Categories
serial

The Cloud. Episode 41

1966, Sydney.

A police inspector drapes an arm over the bare shoulders of a young woman. The woman’s face is hidden under the flop of a wide-brimmed hat. A yellow polka-dot ribbon swings from the hat, tickling the sun-bleached hair on the Inspector’s arm. The arm spans an age gap of eighteen years.

A man spinning clouds of pink candy floss has lost a shoe. Children notice and point. Parents keep their eyes on the prize. Maybe the missing shoe is part of the sell. Maybe not.

The bar across the beach is tasselled with dogs waiting for their men. The dogs pant pant piss. Most of the men piss out of sight. At least three of the dogs will be named Bluey.

A small child runs into the legs of the police inspector with a melting ice-cream in a cone. The Inspector’s navy shorts are dolloped white. The Inspector laughs, wiping at the cream with his fingers. The child’s mother offers the Inspector a red balloon on a long string. He shakes his head, no.

Eucalyptus rubbed between the fingers is a medicament for some. A memory of something lost by others. The woman selling it from a basket promises an end to flies and a future flushed with fortune. New migrants invest handfuls of unfamiliar coins in her augurs.

So we sailed up to the sun. Til we found the sea of green. Try to see it my way. I’m picking up good vibrations. We can work it out. She’s giving me excitations. Smooth tanned feet everywhere drumming to the beat.

Immigrants are surprised by the rain’s vertical nature and its mocking insistence on dribbling where it shouldn’t. Most didn’t pack umbrellas. Those that call themselves locals lie on the beach, face up, and just carry on.

The young woman has never seen so many people on a beach. Has never felt sand so hot. Has never smelt that salty sun oil barbecue sweet. It’s her first time out in a bikini top and a matching mini. She could be on the cover of a magazine.

A police inspector leads a young woman down through the crowds onto the steaming sand. He is holding her hand. Guiding her steps. Picking past the picnickers. Kicking a stray football back to a group of running lads in black shorts. He takes her to the edge of the water. Removes his sandals. Then hers with a grinning bow. He throws them all back up the sand.

The water will be colder than it looks. He lifts her up. She shrieks. He wades in deeper, holding her just above the ocean. The waves crash up to his waist. He is soaked. She is salt sprayed. She is laughing. She has her arms around his neck.

The kiss yokes the Inspector to a murder. The kiss yokes the young woman to the Inspector’s yet to be declared bastard child.

To be continued.

Categories
exercise Flash fiction

Still, no one speaks

The sudden silence is so loud, so brash, so charged, I stumble. My bare heel slips out of my platform shoe and I grab at the nearest chair to catch myself. My glasses steam up and the silence jumps an octave. I force my heel back into my shoe and rub my glasses with a finger. The Café Royal melts into focus.

The serving bar, a long fat oval, is in the centre of the room. Everything in it and about it is flashy and tiled and chandeliered. Johan had chosen the bar and I wasn’t surprised. On-line at least, he’s a flashy sort of guy.

There are mirrors of mirrors of mirrors. Multiples of multiples and shattering vulgar light. I’m confused. Are there five people or ten or fifty? I settle on around twenty including the three barman.

Across from me a woman leans on a chair by the door. She is older than me, and flustered. She is wearing the same yellow shoes. The same cropped jeans. The same neat black jacket. I frown at her and she frowns back. We blush together as we understand our idiocy. I want to scan the bar for Johan but now I’m too humiliated to look.

Still, no one speaks.

A barman, neat in a moustache and a tight black waistcoat with a tea towel draped over his shoulder, studies me.  His appraisal is slow and deliberate. I pull my shoulders in. Shrink inside. He releases me, turns away and leans over the counter to a young bloke in a suit. They exchange whispers and money.

The young bloke swivels on his stool and faces me. He’s looking but not looking. He has a banknote in his fingers that he rolls and unrolls. Something gold flashes around his wrist. He doesn’t seem to blink. I drop my eyes. Sticky acrid bile catches the back of my throat. I imagine it yellow. Then green. I cough. The bloke keeps looking not looking rolling unrolling.

Still, no one speaks.

The bar is dim and cool. Everyone in it is cool and dim. Except me. I am hot. I cannot control my breathing.

I cannot control my breathing. Breaths coming short and fast. Too short and so fast. What’s wrong with these people? It can’t be me. How could it be me? I try looking to my right.

There’s a trio, standing in an alcove. A fiddler, a guitarist, and a woman who probably sings. She’s in a red dress with matching flat shoes. They are not playing music. But they’re not resting. They’re a livestream on pause. The fiddler, a tall man with angles and rough cheeks and a blistered nose, still has his fiddle under his v-shaped chin. The arm with the bow is stuck, crooked in the air. He sways lightly. He is looking at the bloke on the stool. His eyes seem distressed.

The guitarist is also looking at the bloke on the stool. He has more of a querulous look. His guitar hangs on his chest from a leather strap over his shoulder, and his right hand is a frozen pick at a fret. The woman in red has her belly out and her mouth open in preparation for a high note that does not come. She is looking at me. Where is Johan? He must have seen me by now.

Still, no one speaks.

My short fast breaths need reassurance. My hands are sticking with sweat. I try looking to my left. There’s an old woman sat on a high chair at a fruit machine. She’s wearing a sleeveless crocheted waistcoat, nicotine taupe, over a rumpled white shift. Her eyes are pulled to the line of odd fruits. Her fingers are on the red button. The fruit machine is not flashing. Its lights are stuck on glare. The woman’s right shoe makes a rapid tap tap on the wooden footrest below her. It’s the only sound in the bar. The only sound apart from my short fast breaths.

The silence blisters. A mobile phone. It rings and rings until it rings out.  It comes from the far corner of the bar, the corner I can see.  It comes from a group of four men with dominoes splayed out across their table. Two of the men are looking at the bloke on the stool. The other two have their hands flat on the table.

Still, no one speaks.

I feel sick. This is why I never go into bars first. Why I always wait outside. Wandering about on the pavement pretending to make a call. Maybe this is Johan? A test? A test for a first date? But how would he set the whole thing up? He wouldn’t know all these people. The woman at the fruit machine sneezes. She wipes her nose on her sleeve. I’m the only person that looks.

I need to leave. I let go of the chair. I set my face in an air of oh well nothing happening here I’ll just head home. I swing around on my platform shoes. The bloke on the stool hops down. He is bigger than I expected. He moves fast. He moves to the spot between me and the door. He is close enough to touch. He smells of onion and metal. My adrenaline roars.

I look back around the bar for help. To the trio of musicians. To the woman at the fruit machine. To the men with the dominoes. To all the others sitting in silence with their gazes anywhere but here. Someone drops a coin on the floor. Someone on the other side of the musicians. The coin bounces and spins. I can’t help but watch it. The bloke in the suit has breath that is warm and gummy across my hair.

The coin settles. It settles beside something red. Blood red. A trail of blood. The trail leads to a man. A man lying face down all crooked under a table with a couple sat each side of him. No one bends to retrieve the coin.

And still, no one speaks.


Postscript. This was a writing exercise on building tension.

Categories
fiction serial

The Cloud. Episode 32

2019. Portobello, Edinburgh.

‘So,’ said Katherine, unwrapping two small gold packets of butter and spreading them both onto her white bread roll, ‘how have you been, Janet?’  Janet didn’t eat butter. At least, not like that. Not in full view of everyone else. Those poor wailing cows at Pop George’s cottage. Bawling night after night so that folk could spread fat on bread that didn’t even need it.

‘You know, doing away.’ Janet wasn’t good at small talk. She didn’t have anything of value to say. She couldn’t confess the ferret. And she wasn’t sure why Katherine was bothering to help her. Katherine seemed to be one of the busy young women that excelled at everything. They go to work, they go on fancy holidays with packs of friends, they swim in the sea on their own, they have their own mortgages. They probably even have sex toys. Although what they did with them she couldn’t be certain. She stirred her tomato soup with the spoon. It splashed up the bowl and onto the table. She didn’t like tomato soup, but she’d panicked when the waiter came to take their order. Katherine had known what she wanted straight away, so Janet needed to too. ‘You said something about news?’

Katherine put her knife and fork down on her plate and pushed it to one side. She took the salt and pepper shakers, one in each hand, and moved them across the table towards Janet. ‘See these?’ Janet nodded. Of course she could see them. ‘See how ordinary they are? How you only notice them when they’re not there and you want to add salt. Or pepper?’ Janet nodded again. What was she on about it?  ‘Well, I’m going to be the pepper.’ Janet raised her eyebrows. Was her mind getting away from her? It wasn’t the first time she’d been confused by something that Katherine had said.

Katherine looked at Janet. Janet sensed by the tightness of the lips that she was exasperated, frustrated that Janet wasn’t as clever as she was. ‘Could you just explain it to me,’ she replied. ‘I’m not following.’ She wiped her mouth with the paper napkin. It came away streaked rusty orange. How long had her mouth been stained by that soup? She put her hand to her face and blushed. She should have worn the lipstick. Eaten more carefully. Ordered something without colour.

Katherine said ‘I’m going to infiltrate the group.’ She leant back in her chair and put a finger to her lips. ‘And when they realise they can’t do without me,’ she paused, ‘I’ll strike.’

Janet opened her mouth to reply just as the waiter returned to the table. Katherine waved him away. ‘What do you think, Janet?’

‘Isn’t it dangerous?’

‘Do you want the cloud back?’

‘Yes, of course. But…’ Katherine interrupted her. ‘It’s either this or the police. And you said you didn’t want the police.’

‘Yes. No.’

‘Although I wish you’d tell me why the police are a problem.’

‘Infiltration. Yes. You’ll be great at that.’

‘That’s what I thought.’ Janet looked at Katherine’s fingernails. Neat, just the right length, polished in emerald green. Her thumbnails flashed. Two little silver stars on each one.

‘Will you need to be disguised?’ Katherine turned to look at the other customers. She was conspiratorial. Something out of a movie.

‘No,’ she said. ‘Were they disguised when they came to your flat?’ Janet blushed again. Of course they weren’t. Or were they? How would she know?

‘But I can wear a wig if you’d like,’ Katherine went on. I’ve got three at home. I’ll send you the pics and you can choose.’

‘For me?’ Janet asked, scrunching the napkin into a tight fist.

‘No, you idiot. For me.’ Janet managed a smile. How stupid she was. She hadn’t always been stupid, though. She’d got away with murder. Not everybody could say that.

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