Posted on April 24, 2012
Adventures in Hull #45
I went out first thing in the morning and began looking for it. I never expected to find it in the road where I had lived for seventeen years, but the gossip that I overheard in the pub the previous night had confirmed it; one of the manholes led not to a sewer, but to the long-sealed tomb of a 16th century wizard king, struck from the history books for confusing magical reasons.
I located three of the round, thick metal lids; two bearing the logo of the local water authority, the third completely blank. I’m not sure how I hadn’t noticed it before, as my eyes usually glue themselves immediately to the lack of things, the blank, the absent. But this had passed me by completely – a perfectly smooth, round disc with no scuffs, engravements or handles. Not even a gap around the side for my trusty crowbar. It made sense – why would the bones of a wizard king make it easy for any passer-by or mistaken workman to enter their place of sanctitude?
I knocked on the lid. It was early and nobody was around, and I was glad of this as the sound of echoing death rang out across the street as I rapped the manhole cover with my bunched knuckles. Birds rose from trees, branches rustled and a crow was sick. I went to knock again, and my hand passed straight through the cover, which had grown mysteriously permeable as if my firm knock had somehow altered the molecular structure. Pride swelled within me; it had been a very good knock. But, as I allowed myself a small smile, I noticed that I had entered a state of dangerous imbalance and was beginning to topple towards the hole. I shut my eye holes tightly, and braced myself for an impact that never came.
I fell for a time, and then something changed. I no longer felt air rushing past my face, and I no longer tumbled and span like a miniature wolf in an oversized washing machine. I quickly decided that I would have to open my eyes, and quickly followed this thought with the corresponding action. I was floating mid-air in an infinite chamber. It was Tuesday.
Posted on April 18, 2012
A conversement
Dear Ted,
I have found one of God’s limbs. It is as slender as a whippet, but stronger than a bridge. I cannot work out whether it is a leg, or an arm; but I suppose that when you’re God, it doesn’t really matter.
I took it to the post office and asked if they had some kind of celestial delivery service that operated outside of our mortal realm. The woman coughed and then stared silently at me for several minutes while the queue grew agitated behind me. Eventually, as the shop floor pulsed and murmured, I took the packaged limb and left. She spluttered back into action as soon as my back was turned and nobody seemed to notice me leave.
This isn’t the first time I’ve been disappointed with the level of service at a Hull-based establishment. In 1994 I was turned away from a library for tearing pages from a book. It didn’t seem to matter to them that I had brought the book with me, or that I was tearing the pages very slowly and carefully and not “causing a scene”. I explained that I was removing elements of my life from my own diary in order to change the past itself, but the librarian told me that time does not work that way. I had to finish my task in the disconcertingly noisy high street, where at least I was paid no heed by passers-by.
I have started wondering whether there could be some other city outside of the historic walls of Hull; something on the other side of the Humber bridge other than decay and misery. I have heard tales of places where a young warlock like myself may find sympathy and encouragement. Places called “Basildon”, “Cirencester”… “Chelmsford”. Surely, with God’s Limb on my side, I could make a go of it in one of these settlements and find things that Hull can no longer offer?
But I can’t turn my back on these fair streets, no matter how hard I try. There are too many memories here – albums recorded in dingy basements, waking confused in cornfields, my first skateboard… and mother, of course. Kind, hideous mother.
Should you wish to reply to this, Ted, I can be reached at the usual address. I shan’t go anywhere just yet. Certainly not while God’s Limb still rests in my bed.
Kind regards,
Toby
–
Dear Toby
As always nice to hear from you. Should explain misconceptions about time but would only get you angry (the removal of diaried life only works with the construction of boats from the pages, set adrift upon a smooth and marbled lake, meat of your own or at least blood carried in their hollows, each one sank by the landing on it of a bird successfully cut from time, replaced though by god knows what, each one left untouched doubled in strength, crippling possibly your very brain and overwhelming all other memories, it is the risk you take, each one eaten from below by fish or eel? that i do not know for it has yet to occur, for me, or for mine) so ignore the bracketed words if you wish to retain your composure. Have story to tell you later concerning several new words I have discovered, one of which could possibly be used to describe your mother.
Kind Regards
Ted
–
Ted,
I knew I had forgotten something. Once I had removed each page I was simply chewing it until the paper reached a thick paste-like texture in my mouth, and then squeezing this out between my teeth to form a small “pellet” of memories, which I then burned. In fact I am starting to think the librarian was actually well within his rights when he asked me to leave, especially now that you have explained exactly what I was doing wrong, as only you can.
Of course it’s possible that I was, in fact, doing everything correctly and you’re just jealous that I now possess more of God’s limbs than you, in which case I will thank you to take your leave of this conversation and go and hunt down your own immortal limb rather than bothering me with your pedantry. For the record, I found mine in a shed.
Yours furiously,
Toby
P.S. The following words have been agreed upon when describing mother:
Cerebral
Ungainly
Overwhelming
Warm
Slovenly
Swamp-dwelling
Un- (or in-) –comprehen –sible (or –dible)
If you had been born to a mother – rather than forged in a pit of hatred – then you would understand.
–
Dear Toby,
I apologise for unneccesarily angering you, with my previous letter. The use of sank instead of sunk in my explanation of time’s destruction was an unforgivable oversight. It will not happen again.
Ted
PS Toby have you ever said your own name it is a surprisingly difficult thing for a man to do I tried to say mine the other day and it got stuck in my throat like so many clams turned the wrong way obstructing wind and food alike
–
Terald,
Apology accepted. You may now use any word in your swollen vocabulary to describe my mother, without fear of my flaming vengeance being wrought upon you.
I opted to find a phonetically similar word-pair that I could utter when called upon to speak my name, since the action of speaking my own name causes me to panic and sweat. I can then go on to spell out the individual letters of the words if the listener is writing my name down onto a form or computing device.
The phrases I settled upon was “Toadie Fox”, after several months experimenting with “Zombie Clock” and finding that it rendered the listener immobile due to some forgotten curse or cantrip. For yourself, may I suggest “Did Bark” or “Dead Back”, depending on your accent (have I ever actually heard you speak?)? – ?
For the sake of mankind I can only hope that neither of us ever have to reveal our middle names, because they redefine the concept of “grotesque”.
Tobin
P.S. I really must get rid of this limb somehow. It is giving me terrible moodswings, and every time I blink I see visions of the reigning messiah, Jesus IV.
–
Toby
Igloomined
Ted
–
It is perfect. Mother is delighted.
–
Toby there is more
It means to bring gloom to, or having done so, like illumined, but inverted, but not even fully inverted, for gloom is less than dark, and more evocative, like dust choking the soul and eyes of a child
Ted
–
Ted,
Mother’s delight now seems painfully ironic; and yet this is still the emotion she conveys, even after I read the full definition to her.
She is nothing if not a whirling ball of contradictions.
–
Then my work must be abandoned before it is too late.
Te. V.
Posted on January 31, 2012
The Tenbar Combinatrix
A device that captures sound and turns it into light and smoke. A button on the side to activate, a switch on the base to adjust brightness and velocity. It sells for high prices at gentlemen’s boutiques and larger apothecaries.
The light carries sunshine properties and aids depression, the smoke mellows the mind and calms the soul. It is everything to all people. The only side effect? A demoralising hum upon shutdown that can be remedied using an accompanying soundproofed case.
On sale from Thursday. Advertisements to be flown over sporting events via dirigible.
Posted on January 24, 2012
Pengotax
I’ve activated the Pengotax and it’s kind of whimpering, mewling. The chains will hold it, but only until my sympathy is exhausted and I free it, at broom-length, and watch it career down the corridor and into the streets. They’ll hunt it down again, of course, but not before it has severely damaged the economy.
Posted on January 1, 2012
THEY CAME FOR OUR MUSIC released TODAY
hello friends
my new album, They Came For Our Music, is now available. I have been working on it for more than three years.
I would like it if you would listen to it for a while.
with best regards,
Toby Vok
Posted on December 20, 2011
the man
there was a commotion in the lobby of the railway station and I noticed everyone was looking up. wanting to fit in for once, I looked up too. something humanoid was stuck in the rafters, glowing.
>what is that?
nobody seemed to hear me, or if they did they had no response. I nudged a nearby child.
>what is that?
he shrugged, his shoulders an exaggerated cavalcade of confusion. I set my toes for balance and strained upwards for a better look. I pushed on a railing and my eyes bulged closed to the roof. something humanoid was stuck in the rafters, glowing.
>it’s a man
>I think it’s a man
the woman in front turned to admire my stance, or because I had spoken, but more likely because of the stance.
>>a man?
>I think it’s a man
>>it DOES look like a man
>yes
suddenly the crowd began shifting and parting and a corridor of flesh was formed for a man to carry a ladder through, which he did with much grace and endeavour. setting it up against the advertising hoardings he shifted a lever on the side and locked an extension into place that locked firmly into the roofing.
>>all clear. we think it’s a man.
I agreed that it looked like a man, but glowing like no man ever should. what could cause a man to glow so? I had half a mind to leave the station, but as I turned I noticed the doors had been closed and were held by men in yellow reflecting jackets, muttering to each other, most probably about how they thought it was a man.
the other man, the ladder man, climbed his ladder. step by step, up he went, up the ladder, closer to the glowing roof man, who hadn’t moved. ladder man was wielding a broom; tucked under his arm like a lance as he climbed.
he shouted as he reached the top
>>I THINK IT’S A MAN
the crowd nodded and murmured. they all thought it was a man too. but why was he glowing like that? nobody had the answer.
ladder man reached out his broom towards the glowing man, and disappeared. the ladder shook with the release of suddenly removed weight. an announcement:
>>ALL TRAINS ARE CANCELLED
Posted on November 28, 2011
Blink (and you’ll miss it)
I haven’t been able to stop blinking for the last three days and it is making my life into the most unnecessary strobe light extravaganza of partial sightedness. As soon as the eyes open, they close, and as soon as they close, they open! I can’t sleep! I can’t correctly operate a zoetrope! I can’t nothing!
I wedged one eye open with a matchstick, a trick I learned from a cartoon, but my forceful eyelid crashed down and broke the stick in two. I tried covering my eyes with an airplane-style “light-blocking mask” but the vibration of my head caused it to sliiiiiiiiiide over my ears and away.
This is torture? This is torture. I am going to the Post Office post-office. The disabled toilet is disabled. I am making a record of the records this broken record has broken. 1: Best-selling. 2: Best-smelling. 3: Least influential. 4: Yeast influenza?
Posted on November 23, 2011
I Am Entirely Made Of Zinc
I am entirely made of zinc
and you have brought me to the brink
of insanity and disrepair and misery
I am entirely metallic
which implies I’m anencephalic
but somehow I can still function physically
you take me to the fair
and implore good folks to stare
“an all-zinc man”, you declare, as propaganda
people gather, and gasp
and attempt to alloy me with brass
but the police amass, I hear the coppers and a
helicopter hit the scene
scatter folks with flying machine
embarrassed, I burn green, I blew it too
protestors hurl debris
the source of their fury? me.
I am at fault here, cannot flee the way you flew.
now locked behind metal gate
for inciting public hate
when my unusual physical state was analysed
you should have let me stay
home, kept public eyes away
for ’twas my monstrous face that horror galvanised.
Posted on November 10, 2011
The lake
I saw a bearded man walking down the street, violently banging his head back and forth, his screams muffled slightly by his terrrifying clenched teeth. He was aimed for the lake.
I saw another man, bearded too, but this time running, arms flailing, neck bent, towards the lake.
I recall thinking “In Voklian Geometry all lines converge upon the lake” but went no further along this trail of fancy.
It was around this time that I noticed the hem on my trousers had begun to fray, and the word hem dominated my thoughts from thereon in.
Posted on November 9, 2011
Identicrime
somebody has been impersonating me and riding on boats using a replica of my passport and drinking my milk. I first realised this when I went to make a cup of non-denominational hot drink and there was no milk. earlier when I had performed my daily milk-cataloguing there had been plenty – the explanation? fraud and scandal. I realised the boat thing when I received a postcard from a man with my face, riding on a ship that I had never seen before, addressed to and signed by myself.
to prevent this from happening again, I have changed my image in secret. if this person (or persons) attempts to impersonate me again, they will now in fact be impersonating the person I used to be, which is to say, the person I no longer am. in addition, my final acts as the person I used to be were several unpleasant crimes which have led the global police to issue a warrant for my old face’s arrest. they are sure to swoop soon, landing this impostor in VERY hot water inDEED.