Thursday, 26 January 2017

Episode 28







PREVIOUSLY


“You want me to come with you?” asked Jack. Wasn’t he a bundle of surprises, thought Beulah.
It was beginning to rain now.
“No, I’ll be alright…thanks.” She flashed him a fleeting smile, and gathering her coat about her, hurried in through the gate.
She didn’t quite know what she was looking for but steered towards her mother’s grave. In the back of her mind she had the misguided thought that the old lady would be there waiting for her.
Well, she had been partially right. Even from a distance she could see that something had been written on her mother’s tombstone in chalk….a message….she was sure it was a message from the old lady. She ran forward through the rain, breath rasping in her lungs, screwing up her eyes to try and read what it said, but it was bucketing down now, washing in waves against the chalk marks and melting them into a thin sheen of white water. By the time Clara got within range the writing was indecipherable. She collapsed to her knees, the last link with her son dribbling away in the gutters. She had been seconds too late. For a moment she felt like clawing at the headstone to try and retrieve the message, but then her mind turned inwards and the light in her eyes went out.
A human being can only stand so much disappointment. She sat in silence…soaked to the skin…unhearing and unknowing. She was no trouble to Beulah and Jack who gently took her by either arm, raised her up, and led her to the waiting car.


 NOW

When they got home they almost didn’t notice the unstamped letter lying on the floor just inside the front door. It got stood on, dripped on, and kicked to one side in the stampede to get out of the rain. It was only when Beulah was hanging up the coats that she noticed it. She picked it up and saw that it was addressed simply to ‘Clara’ in a spidery hand that didn’t need a second guess at the writer. She carried it rather reverentially into the kitchen and placed it on the table in front of her mother. Clara sat unseeing with her hands folded on her lap, white lips drawn tight together. Jack was busy making a hot pot of tea and cutting some bread for toast and jam. He was relaxed and moved easily about the kitchen for a hulking football player, as if he was quite at home. He and Beulah carried on about their business as if nothing was wrong, letting Clara have the time to come to herself when she felt like it.
Jack placed the steaming cup of tea and warm toast in front of her, the delicious aroma wafting up into her nose and caused a synapse or two to register in her brain. Within a short while she was eating ravenously, fingering the envelope as she remembered her philosophy teacher quoting Nietche: “A person should put a special day aside for the receiving of mail…and then take a bath immediately afterwards”. She was sure this was going to be one of those letters and was in two minds whether to open it. Alice was never good news. But what the hell. She was a woman and they were notorious for their curiosity.
The letter read: “Dear Clara, I know we have had our differences and I know I done you wrong. I would like to make it up to you believe it or not. I think I know a way to get your boy back!”
Clara nearly laughed out loud. There must be a catch. Alice never did anything for anyone other than herself. But as she read on the letter began to get her attention.

Samuel found himself tapping his fingers on the visitors table impatiently – eyes constantly scanning the hall gate where Ronetta would appear. His heart raced slightly and his hands were clammy…a sure sign of guilt in criminals. He had no idea what he was doing here. On the other hand he knew exactly what he was doing here. He was doing a one hundred and eighty degree turnabout…if you’ll pardon the phrase. Law and order plonked on its arse by a cross-dressing homo-hooker and the pillars of his moral stature cracking like cheap concrete and crashing into the dust.
Ronetta was late. But Ronetta was never early. It irked him that she kept him waiting, dangling like a fish out of water, unable to breathe except in her presence. Since last they met he had thought of little else. He couldn’t sleep, he couldn’t eat, and he couldn’t concentrate. He was, for the first time in his life…in love. And it hurt.
Eventually she walked in wearing a tight grey pencil skirt and a see-through blouse. High heels and stockings finished off the ensemble and pretty much finished off Samuel as well. Her hourglass figure swayed from one end of the room to the other leaving Samuel speechless by the time she got there. Even her peripheries - legs, ankles, arms, neck - everywhere he looked clapped him in a new set of restraints until his eyes were fastened to her with a thousand chains.
“Hello,” she said, and sat down with a sliding swish that had his ears standing out like radar dishes. His skin prickled on alert. Somewhere inside, his conscience was trying to get a word in edgewise. ‘Your son is missing. Probably dead. What kind of revolting animal are you, drooling over this tart?’ Truly, he was never more disgusted with himself than at that moment. His own son….for this woman. And not even a real woman…….a MAN! He remembered what he had thought of all the other men who ‘cohabited’ with women like her….queers, gays, poofters, fags….and now he was one of them…or as close as, for given half a chance and he knew he wouldn’t hesitate. He had even been toying with the plan of visiting her in a private cell where no one could see what went on. He understood now what people meant by physical attraction. She was like a magnet. He hated himself for the way he was side-lining Joshua, but secretly he was glad of an excuse to come and see her.
Ronetta for her part could see the effect she was having on him. It was written all over his face. She had him dangling from her little finger. She lit a cigarette to give him time to sort out his malfunctioning circuits. She was reeling him in and she didn’t even have to take it nice and slow. He was well and truly hooked. She supposed that’s why they called them hookers.
“I remembered something,” she said.
“Oh.” Samuel sat back in his chair and tried to appear nonchalant.
“Somewhere my mother might have taken him….an old warehouse where I used to practice my girlie act. I took my mother there once in a misguided attempt to try and convince her that I was serious. She might have remembered.”
“Where?” he asked.
Ronetta remained silent for a long while. He watched the smoke curl from between her lips. Oh how he wished he were that smoke.
“I’ve changed my mind,” she said. “I think I do want to get out of here.”
A vein started throbbing somewhere under his left eye.
“Okay,” he said, stalling for time. “I don’t know if that’s wise. I don’t know…well I do know what’ll happen if I break you out of here. I know what’ll happen to me. I’ll be fired and probably end up in prison myself. And you. Maximum security. Moved to Hemworth and put in with the general population. I don’t think you’re going to like that.” He’d been giving an escape plan plenty of thought lately and hadn’t been very encouraged by the results.  
She shrugged her shoulders and pretended to be bored with his answers. Samuel’s mind started racing. Dear God she was serious.
“Where would you go?”
“I have a place.”
“Look. I can make things very easy for you in here. You’d be surprised how sweet life could be. A special room…on suite bath….everything you could possibly want…”
 “I didn’t think so,” she said. “You started me thinking about freedom, and I think I’d like to try it. I’ve had enough of this.”
“They’d fire me,” he said, stalling for time.
“Look,” she said. “You want your boy back?” She knew who she was dealing with here. She had to get him to focus now. Time to bring out the big guns. “You want me?”
Samuel looked at her with hunger in his eyes.
“Then take me away from here,” she looked appealingly into his eyes and he nearly wet himself. He didn’t dare move because he knew his coordination had just gone bye bye. For a while his throat wrestled with a word that never saw the light of day. Ronetta clasped her bag and stood up. “I’ll be waiting.” She touched his cheek gently then turned and sashayed away to such a tune that Samuel was once again hard pressed to remember what they had just been talking about. He was none too pleased when he did.

Thursday, 19 January 2017

Episode 27






The old nurse lady entered the derelict warehouse and immediately noticed the dog was lying on the boy’s bed, right next to him, his snout on the boy’s chest. She went to the cot but the dog half rose on its hackles and growled at her protectively.
“Alright, alright,” she said. “I’m not going to hurt him, but I have to change his bottles.”
Carefully she went about her business, and when everything was done to her satisfaction, she sat down again and began to read the paper she had brought in with her.
“LOCAL PEOPLE FORM SEARCH PARTY FOR COMA BOY – MAYOR WARNS AGAINST VIGILANTISM”
The colour drained from her face as she read further. She had told the woman…no press…no police…or else. Halfway down the page there was a picture of her from her younger days with the caption: “CHILD THIEF” and below that a picture of her son in full drag. “HER SON – RONALD” said the caption.
“Noooo,” she shouted into the empty room, so loudly that the pigeons nesting in the rafters took flight and circled crazily about her head until they could settle again.
“That’s not my son. What are they saying? They are trying to trick me. This is a trick…that’s what this is. A trick to get me to come forward…..well I won’t. I still hold the joker. They gotta come to me.”
She read further. The search was being organized for tomorrow, it being Saturday and all citizens available. Tonight, it said, there was going to be a meeting in the town hall to allocate boroughs to each group. The newspaper had also printed the very precise details about how she had wanted her son to be delivered to her at the City Limits motel. Well, she could forget about that now. She would have to find some other way. But her mind had become numb and she could hear a noise ringing in her ears. She couldn’t think. None of this boded well. She was fairly confident that no one would ever think of looking here, but you never knew. And now she couldn’t walk about in broad daylight anymore because someone might recognize her. Things had taken a turn for the worse. She clenched her fists and looked at the sleeping boy. If they didn’t give her boy back…then this one would die.
 

Clara woke up with the mother of all hangovers pounding in her head. When she moved she felt her brain wobble painfully and the nausea climb up into her throat. She opened her eyes and felt the lids rasp like sandpaper over her bloodshot eyeballs. She lay back carefully and let the memories of the last few days flood into her consciousness. She felt strangely calm though, almost as if it wasn’t happening to her but to someone else. She seemed to have reached a level of detachment that gave her room to breathe, a vantage point removed from the immediate action that gave her a calm view of events.
She remembered threatening Samuel - poor dear, he had looked like a terrified rabbit in the headlights - but she was as much, if not more, to blame for all this. She cringed when she remembered what she had said to him. She might have been drunk, but even that was no excuse. She’d never be able to take those words back. She had said some very horrible things. No one deserved that. She had just been frightened out of her wits and had taken it out on him; which was just as well in a way, because had she been an introverted type of person she would probably have killed herself by now. Never mind. She still had a situation to deal with – one that she couldn’t escape – but it was no good running around like Al Capone with his head cut off.
An urgent pressure in her bladder forced her to brave the pain in her temples and go to the bathroom. As she sat on the loo she realized that if she hadn’t chased Alice out of the house, she probably would not have gone to the papers. Well, maybe not. Why did she hate her so? She was no real threat to her. She was just using Alice as a focus for her unhappy life. Oh well, there was no getting off this train. Might as well get up and face the music. She pulled the chain and went back to her dressing table. This part she didn’t remember. The mirror was broken. Seven years bad luck. She laughed at that, and then she sat down and cried. God she missed her mother, bitch that she was. At least her life had been….looked after. She was looked after. She supposed that was what Samuel had been doing all these years. She hadn’t given him any credit for that. Now for the first time she was forced to take matters in hand and she didn’t like it one bit. She was just no good at it. Samuel, for all his high handed ways, was. She couldn’t go on blaming Samuel for not bailing her out of trouble. They were equal partners in this business now. Both were to blame. She had to stop behaving like a spoilt princess. Stop behaving as if life didn’t concern her. As if she was just an observer. She examined herself in one of the remaining shards of glass in the mirror. She didn’t like what she saw…but it was her. It was all she had.
“You’re a middle-aged woman already. Time to grow up and shoulder your load.”
“Hi mom,” said Beulah, looking in the door.
“Hi, sweetie. Come in.”
“You alright?
“Yes. I’m fine. Had a bit of a meltdown, didn’t I?”
“Something. I brought you some tea and an aspirin.”
“How did you know? You don’t drink too…?”
“No. Daddy suggested it. Said you’d have a hangover.”
“Where is he?”
“Laying low,” she said and smiled. “No, he’s gone out to speak to the old woman’s son again. See if he can find out anything more.”
She wouldn’t be surprised if he didn’t come back. It was over between them. Things had gone too far. No one would want to live with a mad woman anyway. Alice understood him, and they were good together. She didn’t quite know how she was going to cope on her own, but as long as she got Joshua back, she would make the effort. If not……..well.
“And the reporters?”
“Still there.”
So this is what it takes for us two to be nice to each other, thought Clara. She looked at her daughter and for the first time noticed how beautiful she was.
“I need to go to the cemetery again.” The sentence was so out of the blue that it surprised even her. “But I don’t know how we’re going to get there with all the newspaper people out there.”
“I’ll phone Jack.”
“Jack? There’s a Jack?”
“He has a car.”
Clara didn’t say anything, she just nodded. She was going to have to start being nice to people if she needed any help.
“Thanks. That would be great.”
Clara turned to the windows. There was a grey day gusting outside with heavy storm clouds threatening overhead.

 “Hello Mrs Mitke, nice to meet you,” he said, opening the car door for her.
“Hello Jack.” He was a pleasant fellow with an open face. “Thank you for doing this.”
“No probs. Glad to be of help. Awful about your son. You must be going spare.”
Beulah sat in the back seat with her mouth hanging open. She’d never heard him say so many sentences one after the other. And he was being so nice to her mom that it nearly had her in tears. Her heart was definitely warming to him. He drove off smoothly and smartly, slipping away from the crowd of vultures with ease. In no time at all they were parked outside the graveyard…the scene of so many recent travails. A rumble of thunder reminded Clara of her need for haste. Jack switched off the engine and got out to open Clara’s door.
“You want me to come with you?” asked Jack. Wasn’t he a bundle of surprises, thought Beulah.
It was beginning to rain now.
“No, I’ll be alright…thanks.” She flashed him a fleeting smile, and gathering her coat about her, hurried in through the gate.
She didn’t quite know what she was looking for but steered towards her mother’s grave. In the back of her mind she had the misguided thought that the old lady would be there waiting for her.
Well, she had been partially right. Even from a distance she could see that something had been written on her mother’s tombstone in chalk….a message….she was sure it was a message from the old lady. She ran forward through the rain, breath rasping in her lungs, screwing up her eyes to try and read what it said, but it was bucketing down now, washing in waves against the chalk marks and melting them into a thin sheen of white water. By the time Clara got within range the writing was indecipherable. She collapsed to her knees, the last link with her son dribbling away in the gutters. She had been seconds too late. For a moment she felt like clawing at the headstone to try and retrieve the message, but then her mind turned inwards and the light in her eyes went out.
A human being can only stand so much disappointment. She sat in silence…soaked to the skin…unhearing and unknowing. She was no trouble to Beulah and Jack who gently took her by either arm, raised her up, and led her to the waiting car.



Thursday, 12 January 2017

Episode 26





Clytemnestra is outraged that one of her charges has been stolen from under her nose. This causes her to complain long and loudly to her almighty. She is also mightily disappointed in her handler for succumbing to such a common trick as opium in his pottage; which had him snoring like a turkey at Christmas. Clytemnestra has no patience with this and has set off on her own to pursue the offenders with much spleen and determination. The Gravidores are easy to follow, not being very fleet of foot and apt to leave a trail a mile wide. Throughout the day she follows them, not out of sight, but always at a safe distance. It doesn’t take long for Demona to notice her, but there is nothing she can do about it….for now.
At night, after Demona and her lackey have set up camp, Clytemnestra walks in wide circles around them, hooting and calling and fretting the Gravidores to the end of their tether. At first Demona tries to drive her off with sticks and stones and curses galore, but they have no effect on her, for camels are immune to the tricks and spells of sorcerers and witches, who rely for the most part on the gullibility of feeble minded individuals. A camel is not like that. Once a camel has set their mind on something they are as relentless as the sand and implacable as the wind.
For seven nights in a row Clytemnestra maintains her insidious attack, keeping everyone awake and causing Demona to lose some seriously needed beauty sleep. Carrapacchio however is secretly supportive of the camel in her efforts to wear his mistress down. He still hasn’t worked out a way of getting rid of the boy, but now he is feeling more hopeful.
Demona cannot do anything to the boy whilst they are in the City of the Dead. She has to get him out first. So by day she drives the Gravidores faster than they have ever run before, sitting between sheets of snot and mucous as they pound through the miles trying to outpace the camel. They might as well have been spared the effort.
On the eighth night a new sound is heard. A new sort of wailing to compliment the braying call of the camel. At first it is soft and not much to write home about. On the tenth night however, Demona knows she is coming under a full scale attack.
Out in the darkness the echoes have been gathering; one by one they come in answer to the camel’s calls. They are no friends of Demona, for she has often feasted on them during her journeys across the City of the Dead, catching these poor homeless spirits by surprise as they wandered through the ruins of the homes they used to inhabit as people. Demona had received a reputation as a ruthless killer and regarded them merely as food. She had no mercy on them and that is why they come now, because the camel is offering them a chance to get back at her. They begin collecting in vast numbers. By day twelve they almost completely surround Demona’s campsite to a depth of hundreds of yards. They look like the ghost sails of a vast lost armada of ships…thousands and thousands of them moiling around on the desert floor, wraiths of mist writhing in the moonlight, wailing their grief for a battle lost long ago so loudly that the sand begins to shift in sympathy to the resonance to their call. Dust begins to lift off the tips of the dunes and curl up into the sky.
Demona is beside herself. The noise is untenable. It rasps at the very bone of her being. Hourly she rushes out into the darkness and scythes down rows of Echoes, but they are instantly replaced by new ones. Out in the vast emptiness the wind begins to blow, driving great billowing clouds of dust before it. The assault has begun. Clasping her hands over her ears, Demona sits under her blanket in her tent and keens to herself. She needs sleep. She is so tired she wants to cry…and her plans for the boy are nowhere near finished yet. The windstorm buffets the tent like the fist of God, and the lanterns flicker and sway uncertainly. Suddenly Demona’s nerve breaks and she feels a pang of fear in her ample bosom. She rushes to the mirror and unwraps it. Yes. He is still there, staring out at her. She reaches her hand out to touch the glass for reassurance and the wailing outside increases. Perhaps she is for an instant distracted; perhaps at that precise moment she feels a surge of hate for the camel and her echoes, but whatever power it is that possesses her at that moment, it causes the mirror to shatter under her touch. It sounds like a cannon going off. Demona is half blinded by the blast of glass and wind and the boy spills out of the frame and drops at her feet.
Carrapacchio watches on with awe, hardly able to believe what has happened. Demona’s weapon of mass destruction…shattered…ruined. Demona gropes around for the boy, unable to see a thing. She cannot afford to let him escape. The wailing of the echoes has increased tenfold, adding to the whine of the desert wind driving the dust in through the flaps of the tent. Carrapacchio has managed to get the boy under his arm and is trying to sneak him outside, when, blinded by the sand and frightened by the noise, the Gravidores finally break free from their restraints and gallop off into the desert, pulling half the tent with them.
The boy needs no more encouragement. He slips from the creature’s grasp and staggers out into the storm, trying to get as far from Demona as possible. Within a few heartbeats he runs into the soft, warm lump that is Clytemnestra. She brays quietly in his ear and drops to the sand so that he can get on her back.
In a wink of an eye she is up and running like the wind. Clytemnestra is in her element. Nothing can catch her now. Her old joints and muscles reinvigorated…infused with new life and purpose. From the darkness behind them they hear a terrible howl of anguish rising from the storm as Demona discovers her loss. The camel smiles to herself as she runs. A good night’s work indeed.


Thursday, 5 January 2017

episode 25




 

“I have him. I have him,” she says, and dances her little dance of glee. Carrapacchio watches her with undisguised jealousy. The boy stands inside the mirror, hands against the glass….trapped in its shining surface.
“I knew it. I knew he would succumb. I knew he’d go in there of his own accord and now I have him. I have him,” and she twirls around on her toes like a little girl, twinkling across the rugs, her skirts flowing around her like a multi-coloured river, showing off her shapely legs. She never looked so beautiful in her life. Carrapacchio never hated her so much in his whole life. He knows he is looking at his end of days. His poor little brain aches from the effort of trying to think up some scheme or other that will get rid of this interloper. He just isn’t good at that kind of thing. But that won’t stop him trying.
“I’m watching you, creep. No funny business or I will put a scorpion down your pants. Ha, ha. That should spice up your love-life.” She chuckles at her own wit and goes back to admiring her handiwork.
The boy calls and bangs silently at the mirror’s surface. All in vain. He isn’t going anywhere. Demona runs her fingers lovingly down the front of the glass…she can almost taste him. The thought excites her to the point where she is compelled to go and sit down and squeeze her thighs together until the dizziness has passed.
“Heady stuff. Oh I am ready for this. I shall be…….magnificent.” And with that she passes out on the bed and sleeps the clock around.

On awakening she can see that Carrapacchio has discovered the impregnability of the mirror. He sits to one side, exhausted by his efforts, and yet he has made not a mark on it. The boy is still inside; true he is sleeping now, but that doesn’t matter. He is safe. Now all Demona has to do is implement part two of her plan.
“Up, you traitorous dog. We have things to do,” she says, giving him a kick in the rear to hurry things up.

*

By midday the reporters were at the door. The local TV station truck was parked in the street and people were swarming all over their front lawn poking their cameras at the house.
“So,” said Clara, ever so slightly tipsy. “Here we are.”
Samuel sat uncomfortably opposite her at the kitchen table, not saying a word. Beulah sat cautiously on the side-lines, eyes flicking from one parent to the other. She really didn’t want to be there but she had no choice either.
“So,” said Clara again: the clock, the knife, and the bottle – though now only half full – still on the table in front of her. “Tell me…” She flung her eyes at Samuel. “Tell me what you make of the situation?” she said ominously, indicating the headlines on the morning paper on the table in front of her.
It read: “LOCAL NURSE ISOBEL WATTS KIDNAPS COMA-BOY – RANSOMES HIM FOR HER SON’S RELEASE FROM PRISON” and underneath it, a larger than life picture of Alice with the caption: “COMA-BOY’S AUNT TELLS THE WHOLE STORY”
Samuel was trapped. He knew he had to say something, but he would rather not because whatever he said would be wrong. There was no escaping this one.
“I am so sorry,” he said, “I didn’t think she’d….”
“You ‘didn’t think’……just about sums it up. Well,” she said with a calmness that made his flesh creep. “I’m not going to chase you out. No, no, no, no, no, no. I want you right here…..for when they find Joshua. Because you see,” she said, waving the bottle in a circle around her head. “You see…” and at this point, thinking of Joshua, she nearly broke down and cried. But with a steely determination she hung on and pulled herself together. “Because, you see – if he’s alive – well and good. But if he’s not………………….I’m going to kill you.”
She gave a little drunken nod at this and bit her lower lip.
“You will share his fate. You might not think this is fair – but I hold you responsible – firstly for his being in a coma, and secondly for your sister ruining our chances of ever getting him back alive.”
She swayed in her seat as she spoke.
“You can run – I don’t care. I shall dedicate my life to finding you and….” But she couldn’t go on and at that point she just fell to pieces. Her body sagged as she sucked in a lungful of air and began howling with pain. She had run out of resources. She could hold on no more. Samuel caught her before she hit the floor and held her gently in his arms. He rocked her back and forth while her body shook with grief. Beulah watched with tears in her eyes. The full import of the tragedy had finally come home to roost. Their lives were literally over. The family was finished, smashed to bits. All hope was gone – just terrible emptiness – terrible pain. They would never be the same again.
Eventually Samuel helped Clara up and managed, with her one arm over his shoulder, to hoist her up the stairs and into bed. But he couldn’t get her to let go of the bottle. She had a death like grip on its neck.
“Samuel,” she said tearfully. “Sam…what are we going to do?”
Once again Samuel knew he had to answer – but he was damned either way.

The boy in the mirror looks out into a strange bedroom. It is lit in the dim light from a streetlamp outside. He no longer sees the ornate tent with that demon woman and her bizarre creature. He is glad, for she gave him the creeps. He is far from happy though. He misses the old lady and feels very lonely. He can’t move much either. He is but a two dimensional being trapped in the surface of the mirror. He doesn’t know how he got here. He only knows it had something to do with the young man he had been watching. And the pretty lady.
Suddenly the lights come on and he sees the pretty lady being helped into the room by a man. This must be her bedroom. Why is he here? In her mirror.
He can’t hear anything, but he can see the lady and the man are having some sort of fight. The lady looks drunk, for she staggers and nearly falls, swinging her bottle around to try and keep her balance. Now she is shouting at the man again and he is trying to calm her down. But he has no luck. She swings around and flings the bottle straight at the mirror and the boy breaks into a million pieces.

The sun poured in through the broken skylight of the abandoned shed. The red bricks glowed rosily in the afternoon light. Off to one side in a cosy corner stood a cot, with all sorts of contraptions around it. These were the drip-feeds and urine bags that were attached to the sleeping boy. Lying on the floor in front of the cot was a large, shaggy-haired mongrel dog. In the beginning the old lady had chased it away, but it kept coming back so eventually she gave up and just let it be.
Next to the cot was a chair and a coffee table with a couple of books on it. The old woman was nowhere in sight, but had she been there she would have noticed something unusual about the boy’s condition. Under his closed eyelids there were some indications of REM sleep – not much – just a flicker – and all was still again.