, communicate at all. There were so many words crowding
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his brain, and words needed to be let out one at a time, in a
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certain order.
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He didn't even notice that he had already automatically
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turned across the front lawn (he never used the cracked and
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heaving sidewalk) and was making his way up the creaking stairs
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at the side of the old leaning house where he was renting an
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apartment on the third floor. He reached into his pocket to pull
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out his key ring and froze: it wasn't there. His eyes widened.
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Shit, he thought. He patted himself absently and dug his fingers
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into other pockets while he mentally retraced his steps home.
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Then he remembered leaving them on the table in the staff room as
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he had gotten changed to leave. He'd been in a hurry: skipping
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out early wasn't something you did when your fellow employees
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were around. He'd almost made it unobserved, but Andrea had come
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bursting in the back way, almost taking his head off with the
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door. Andrea was a waitress he got along with quite well, but
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today he had been curt with her:
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"Hey Derek! How'r ya? Looks like you're leaving a little
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early," she said, far too loudly. He rolled his eyes and said,
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"Yeah, so?"
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"'Yeah, so' nothing," she shot back, refusing to be daunted.
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"See you later." It was a statement of fact.
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That's what he'd always liked about Andrea: she was
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straight-forward and honest, and full of energy. She was one of
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those persons who exuded energy and managed to animate everyone
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else around her. She was one of those neat independent girls who
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somehow latch onto and keep interesting, handsome and artistic
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guys, while being the object of every other guy's not-
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necessarily-sexual desire. She wasn't someone who you had to
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groan about while they went around with some goofball who managed
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(by what means, no one knows) to impress her with his car. You
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couldn't help liking Scott, Andrea's boyfriend.
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Thinking about talking to Andrea made it that much easier
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for Derek to get up his resolve to head back to work. Suddenly
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he chuckled, thinking that Fate was going to make him walk, no
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matter how hard his natural apathy tried to assert itself. He
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clambered back down the stairs and headed for the back lane,
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instead of going up the busy front street. It was much more
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peaceful; the delapidated houses and the accumulated garbage even
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looked like Art. He suddenly felt good, so good that he decided
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to reward himself. He promptly lit a cigarette.
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IV
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It took more than an hour to get back to work, longer than
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Derek had anticipated, and he was tired by the time he arrived.
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Man, I am out of shape, he thought, and he felt vaguely guilty
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about it, but pushed the thoughts aside with the conviction that
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he was doing something about it--he was actively pursuing a goal.
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Action was very important. Action could change your very mind;
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like washing a car, with action, force and energy you could
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remove all the dirt and corrosive salt to reveal the gleaming,
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solid entity beneath. Sometimes Derek felt that his mind--maybe
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consciousness was a better word--was somehow smothered, and, had
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there been some sort of "other-word" entity there to assess it,
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would have appeared indistinct and amorphous. He spent most of
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his conscious thought-time wondering where to start cleaning.
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But at times like this he felt much better, like as if he had
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been aimlessly scrubbing, and suddenly saw, beneath the crust and
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ooze, a wonderful stray gleam. He dared not question.
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With a smile on his face he jerked the door of the
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restaurant open and swung inside.
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It was always dark in the restaurant, but the kitchen was
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well lit, and he nodded greetings to the two busy night-shift
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cooks. The head cook, with the unlikely name of Ipzwaldt, was a
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tall, lanky guy with a pleasantly twisted face. "Hey Derek!" he
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yelled, "since you abandoned ship too soon before, why doncha
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bail us out for a bit?"
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"Sure thing, Captain Waldo," said Derek with a grin. He was
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in too good a mood to feel bad about his earlier actions.
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"That's 'aye aye' to you, sailor."
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"'Arrr, like bloody 'ell," snarled Derek, reaching to butter
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some bread.
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"Watch yerself, mate. That's close to mutiny. Hey Bob!"
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said Waldo, calling to the other cook. "Hold this bugger down
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while I pour our Special Sauce down his pants."
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Bob, who was new, got into the spirit of the banter. "I'll
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not do it, Cap'n. Not 'til I get a bloomin' raise," he said in a
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parody of Irish.
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"What?! Insurrection on my ship? Fine, I'll do it meself.
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But you'd best look to your own britches later."
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They carried on for a while, until the waiters and
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waitresses stopped plying them with orders. Andrea noticed Derek
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working. "What are you doing here?" she asked.
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"Bailing," he said, and flashed her a smile of "I'm OK,
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you're OK too".
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"You're weird," she said, and wondered how he could be so
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moody. Derek just chuckled.
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V
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Derek liked working with Waldo. Waldo rarely lost his cool,
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and was almost always in a good mood, but the thing Derek liked
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most was that Waldo and he never bumped into each other. That
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might seem like a small thing, but in a crowded kitchen full of
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objects both sharp and hot it became important. Somehow he and
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Waldo knew where each other were going, which way the other would
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move, even whether or not the other guy was coming around a blind
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corner. Derek could remember many times when he had avoided a
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collision by slowing down for no other reason than he felt he had
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to. And he knew that Waldo had done the same. It was sort of
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like dancing (once the restaurant got going you did get into a
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rhythm), and he and Waldo were great partners.
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Of course, Derek didn't know why this was so, but he knew it
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was true. When he worked with other guys, half the time he was
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running into them, saying things like "'scuse me" and "oops!
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Sorry" all night. It got frustrating, and usually destroyed
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Derek's good mood. Derek had a passion for harmony and flow; it
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got right to his gut when he was working with some klutz who
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couldn't seem to understand what dancing was all about.
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So Derek, enjoying himself, stayed in the kitchen and worked
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for a couple of extra hours for free until the manager, a short,
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squat, young guy named C.D. (the cooks all called him Compact
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Dip--behind his back of course) told Derek that he had better
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leave the kitchen since he didn't have on his uniform. Derek
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remembered his keys, and then remembered that he had wanted to
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talk to Andrea.
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"Sure thing, C.D.," he said, agreeably. "We'll see you
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mates later," he left Waldo and Bob in the now calm kitchen.
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Waldo threw a chunk of pineapple his way, but Derek dodged around
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|
the corner and was gone.
|
|
Having gathered his keys, he headed towards the staff table
|
|
which was set into an unobtrusive corner of the restaurant, and
|
|
sat down on the bench seat next to Tracy who was chattering
|
|
animatedly (as she always was) with Andrea. Andrea nodded a
|
|
greeting; Tracy said "hi", absently, because she was engrossed in
|
|
her story (as she always was). Derek tried to pick up the flow
|
|
of the conversation while he surreptitiously checked Andrea's
|
|
pack of cigarettes. She had only one, so he left it there. She
|
|
caught him as he put the pack back down and slapped his hand,
|
|
giving him an exaggerated dirty look. Tracy, feeling
|
|
interrupted, hit Derek too, and said, "Leave her stuff alone",
|
|
then continued with her story as if nothing had happened.
|
|
Derek envied her that. If someone interrupted him in the
|
|
middle of a sentence he usually forgot what he was talking about.
|
|
And sometimes he even managed to interrupt himself, new thoughts
|
|
intruding upon the current ones. That was embarrasing.
|
|
Derek was wondering how she did it when he realized that she
|
|
was talking to him, trying to get out of the bench seat.
|
|
"Will you move? Or do I have to cause some pain?" she
|
|
wielded a burning cigarette threateningly. He grabbed a knife
|
|
from the table and took an "en guarde" position. They fenced for
|
|
a bit, laughing, then he got up to let her out of the bench seat.
|
|
"You look preoccupied," said Andrea as Derek sat back down.
|
|
"Ah so, so very perceptive, missy. Derek Chan seek profound
|
|
wisdom from you'self. He is at great loss."
|
|
"Yeah, what did you lose?"
|
|
Derek got serious. "My sanity," he said. She laughed.
|
|
"So you finally realized. Well, join the club, sonny. If
|
|
you think you're the only one just take a..."
|
|
"No!" he said with some heat. "I know I'm not the only one,
|
|
but I want to do something about it." He looked around, but no
|
|
one else was near. "Look, I'm starting to realize some things
|
|
and it isn't pleasant. I'm not going anywhere, I'm just
|
|
drifting. I'm just floating along in this not-so-pleasant world.
|
|
I want to go somewhere else, do something different! I'm tired
|
|
of this crapping lifestyle..." he trailed off, groping for words.
|
|
"So do something, then."
|
|
Derek's whole body slumped. "I guess I just don't know how
|
|
to start." He fiddled with a book of matches, sighed, and tossed
|
|
them on the table. Derek felt disappointed. It was as if,
|
|
having seen the first stray gleam from the body of his mind he
|
|
had left it, partially satisfied, and when he had come back the
|
|
shiny patch was gone.
|
|
"Why don't you go travelling?"
|
|
"What?" Derek broke out of his musings.
|
|
"Go travelling. You know, hop on a bus and head south with
|
|
the birds. Hey! Then you could avoid the winter. You go far
|
|
enough south and you just find a nice beach and stay there.
|
|
Smell new smells, taste new tastes, hell, see new seas. Ha!"
|
|
Andrea was getting excited, "I know a place in Mexico where you
|
|
could have a hut on the Pacific for about ten bucks a month. And
|
|
you meet all these great people!"
|
|
Her enthusiasm infected him. He had heard a lot of Andrea's
|
|
stories before, and he had listened with a kind of wistfulness,
|
|
as if he knew that those things would never happen to him, though
|
|
he would like them to. But this time he didn't feel like
|
|
listening to any more stories. He interrupted her again.
|
|
"So how much would it cost me to get there and back by the
|
|
cheapest way?"
|
|
She blinked. "Really? You wanna go?"
|
|
He nodded. "I have managed to put some money away. It was
|
|
going to be for a car, but who needs a car?"
|
|
"Well that's great! But maybe we shouldn't talk about it
|
|
here. Why don't you come over, let me see," she counted on her
|
|
fingers, "how about Friday night? That way you can think up some
|
|
good questions, and Scott and I can figure some stuff out."
|
|
He beamed at her, and privately decided to bring a bottle of
|
|
scotch.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER TWO
|
|
|
|
I
|
|
|
|
The great rythmic beat swelled up around him, massaged his
|
|
body, pushing it gently to and fro. His eyes were closed, but he
|
|
had just rubbed them and the brilliant waves of magenta and blue
|
|
made his heart pound with a familiar but enigmatic ecstacy.
|
|
Derek opened his eyes and stared again into the warm flame of the
|
|
candle, the only light in the room. There was nothing else; just
|
|
this creamy white candle which fed the tiny sprite dancing on its
|
|
tapered tip. The moment lasted forever; Derek felt as if he was
|
|
on the verge of Truth. Just a little higher, he thought.
|
|
He brought what was left of the joint to his lips and drew
|
|
in professionally, with just the right smooth mix of air and
|
|
smoke. He held it there in his lungs feeling the smoke swirl
|
|
inside his body, his huge body the size of the Earth with its
|
|
currents and pulsings; he could feel the marrow growing inside
|
|
his bones, sensed the slow secretion of the stuff that made up
|
|
his fingernails and hair. He felt a dust mote land on his arm
|
|
and poke a nerve; it began to itch. His inner ear warned him
|
|
that his gentle rocking had gone too far. He fell over and
|
|
realized that he had held his breath too long and was passing
|
|
out. That struck him as absurd; he snorted and began to laugh,
|
|
the thin smoke escaping his lips in small puffs.
|
|
Abruptly he began to cough, violently. He groped for his
|
|
glass of orange juice and soda, almost knocked it over, and
|
|
brought it to his lips too fast. He banged his teeth on the
|
|
glass and some of the orange juice spilt onto his T-shirt. He
|
|
hardly noticed as he finally gulped down the cooling, bubbly
|
|
liquid. He coughed a couple of times more; the burning sensation
|
|
in his chest lessened. He sat there, feeling it with the whole
|
|
of his being while staring into the dark to the left of the
|
|
burning candle. The moment of Truth was gone, and Derek jolted
|
|
out of his timeless revery feeling a profound cold silence all
|
|
about him and within his very soul. His eyes widened and he
|
|
looked around. The thin yellow light of the candle glimmered
|
|
from the white walls which now seemed much too close. A pang of
|
|
fear chilled Derek's heart. He swung his head and looked across
|
|
the room and the immensity of the space before him, yawning like
|
|
the vortex which preceeds the black hole, hit his brain like a
|
|
shock.
|
|
"What is happening?" his lips moved, but no sound came out.
|
|
It was like when he was a kid and was having a nightmare. He
|
|
would come into a semi-wakeful state, terrified and wanting to
|
|
scream, but the most he could do was whisper "mom...mom...", and
|
|
that was the most terrifying of all. But Derek was a little
|
|
older now, and he had some faith in his own reality. He was
|
|
suddenly aware of the muffled warbling sound of the TV of the
|
|
people who lived below him, and he realized that the record he
|
|
had been playing was over, had been for a while. A relieved
|
|
chuckle escaped him. He was glad that the silence he had felt
|
|
had not been in his soul, but rather in his environment.
|
|
"Well," he said outloud to himself, "I think I'll just turn
|
|
the damn thing over." He wondered vaguely if it was true that
|
|
only crazy people talked to themselves, but before he had a
|
|
chance to dwell on it there was a knock on the door.
|
|
Who could that be? he wondered. Derek always felt terribly
|
|
vulnerable when he was stoned. He felt like people could see
|
|
right through him, right to the spot in his heart where his
|
|
deepest fears lay. Anything he said or did only made those fears
|
|
more obvious, so Derek usually clammed up. He hated going to
|
|
parties unless he knew everybody, and he felt most uncomfortable
|
|
in the presence of people who were not stoned. Most likely the
|
|
person at the door wasn't. Derek began to feel pangs of guilt,
|
|
and did not even realize that he was standing motionless in the
|
|
room, his head down and his arms keeping the record in his hands
|
|
away from his body, like a mannequin poised to groove.
|
|
There was a second series of knocks, harder this time, and a
|
|
familiar voice called out, "Hey Derek! Hey tortiose, you in your
|
|
shell?" Derek didn't say anything, but he smiled widely, put the
|
|
record on and turned the volume way up. As he opened the door,
|
|
giggling mischeviously, the music burst out, flooding the room
|
|
with noise.
|
|
It was Arthur, of course, and right now Derek felt like he
|
|
needed a dose of Arthur's unquenchable energy. Arthur took one
|
|
look at Derek and shrieked with raucous laughter, which Derek
|
|
could barely hear.
|
|
"You crazy guy! Look at you, just look! Your eyeballs are
|
|
flaming scarlet. Your nose is dripping, you're drooling like a
|
|
retard, you look terrible, ha ha!" Arthur poked at Derek's ribs
|
|
exhibiting a license for physical abuse which only good friends
|
|
display. Derek tried in vain to fend him off. His silly grin
|
|
spread across his face and became choking laughter. "Hey, do you
|
|
have any more?" Arthur shouted over the music and continued to
|
|
ply his abuse.
|
|
"Not for you, you...you..." Derek forgot what he was going
|
|
to say. But he realized that the door was still open and here
|
|
they were shouting about illegal substances and playing music far
|
|
too loudly. Derek's beaming face suddenly clouded over. He
|
|
pushed Arthur aside impatiently and unceremoniously, closed the
|
|
door and locked it.
|
|
"Aww, man, don't be so paranoid. Your neighbors are cool."
|
|
Derek shrugged. A swirl of feelings engulfed him. He felt
|
|
stupid for not having noticed the door, and he wished that Arthur
|
|
had more sense. Whether his neighbors were cool or not was not
|
|
really the point; Derek was a private person and did not like to
|
|
feel that his comings, goings, and doings were known to just
|
|
anyone. Oddly enough, Derek could justify the volume of his
|
|
music because it served to mask his personal actions. He looked
|
|
at Arthur who was eyeing him, fists on hips, with a sardonic
|
|
grin. Derek ignored it. "You want some?" he said. It was more
|
|
of a statement than a question; Arthur was an avid smoker of "the
|
|
Herb".
|
|
"Sure, if you haven't already smoked it all." Arthur was
|
|
trying to joke, but Derek suddenly did not feel like responding.
|
|
He was vaguely aware that he was not being very friendly, but
|
|
Arthur's exhuberance was suddenly bothering him. Only a couple
|
|
of minutes ago Derek felt excited about Arthur. But now Arthur's
|
|
energy, as much of it as there was, seemed stale.
|
|
Derek disappeared into his darkened bedroom and pretended to
|
|
root around, trying to clear his head. I'm just being moody, he
|
|
thought. I can't relate to him 'cause he's not stoned...yet!
|
|
Derek soon emerged carrying a bag of green powder and a packet of
|
|
rolling papers. He did not look at Arthur, but went into the
|
|
livingroom and turned on the lamp in the corner. He left the
|
|
candle burning and turned down the music a touch. Then he set
|
|
about rolling a joint.
|
|
Arthur surveyed Derek's livingroom with his permanently
|
|
curious eye. It was rather bare: there were only a few prints
|
|
hanging up to take away the starkness of the white walls, and the
|
|
furniture was limited to a coffee table, a few chairs and a
|
|
beanbag scattered over the cheap indoor/outdoor carpeting on the
|
|
floor. Hasn't changed since the last time I was here, he
|
|
thought. Arthur liked to spend a lot of time making his place as
|
|
homey as possible. When he saw the lighted candle, Arthur raised
|
|
an eyebrow, and he began to wonder.
|
|
To Arthur, the use of marijuana was a social thing, an
|
|
experience to be shared with others. He did not understand how
|
|
Derek could sit all by himself in the dark, alone with his
|
|
swirling and scattered thoughts. That was because, though he
|
|
would never have admitted it, Arthur was afraid of his thoughts.
|
|
Despite his boisterous, energetic and positive front, deep down
|
|
Arthur did not trust himself, and his thoughts and desires often
|
|
haunted him. He tried to drown them out with constant movement
|
|
and action, and the idea that Derek was doing what he dared not
|
|
do made him worried. He did not realize that Derek was even more
|
|
uncomfortable among his peers, when stoned, than when he was
|
|
alone.
|
|
Arthur crossed the room and turned down the music so he
|
|
could talk to his friend. He was trying to think of what to say
|
|
to get Derek to leave with him, to get out of these oppressive
|
|
surroundings.
|
|
"So what's new, Bud?" he asked. Derek did not look up from
|
|
the floor where he was carefully rolling the joint.
|
|
"Not much," he said in an uncommunicative tone. Derek held
|
|
the joint up to the light and eyed his handiwork critically.
|
|
Satisfied, he set about rolling another. He was preparing to be
|
|
in a better mood, but he wanted a few moments to think about
|
|
something else entirely. Arthur, knowing his friend well,
|
|
recognized this and kept silent. Scanning the room he noticed a
|
|
pencil and notepad on the coffee table in front of him. Curious
|
|
as always, Arthur reached for it and saw that it was covered with
|
|
wandering doodles and almost illegible scrawls.
|
|
Derek was aware of Arthur's movements. He said nothing, but
|
|
wondered what Arthur would say, and waited in anticipation.
|
|
Often when high Derek would try to write down some of the random
|
|
thoughts which occured to him, thoughts which at the time seemed
|
|
like indisputable Truth. He took his time rolling the joint and
|
|
cleaned up thoroughly afterwords. Then he carefully re-rolled
|
|
his bag of pot and sat back watching Arthur's expressions as he
|
|
read.
|
|
Unfortunately for Derek, Arthur's face remained impassive
|
|
and he finally threw the notepad down without a comment. Derek
|
|
was disappointed and stared at his friend, feeling lost. He had
|
|
thought that the few lines he had scrawled were quite good, and
|
|
he wondered that Arthur could remain unmoved by them.
|
|
Not that this was anything new. Derek often felt frustrated
|
|
by what he saw as the insensitivity of others to what he
|
|
considered Truth. Statements like "The Oneness of All", were too
|
|
easily seen as being corny, or even meaningless. But Derek
|
|
thought he felt the full meaning of such a statement. Consider:
|
|
your entire body replaces all the molecules in it about once
|
|
every three months, then they become part of something else; the
|
|
air you breathe today was breathed in Hong Kong a month ago; even
|
|
the electrons around the atomic nucleus had only a given
|
|
probability of being where they should be--they could be as far
|
|
away as Pluto at any given moment. And there was more to it than
|
|
that, something that Derek could not quite put his finger on, but
|
|
felt in the depths of his soul. So he was disappointed by
|
|
Arthur's response.
|
|
Arthur could sense Derek's frustration but he had no
|
|
inclination to say anything and so avoided looking Derek in the
|
|
eye. To Arthur it was all hogwash. Well, it might be true, but
|
|
so what? To Arthur, philosophy (which is what he termed any
|
|
intellectual speculation with which he was confronted) was for
|
|
people who had too much time on their hands and could not face
|
|
living in the real world. Although he would not have expressed
|
|
his conception of his existence in this way, as far as he was
|
|
concerned, he, Arthur, was a distinct entity coexisting,
|
|
cooperating, and competing with other distinct entities. This he
|
|
took for granted because his eyes and ears told him so. How this
|
|
was so, or why, did not concern him at all, although if pressed
|
|
he might have conceeded that the responsibility probably rested
|
|
with "God". Seeing Derek's feeble attempts at capturing
|
|
something intangible made Arthur more worried. When he finally
|
|
did look at Derek, his eyes and a twist of his mouth seemed to be
|
|
making an apology.
|
|
Derek stared at the wall, tapping his foot to the beat of
|
|
the music, seemingly oblivious and content. He was wondering,
|
|
however, why he continued to hang around with a guy like Arthur.
|
|
It was so obvious that they were on completely different
|
|
"wavelengths". While they enjoyed doing similar things on a
|
|
physical level, Derek and Arthur rarely communicated at a deep
|
|
one. Derek supposed that it was because he had known Arthur for
|
|
six or seven years that he continued to see Arthur at all.
|
|
Arthur could not abide the silence any longer and he
|
|
conquered it in his usual fashion.
|
|
"So are you going to light that thing, or what?" he asked
|
|
jovially, as if there was no tension between them. Derek had to
|
|
laugh. Arthur was just unquenchable, and suddenly the
|
|
realization that Arthur was Arthur and Derek was Derek and
|
|
neither had to change for the other made Derek feel warm inside.
|
|
"Yes, I am," he said, smiling. "But be careful. This stuff
|
|
will knock your socks off."
|
|
"Right on."
|
|
They smoked in silence, and Arthur, his lungs full and his
|
|
cheeks puffed out, nodded his appreciation for the quality of the
|
|
herb.
|
|
Derek felt the familiar rush of sensation through his torso
|
|
and down his legs, but it was not the same as before when he had
|
|
been clear headed to begin with. It was muddier, less intense
|
|
and paralyzing, and he knew that the euphoria would be short-
|
|
lived.
|
|
The joint was finished and Derek popped the tar-blackened
|
|
end into an old film canister--his "rainy day toke dump". They
|
|
began an animated conversation, now and then bursting into
|
|
hysterical laughter, sometimes for just any reason at all. After
|
|
a while Arthur managed to convince Derek to get outside. "For
|
|
some fresh air," he said. They cruised around for a while in
|
|
Arthur's big blue battered Plymouth, smoked the second joint, and
|
|
eventually ended up at the local pool hall/video arcade. Arthur
|
|
parked in the lane behind it, but Derek did not want to go in.
|
|
"I don't feel like it," he said, not explaining why.
|
|
"Fuck," said Arthur mentally rolling his eyes. Did this
|
|
always have to be so hard? He continued, "Why not? There's a
|
|
new high score on KILLER ROBOT SERENADE and I want to try to
|
|
break it."
|
|
"So try tomorrow. Why now?"
|
|
"Because we're stoned, man. We have the advantage of
|
|
'heightened awarenesses', so let's make the best of it."
|
|
"Well, that's exactly why I don't want to go in. I'm
|
|
stoned. What if..." Derek trailed off, not wishing to admit
|
|
that he was petrified at the thought of going inside and facing
|
|
the cold perusal of the pool hall crowd. Everybody in there was
|
|
"cool". They knew their places and they fit in. Derek, on the
|
|
other hand, knew he wasn't "cool", did not have a place and knew
|
|
that he did not fit in. They'll see through me like Saran Wrap,
|
|
he thought.
|
|
If he had not been so high, Derek would probably have had
|
|
the confidence to appear quite comfortable, or even to mildly
|
|
imitate the role which he felt was required here. But his
|
|
natural feelings of transparency (which in everyday life he
|
|
managed to cover with an act), along with the disorientation
|
|
caused by the drug, loomed so large that Derek could not
|
|
understand where to begin acting.
|
|
Arthur thought he understood. "Look, man, everybody in
|
|
there is stoned," he said gently. "Just act natural. And
|
|
besides, nobody cares, anyway."
|
|
Arthur continued pushing and prodding, and slowly Derek let
|
|
himself be convinced (although he did not know what Arthur meant
|
|
by "act natural"). He got out of the car, trying to relax. He
|
|
felt disoriented, uncomfortable and depressed (like he usually
|
|
did after being stoned for a few hours) and would rather have
|
|
gone home and gone to bed. Arthur, on the other hand, was quite
|
|
cheery feeling that he had done his duty in getting Derek into a
|
|
more sociable setting. Together, Arthur slightly in the lead,
|
|
they walked around to the front of the arcade.
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
Arthur honked once and drove off into the night, the big
|
|
engine of the Plymouth chugging roughly. Derek watched as the
|
|
car floated under the dim streetlights and changed colors: now a
|
|
blue blacker than black, shimmering at the edges; now reflecting
|
|
the yellow streetlight glare like whole galaxies passing across
|
|
the empty face of space; now a murky grey-green, but shiny like a
|
|
shellacked mushroom. The left taillight was brighter than the
|
|
other. Derek watched until they seemed to rise into the air,
|
|
then disappeared over the bridge.
|
|
He looked up. The sky was almost clear, the half-Moon
|
|
falling towards the hidden Sun. Derek stared at it a while
|
|
letting his eyes adjust to the brightness. Amazing how bright
|
|
the Moon is, he mused. He could almost feel its pulsing rays,
|
|
the rays of a creature nearly living, nearly stirring and warm.
|
|
Either that, or powerful and quiescent. If I was a Celt, I'd
|
|
make the Moon my God, he thought. Goddess, he corrected. A slow
|
|
contented grin appeared on his face with the first peaceful
|
|
feeling he had had all evening. He turned and went in to bed.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Going into the pool hall had not been as bad as Derek had
|
|
feared (it never was, but the FEAR was always so dibilitating),
|
|
and Derek was privately grateful to Arthur for having shown him
|
|
that. At first Derek felt intimidated by his sense of having
|
|
violated the "pool-hall clique", having introduced his not-so-
|
|
cool presence into the murky, smoky depths of the arcade. To
|
|
Derek's meandering mind, these people had "the Knowledge", that
|
|
priceless sense of who they were and where they fit. It was
|
|
something that Derek had been striving and straining for for so
|
|
long now that he was beginning to get desperate. But he realized
|
|
quite soon that none, none of these goofballs had the slightest
|
|
clue what they were doing there either. Sure, they were having
|
|
fun, maybe, but were they completely comfortable? Definitely
|
|
not, thought Derek. All of them were so concerned with posturing
|
|
and posing in their jeans and leather jackets, black tee-shirts
|
|
with the promise of DEATH displayed so starkly that they were
|
|
confined to this one place on Earth, this one place where they
|
|
could feel that they were a part of the scene, that they were a
|
|
part of what was happening...
|
|
It gave Derek a sense of unwarrented superiority that he,
|
|
uncool as he was, could barge in on this scene, even though he
|
|
did not belong, and feel somewhat at ease. And that was the
|
|
secret wasn't it? To be a genuine Human Being, able to move
|
|
freely among all manner of men and women? For that was what it
|
|
was all about, wasn't it?
|
|
Derek found himself on the verge of Truth for the second
|
|
time that night, only to become aware that he was the subject of
|
|
laughter and jests, led by Arthur who was saying:
|
|
"...kind of spaced out. Look at him! Where are you, man?"
|
|
he taunted, snapping his fingers under Derek's nose. Derek's
|
|
reverie and rapture fled. He grinned a good-natured grin at
|
|
Arthur and the others, but his eyes glared at his friend saying,
|
|
"How could you dare to subject me, your friend, to such awful
|
|
humiliation, you shit?!"
|
|
And Arthur's mischevious eyes twinkled back, "Get your spine
|
|
up, you wimp. Life's no piece of pie ala mode, and if you want
|
|
to be cool you have to be on your guard. If you slip up, you
|
|
have to cover your ass all by yourself."
|
|
To cover his embarrassment Derek mumbled something about
|
|
being "ripped just right out of my mind", but nobody understood
|
|
him, and nobody asked him what it was he said.
|
|
Feeling ignored, Derek went to inspect the various video
|
|
games to see if there were any new ones. There weren't, and he
|
|
knew all the old ones well. He felt bored. He felt like leaving
|
|
and he wished Arthur would hurry up. Finally Arthur came over.
|
|
They played KILLER ROBOT SERENADE, but Arthur could not beat the
|
|
high score. Arthur cursed and shook the machine until he was
|
|
reprimanded by the owner.
|
|
Derek let himself be carried away by a fantasy where he was
|
|
almost convinced that the game itself was sentient and had an
|
|
evil will. It cleverly led them on, let them think that they had
|
|
it figured out and that the illusory glory of getting "High
|
|
Score" would soon be theirs. Then they would reach the dreaded
|
|
"Panel 9". "Panel 9" was more than the sum of all the screens
|
|
before; "Panel 9" had cunning beyond a mere machine, and it
|
|
showed a true mastery of psychological manipulation; "Panel 9"
|
|
lived! And to get high score you had to defeat "Panel 9".
|
|
Several times they came close, fighting furiously down to
|
|
the last man the "Beasts of Panel 9". But each time they were
|
|
repulsed. Hot and sweating in the dim, overheated hall, they
|
|
removed their jackets and plugged more coins into the greedy,
|
|
gaping maw of KILLER ROBOT SERENADE. Finally they were
|
|
disgusted.
|
|
"Last game?" asked a sweaty Arthur, holding a quarter poised
|
|
to feed the demon to whom they were selling their...selling what?
|
|
Derek frowned.
|
|
"C'mon, last game."
|
|
"...sure..." and they plunged into the battle again. This
|
|
time they almost made it. Almost, but Derek's hands slipped on
|
|
the controls and his last man was ripped apart. Derek was sure
|
|
that the controls had jumped in his hands, and so far gone was he
|
|
in his fantasy that he felt an irrational, cold rage, and a
|
|
determination to defeat this evil creation, to show it its place
|
|
like an avenging paladin. He went and got more quarters.
|
|
They played a few more games, but it was pointless. They
|
|
finally left in disgust, donned their jackets and stepped out
|
|
into the cool of the night. They breathed deeply, trying to rid
|
|
their lungs of the smoke and filth from inside. Derek blinked,
|
|
and his eyelids displayed scenes from the game. That perturbed
|
|
him since he was trying hard not to think about it anymore. He
|
|
felt manipulated and cheated, led on by some foggy promise of
|
|
glory.
|
|
And how would you have felt if you had gotten High Score?
|
|
asked an unbidden voice in his head. Derek blinked, surprised.
|
|
He realized that, while he might have felt some sensation of
|
|
pride, it would not have lasted very long, and he might very well
|
|
have poked fun at himself for feeling that way.
|
|
So it was a waste, not only of time, but money and your own
|
|
energy as well. What was gained? Nothing but an illusion, and a
|
|
masturbation of your imagination. Derek digested this and
|
|
thought it over. Then he realized that he was making thinking
|
|
noises--like "hmm"--and that Arthur was looking at him funny.
|
|
Derek cleared his throat and gave Arthur a sidelong glance
|
|
that said "Go ahead, say it, I dare ya".
|
|
Arthur laughed. "C'mon," he said. "I'll drive you home."
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
Asleep Derek lay in the darkest part of the room where the
|
|
patterns cast by the streetlamp did not fall. His breathing,
|
|
once slow and deep, came more swiftly and shallower. He turned
|
|
on his side, opened his eyes briefly without seeing, sighed, and
|
|
was quiet once again.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
...It should have been obvious to him at the time, but it's
|
|
hard to tell in a crowd. She was no longer visible, but that
|
|
wouldn't stop him from trying. He pushed deeper into the
|
|
swirling chasm, sometimes helped along, but most times, it seemed
|
|
to him, hindered. He began to despair, and, on waking, sobbed.
|
|
I need to go for a walk, he decided. He wiped a tear away, blew
|
|
his nose, and pulled on his faded jeans. He didn't put on a
|
|
shirt; it was too cold, and a shirt wouldn't help. He shuddered
|
|
as he stepped out into the snowy night. The huge flakes hissed
|
|
and steamed as they touched his vibrant skin, and soon his back
|
|
was running with cool, clear water which pooled in the waistline
|
|
of his jeans; it collected there, inexorably soaking downward,
|
|
loosening their inherent tightness, until they began to sag.
|
|
This is stupid, he thought.
|
|
A passerby sneered and muttered, "Disgusting!" That brought
|
|
him to an abrupt halt, and he stared at the receding back of his
|
|
slanderer, wishing to look fierce, so fierce tha
|