Throwback Tuesday Payback

This posting is part of an intermitten series of re-postings of some the earliest on this site:

Sit back and enjoy one of the earliest posts from 2019…

Drabble Blog

I recently found out that the 100 word flash-fiction/micro-stories I have been working these past three years have an actual name – “Drabble”.

The term is derived from a 1971 Monty Python book. ’nuff said!

There’s even a website to prove it.

So, ever at the rebellious cutting-edge, my newest piece – a seasonally appropriate monologue – is a variant-drabble form I’ve just invented.

It’s called a “Faux-Drabble”.

That is a piece that could pass for a drabble, but is actually 15 or so words out.

And so, I present to you Bella Basura’s First Faux-Drabble.

Cold Edges

My winter consciousness feels bound within cold edges.

I am double-thermal long-johns.

And still my ankles are frozen blue.

They  descend into hypothermic dysfunction, squishing like icy jelly when I stand on them.

 My knees feel chilly. And my elbows.

I can’t leave the house, enraptured in my unnatural attachment to a radiator. “I love You. I want to envelope you. I want to lie all over you”. I say the same to my fur-covered hot water bottle. Hot chocolate and fleecy throws seduce me. Candles and a ‘real’ fire screen-saver on my laptop too. Hygge hygge hygge my arse.

Green and pleasant, England’s winters are mild, but still my consciousness always feels bound within cold edges.

Bella Basura January 2019

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Hey Joe!

In a crowded city centre high street an innocuous grey haired man called Joe is unceremoniously thrown to the ground by two burly uniformed men. With Joe’s chin pressed into the pavement, one security guard straddles him, twisting his left arm up behind his back. The other security guard is crushing Joe’s outstretched right arm, his steel toe-capped boot pinioning him down at the wrist.

It seems to Joe that they stay like this for a long time, a crowd of onlookers gather. It seems like a long time until the police come and arrest him. Enough time for Joe to calm down  and think out the situation. He wonders how other men might have reacted if they’d found their old lady messing round town.

The incident had started half an hour earlier that morning, in the Marks and Spencer foodhall by the market.

Mary and Joe, a couple approaching retirement, are dawdling by the bakery counter.

Joe is desperately clutching a pack of belgian buns.

“Oh! Come on Joe! Be a bit adventurous for a change” Mary is wheedling.

“But we always have belgian buns on a Saturday morning”

“I know, love, but the portugese custard tarts are delicious”

“I don’t want…” Joe is truculent in that usual middle aged passive aggressive way that always piques Mary.

When was he going to have his mid-life crisis?

She’d waited 30 years for him to go wild, buy a fast car, wear clothes too young for him, start going to discos. Lord knows she’d welcome an open necked shirt and gold medallion. She’d worked her entire life waiting for the freedom of Joe’s mid-life crisis.

“You’d love them” Mary tries enticing him “I bet you’ve never even tried one”

“I don’t want to. I want belgian buns like we always have on a Saturday”

“mmm, they’re lovely?” Mary licks her lips

“How do you know” he’s suspicious

“Trust me, honey” she pats his arm

“You’ve had one haven’t you!”

“Yes” she says “I bought a packet in the week”

“A packet!” Joe is losing his cool “So you’ve had four, you’ve had four portugese custard tarts without me” He’s waving the belgian buns in her face.

She turns away “I knew you’d be like this, that’s why I didn’t tell you”

Joe is in the murderous grip of jealousy, storming off.

“Hey Joe!” Mary calls after him, as he stomps out of the shop to the bleeping of the alarm.

And security are on him, crushing him to the ground.

Mary cries out “Hey Joe, where you going with that bun in your hand?”

Slush Pile Bonanza – Dod Pledges

Time for some more offerings from my Slush Pile Bonanza series, stories I wrote that have been hanging around in boxes or carrier bags under my bed, unpublished, possibly unpublishable.

So here is an unpublished short story that I’ve had knocking around for over 5 years.

Dod Pledges

“But I don’t want to stop.” Dod finally said. Standing up he sauntered to the bar to buy himself his third pint. I’d declined to join him after the first pint, it was only lunchtime, and I had to be back in the shop this afternoon. And in anycase, I was there to get a job done.

When Dod had stormed out of the bookshop where we both worked and slunk into the pub round the corner the Boss sent me after him, to talk him down. Truth is Dod had thrown one hell of a hissy-fit when the boss challenged him over the 3 empty and one half-full cans of special brew knocking around under the book tokens counter. Dod had screamed his resignation, and exiting had slammed the door so hard that the open/closed sign fell off. Boss sent me to placate him and bring him back.

Dod returned to the pub table and sat worshipping his new pint in silence.

I looked at my friend with sympathy. I worried for him even though he was a workmate rather than a friend, we were occasional drinking partners. Not that I put too much store on that – Dod drank with everyone, anyone. I knew he was going through a bad divorce, his daughter refused to see him and his wife was in therapy, still he carried on drinking. I liked him, I wanted him to be alright.

He was half-way through the third pint when I finally spoke “Look Dod, Boss-man is offering to finance you through rehab. He’ll pay, keep your job open, get off the booze at his expense. He’s being very fair, you know.” Dod didn’t respond beyond a raised eyebrow.

I waited in silence till the last minute, then I stood up “He’s giving you a big last chance here Dod, He’s offering to support you through rehab.” Dod gulped at the dregs of the finished pint, groaned and stared at the empty glass “I don’t want rehab” He said “And I don’t want a job at the end of it. I just want another pint” And with that he hauled himself up and off to the bar.

Greased My Palm

 When the head line, heart line, life line and fate line connect it can create a letter “M” in the palm of the hand. It means you are blessed with good fortune. It is a sign of strong intuition. Not everybody has an “M” in their hand, are you one of the chosen few?

I am sitting here, staring at the enormous “M” I have in my right palm, and feeling blessed and encouraged, I’m feeling validated.

 The “M” is a sign of strong intuition and creativity, as well as determination and career growth…

There is a stirring in my memory and I intuitively look at my left palm. Astonishingly, I also have a huge “M” in the centre of my left palm. I am very special, I am so rare, I have two “M”s, one in each hand. I am a doubly supremely perceptive person.

But there is a nagging memory in the back of my mind…

You are special, you are chosen…

And then the memory drops into the light.

I am eleven years old, and I am browsing in the bargain basement of a grim little seaside junk shop. I pick up a slightly damp-stained, battered blue linen bound Edwardian book, “Cheiro’s Book of Mystic Chiromantic Palmistry”. I sit in the corner of the shop and read the book and discover I have an “M” in my palm, on both my palms. I buy the book and devour it over many years.

Those with an “M” in the palm have great power of perception and curiosity…

And there again, is the nagging doubt in the back of my head, the vague remembering that everybody I spoke to at school about my palmistry discoveries also had an “M” in their palm. Or am I imagining that?

A person with an “M” in their palm will be successful in whatever field they choose, they will become famous painters, they will excel in the world  of literature…

It dawns on me that I have known for decades that I have the miraculous  “M”s in my hands – but then so does everyone else. I wonder what happened to that book after I left home.

 The “M” indicates a hugely successful, driven and intuitive individual, whose personality ensures money will flow to them organically…

On seaside holidays my Mum was an avid frequenter of fortune telling booths, I would be dragged around fairgrounds, left to wait outside the tent while Mum had her cards, or palms, or bumps, or tealeaves read. So I have stood aside at the threshold of the psychic carnival all my life. And with my great intuition I can see that all is not as it seems.

If you have an “M” you will never fail in your endevours…

The psychics would always ask my Mum if she was searching, did she search? was she a seeker? then they ask her if she herself is a psychic. And that was the hook, she greased their palms and stepped into the light. My mum was always beside herself, delighted, she would talk about it for days. “you know, I do think I am psychic” she would say. “I do believe I am”. Fortune tellers gave her the validation she sought.

As for me with my many years of failure and discontent lengthening by the day, I’m a bit more cynical.

  As a person blessed with the “M” marking on your palm anything is possible for you… Sign up to our monthly guide to psychic success for only £4.99 a month.

The Future Food

“It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a person in possession of a long-term vegetarian habit, must be in want of a bacon buttie” I was thinking, as I browsed the vegan meats section in the supermarket, when I suddenly spotted the fake bacon rashers on special offer. The gleaming strips of firm pink flesh and soft white fat lay side by side in the plastic tray looking for all the world like real bacon rashers.

I had no qualms, I’d already tried fake bacon lardons by the same brand and although it wasn’t at all bacon-like it had worked well in a fake Carbonara. Both the texture and flavour were off, it was flaky and had a strong salted taste of smoked fish. The fake bacon lardons wasn’t at all bacon-like, but it was pleasant enough and indeed satisfied a 30 year long craving for kippers that I never even knew I had.

I was keen to see what else I was missing.

At the checkout the cashier laughed “What is THAT?” she asked “fake bacon” I replied. “It looks like they let a 5 year old make it out of play-doh” She laughed again.

“I’ll let you know” I said.

And so for brunch today, I decided to do myself a proper fry-up, mushrooms, baked beans, linda macartney bangers, tomatoes, scrambled tofu, hash browns, wholemeal toast, a big mug of black tea and the fake bacon rashers, an all day vegan full english to write home about. I decided to fry  the fake bacon (as per the instructions on the packet) in the same pan as the mushrooms – two beautiful big open-cup portobellos sliced in fat wedges, I was looking forward to mopping up their black oily ink with the doorstop thick slices of organic wholemeal toast. The mushrooms had been sizzling away and were just getting there when I plopped in the fake bacon rashers, and in that moment brunch just went to shit. Two minutes each side (as per the instructions on the packet) and the fake bacon literally turned into actual fried play-doh, it rendered into stringy knots of white and pink twine, which melted, stuck, and sucked up my lovely mushroom jus. It indelibly coated the bottom of my frying pan in candy-coloured fibrous sludge. I think it might have permanently damaged the stainless steel.

Now, I think it is almost impossible to ruin a fry-up, you can slightly burn, over crisp, or blacken but it’s a fry-up so its always good anyway. Believe me,  this was, without a doubt, the worst fry-up of my entire life.

I was thinking I’d tell the supermarket cashier that she was right about the 5 year olds play-doh fake bacon, but at least a 5 year old knows that bacon is food. I have a theory that the fake bacon was created on a 3D printer, under the direction of an A.I that hadn’t been told that the fake bacon was supposed to be cooked and eaten.

This is the future I see – Artificially intelligent fake bacon, eaten by anthropomorphs with 6 and half fingers that bend the wrong way, who have “serving suggestion only” written on their foreheads.

The Keeper of Confessions

Keeper of Confessions A.I. generated image

I am told I am a good listener, like it’s a compliment. I have been called a calm beacon in a tempestuous verbal sea, a paragon of serenity, a wise woman, a crone, a santuary of silence. They called me the keeper of confessions.

I try never to be dependent on other people. I live alone and I’m happy that way. I actively resist offers of lifts into town, shy away from being obligated to anyone, I am wary of owing a favour and I shirk social expectations repeatedly. It’s not that I am introverted, so much as self-reliant. Not misanthropic, just easily disappointed. I keep myself to myself, and I wish others would do the same. I am a good listener, but I hate manipulative and malicious gossip, bad-mouthing is a cardinal sin.

So I am a good listener, and as a result I have struggled over the years to cope with people who talk too much. People with issues around personal boundaries, issues around anger, all that misdirected energy and wasted time.

People whose mouths run away with them, people who tell me things, people who tell me things I don’t want to know, about people I don’t even know. People who become personally affronted when I tell them I don’t want to hear it, who lash out and tell me things about myself, things that I also I don’t want to hear. In the midst of all this over-sharing shit show I find I am losing my voice.

And they called me the keeper of confessions.

It’s Good to See the Back of a Bully

Statement:

Three times she became aggressive when I tried to turn her monologues into dialogues.

“I haven’t finished” she would scream down the phone “stop interupting me” she would shout. Abuse was becoming her sole mode of communication.

Then one day, at the begining of January she phoned me, and when I picked up the phone and said “Hello” she screamed “You’re shouting in my ear…” she screamed like this until I ended the call.

The second time she phoned me, screaming down the phone “you’re shouting in my ear…” I’d already decided she was a bullying arsehole. The third time I picked up the phone and said nothing, she still screamed “You’re shouting in my ear”.

After that I just stopped picking up her calls.

I decided I wouldn’t pick up her calls until she appologised for shouting at me.

Her unanswered calls eventually petered out, and then, thankfully stopped altogther and I began to get my life back.

And now I do things I want to do, go places I want to go, see people I want to see.

It’s good to see the back of a bully.

History:

At the beginning I felt sorry for her, I thought she was just a sad lonely middle-aged woman. She was a neighbour, a sad lonely old neighbour, sitting out the lockdowns in solitude. She stopped me in the street and invited me to her home for a cup of tea, but, thankfully, it was lockdown so I refused. She made me feel obliged to invite her to my house for tea, but I resisted.I gave her my mobile number instead.

The calls started within hours of me giving her my number,  and each call lasted at least an hour.

She called me in the morning, as I was trying to start my day, she told me how she’d slept, what she had for breakfast, she told me about her dog’s breakfast. I felt sorry for her, she seemed unable to stop talking.

Within a few hours she would phone again, and stay monologing for at least an hour, she seemed unable to engage in dialogue. She told me about her washing and drying regimen, about her lunch, about her dogs lunch.

Or maybe she would phone in the early afternoon, and talk uninteruptable about her washing up, her hoovering, the details of her cup of tea, she told me about her dog’s dinner and her dog’s diarrhoea.

Sometimes, she’d phone in the evening to tell me about what TV she was watching, what TV programme her dog was watching…

This went on every day, daily, for weeks, that turned to months and eventually all the covid years.

Her pattern of intrusive calling, her long impenetrable monologues, the dull minutae of her dull life continued for years, but then she began to complain too.

She complained about other people, she complained that they didn’t give her good enough christmas presents, that they were drunk when she wanted them to drive her to the shops, that they phoned her all day long, that they spoke to other people more than they spoke to her, that they came round to her house every day and she was such a martyr, so put upon.

It was getting wearing, but she didn’t seem to notice, she kept her persistant intrusive calling, her endless miserable moaning, moaning about everybody she knew, moaning that nobody ever invited her to their house.

I kept firm, I never invited her to my house, I could see that she wouldn’t leave if I let her foot through my door. That’s when she shifted from complaining to abuse.

Three times she became aggressive when I tried to turn her monologues into dialogues.

“I haven’t finished”. she would scream down the phone “stop interupting me” she would shout. Abuse was becoming her sole mode of communication.

Re-statement:

Then one day, at the begining of January she phoned me, and when I picked up the phone and said “Hello” she screamed “You’re shouting in my ear…” she screamed like this until I ended the call.

The second time she phoned me, screaming down the phone “you’re shouting in my ear” I’d already decided she was a bullying arsehole. The third time I picked up the phone and said nothing, she still screamed “You’re shouting in my ear”.

After that I just stopped picking up her calls.

I decided I wouldn’t pick up her calls until she appologised for shouting at me.

Her unanswered calls eventually petered out, and then, thankfully stopped altogther and I began to get my life back.

And now I do things I want to do, go places I want to go, see people I want to see.

It’s good to see the back of a bully.

King of Potato

Emblazoned gold on unfurling crimson swags, the cracked old bone china cup read:  “King Edward VIII Coronation 1936”.

They paid cash, crisp twenty pound notes. The assistant slid the tissue wrapped  commemorative cup  across the counter. “Dad, why did he abdicate?” The youngster asked as they left the shop.

Later, they sat on a park bench. The son handed his father a small hammer. The older man placed the King Edward parcel on the ground and smacked it smartly, a single cracking strike.

“Because, Son” he explained as he dropped the smashed memorial in the bin. “He was a Nazi”.

Yesterdays Gowns of Rags and Silks

It was well past midnight, too late for me. I was struggling to keep my eyes open, but I couldn’t let it go, I couldn’t close the laptop and just go to bed, not without knowing for sure.

Of course, in my mind I did know for sure. I knew perfectly well. It had always been one of my strongest memories  of my early twenties. The story was my party piece when conversation lagged, my go-to name-drop when people were boring me. Except now, with there being no evidence on the internet, I was begining to doubt it even happened.

It was in 1985, was it? or maybe 1986…

The posters advertising the gig had been plain and photocopied, black words on a white A4 sheet. “Nico” they read, then in brackets “(of the Velvet Underground)”. There was the day, the time, the venue and the price – a straight flat fiver in cash. No promoters name, no funding acknowledgement.  As I push deep into the memory it seems to become implausible, unsteadily unreal. The posters had been scattered around town, stuck to lamp-posts, like a flyer about a stolen bike, or an ad for knocked off garden furniture, a scam or a hoax. A world before social media. Who can say now what’s real and what was not.

It was summer, all the other students had gone home, but I stayed on in my bedsit. Living alone, on the dole, I guess I liked the solitude. So, I went to the gig by myself, which of course means there’s no one to check with, nobody to confirm that Nico had played the little rundown provincial town in that wet and lonely summer. The internet will not confirm my memory, I search and search, but I find no reference to it among Nico’s online setlist and gig archives. My reality is turning to fiction.

At the door I paid my cash fiver, there was no receipt, no ticket, no souvenirs, just an inky stamp on the back of my left hand. I followed a dark corridor down to a tiny windowless rehearsal studio, tucked away beneath a theatre.

Working lights, dim, the stage area filled half the space  of the room, an Harmonium pretty much in the middle of the room, behind it to the left a piano,  and a collection of percussion, gongs and a variety of drums crowded to the right.

The audience, of maybe 30 people, sat on the uncarpeted floor, buzzing for an Exploding Plastic Inevitable. I felt them double take as the three piece shuffled on stage. A question rippled through the watchers “Which one is Lou Reed?” None of them I remember thinking out loud.  I felt the punters groan collectively as the band rolled into Janitor of Lunacy. A catatonic harmomium drone, scattered striken percussion, sparse percussive piano. And then her voice. Her voice, gravelly deep and funereal, without hope, perfected. I wallowed deep in thick sonic delirium, it was all quite special to me.

Some people left, head shaking bitterly. Nico had waited too long before placating them with All Tomorow’s Parties. The journalists had already left, heading for a bar, by the time Nico gave them a single Velvet’s number. The song wasn’t instantly recognisable except for her plangent growlling voice. I thought it was beautiful, like the best sort of cover version. Different, better than before.

When the last song came round, she said “This is for my friend, Jim Morrison” and slipped into The End. Stripped bare of The Doors cocky swagger Nico’s trembling trio of finality dirged me out into the cool dark night. It was an experience to remember, and I remembered it, I relished it. But the cyber world does not.

And today there is no evidence that it ever happened, google can’t look that far back, there is no indellible facebook page about it, no twitter memory that old, no instagram to prove it real. But it did happen, I was there and I know it happened.

I found one photograph in an image search that tugged my memory, that reminded me of a part of the story I had forgotten. The photo of Nico dressed entirely in black, a pudgy middle-aged woman, hunched forward, staring down at her feet, her motorcycle boots wilting unbuckled, stilled in time. Exactly how I seen her before the show, in a tiny scrubby playground behind the venue, where I stopped to smoke a cigarette. As I sat she caught my eye with her pacing, boots flapping, she circled the seesaw, stopped short of the swings, then slumped herself onto the bench opposite me, just like the internet photo. I don’t think she even registered me there. I wanted, I wanted to run over to her, embrace her, fawn over her, beg her to bless me, but I couldn’t bring myself to do it. She’d have despised me, I am sure, she’d have sneered at my fangirl superficiality. I don’t know, it’s hard being young and desperate to be cool. In anycase, she was obviously waiting for the man, the moment had passed. I finished my cigarette just as a shoddy dead-eyed street junkie sloped into view, he circled the seesaw and sidled to  her bench.

And I left, Eulogy For Lenny Bruce singing in my head: “And why after every last shot was there always another”