Friday, 24 August 2012

Alley Dogs

thethemeis: Aftermath
theauthoris: Aaron Twentythree

   After the boys are finished, they stand back, exhausted, and admire their handiwork. Within a few seconds, the smallest, Ellis, starts to feel sick and his eyes fill with stinging tears. The stench is unbearable already, a kind of warm pet shop smell mixed with blood and gone-wrong drains; but it is not this that is making him want to cry, and he knows it. He got overexcited, lifted by the eagerness of the other two boys, and easily coaxed into an action he would never choose to do; and now, he feels the stomach-turning sting of regret.

   Panting, the largest boy, Stephen, leans on his knees and points at the body with the tree branch he holds. He laughs, gasping in deep gulps of air and wiping the sweat from his brow, before saying, ‘Did you see how its eyes rolled back at the end? Like it knew it was all over.’ His hands and forearms are caked in blood, tiny pieces of minced flesh and sweat. 

   ‘Yeah,’ the chubby kid beside him says, mirroring the larger boy’s posture. ‘Freaky.’

   Ellis, the youngest of the three and the least impressed with himself and the body they have just stilled, starts to back away, dropping his own log onto the floor. 

   ‘What’s the matter with you?’ asks Stephen, standing and turning to Ellis. 

   ‘Nothing,’ he replies, ‘I just don’t like the way it’s looking. Its eyes look sad.’

   Stephen laughs and turns to the chubby kid, Phillip, who also laughs. ‘Did you hear that? Its eyes look sad. Have you ever heard anything as queer as that?’ 

   ‘So queer.’ Phillip agrees. 

   ‘It’s not queer!’ shouts Ellis, a whiny, nasal tone to his voice leaking through in his annoyance. ‘That was somebody’s pet!’

   ‘Yeah, I know whose it was, he’s not even going to miss it.’ says Stephen, flicking a blob of wet, red matter from his wrist. ‘It’s that stupid old cripple who only leaves his flat like, once a month. He lives in these flats; he can’t walk the stupid thing ‘cause his back is so hunched over, so he just lets it run around wherever the fuck it wants to.’

   ‘Not any more,’ interjects Phillip, bending to poke the ears of the corpse. 

   Stephen just laughs. ‘Yeah, not any more.’

   ‘Because he’s old and he can’t chase us, doesn’t mean he deserves this,’ snaps Ellis, his voice raising into a near-shout, ‘It’s not right. That old man is near enough blind, he 
probably needed that dog for company.’

   ‘Yeah. It was probably trying to run home when we chased it here,’ Stephen says, looking up at the block of flats that serves as one of the walls of the alley in which they stand. There are only a few lights on in the whole block, but they suffice to illuminate the alley in a kind of dull orange, red and blue glow. The orange of energy saving bulbs, the blue of flashing televisions through net curtains, the red of dog’s blood.

   ‘Shut up!’ cries Ellis. 

   ‘You know what? You need to wind your neck in, you little squirt. I didn’t hear you complaining when we were bashing its skull in. In fact, I saw you beat this thing to death just as much as we were.’

   ‘No you didn’t!’

   ‘I’m pretty sure it was your idea. Wasn’t it, Phil?’ 

   ‘Yeah,’ Phillip mutters, hooking his length of tree branch under the dog’s collar, trying to pry it out from between the folds of mangled flesh to hold it on the end of his stick. ‘Ellis told me to kill it.’

   ‘Exactly. You little prick.’

   Ellis starts to cry, so Stephen turns back to the body. 

   Around them, the cold night air carries the whisper of a light breeze. The few windows that were open on the advent calendar faces of the blocks of flats that surround the boys are gradually being closed, as the occupants turn up their central heating and get ready for bed, or else put on another layer and watch late night bingo shows or sitcom re-runs. Each block is a closed world inside of the closed world of the estate, a bubble within a bubble. The boys are as alone out here, being watched by every block in the estate, as the occupants of each flat, drawing their curtains and locking their doors and making believe that they are the only ones inhabiting the buildings. 

   Ellis realises he has no one to turn to. The two boys with whom he killed that near-blind old man’s puppy are his only hope for friends at school, now that most of his own academic year have turned their backs on him. ‘What are we going to do with it then?’

   ‘What?’

   ‘The body. We can’t leave it here; someone’ll find it first thing tomorrow.’

   ‘Oh, so suddenly it’s our problem? A minute ago you wanted nothing to do with it, and now you want to hide it?’

   It is exhaustion, rather than a lack of desire to fight back, that drives Ellis to respond with silence. 

   ‘We could move it out onto the road,’ Phillip says after a short while, ‘then people will think it was just run over.’ He scratches the back of his head for a second or two, before realising that he is smearing dog’s blood into his hair, when he promptly stops. 

   ‘Alright, are you gonna be the one to carry it out there?’ Stephen asks, pointing at the mangled body on the concrete floor, lying in a puddle of its own blood. The legs lay askew, as if they are pieces of an Airfix model that were unpacked onto a desk but never got constructed; while the body is beaten to a pulp, caved in, barely recognisable as the shell of a mammal, and appearing instead more like a sack of wet, red sand covered in fur. The eyes stare out at the boys, seeming to follow their every movement, as their sockets and the nose that sits below them remain among the only body parts left intact. 

   ‘Yeah, I guess not,’ says Phillip, taking the time to smell his fingers. 

   ‘We should bury it,’ says Ellis, staring at the dead dog and sniffing the upset. 

   ‘Fuck that,’ Stephen snaps, ‘I’m not burying it. Who carries a shovel round, anyway?’

   ‘Well, I say,’ Phillip says, almost to himself, as he finally succeeds in lifting the collar from the body using his stick as a hook, ‘that we just find one of the big blue bins and shove it in it. It’s a pretty light dog; we don’t even need to pick it up. Just hook it on our sticks and throw the sticks away with it.’ 

   He stares at the collar suspended on the end of his makeshift weapon for a while, before a sly smile creeps across his face and he starts to poke it in the direction of Ellis. ‘Stop it! Stop it!’ Ellis cries, as he bats the air in front of his face and tries to hold more tears back unsuccessfully. He sobs so hard that his chest shakes with the force of hiccoughs, as Phillip flicks the collar from the end of his stick and it hits Ellis in the forehead, before dropping into a puddle.

   ‘I’ve got a better idea,’ Stephen interrupts, ‘let’s just throw away the collar, or burn it, or keep it, and mince the rest of this body so that no one can even recognise what it was.’

   ‘No!’ cries Ellis. 

   ‘Yes!’ chuckles Phillip, waddling back toward the carcass.

   ‘Don’t!’ weeps Ellis, choking on his tears, barely able to catch his breath through the heaving of his diaphragm.

   But the older boys ignore him, taking up their sticks and starting to pound once again at the body of the murdered canine. Phillip bashes its legs, over and over, his corpulent body wheezing with the effort of physical exertion as he brings his log down on the cracking bones; while Stephen focuses on the head, continually attacking the same spot like an axman chopping at wood, until the skull caves in and the eyeballs fall back into the mush and out of sight; while Ellis cries No, No, Stop. Together, the two boys growl and laugh and howl as they pummel and pummel away at the bones and organs of the dead creature, each one’s enthusiasm acting as fuel for the other’s, until they are a perpetual aggression machine, an automaton of violence that powers itself, wreaking havoc on the land and holding dominion over nature and all the power it purports to possess...

   And then, suddenly, Phillip finds that he is alone in the beating. He notices that his is the only weapon coming down on the carrion, and his excitement wains quickly, until he has no option but to look up to see what has distracted Stephen. He gazes upon an unexpected sight: an alarmed Ellis, covered in tears and scarcely able to breathe, but once again brandishing his own hitting log; and an unconscious Stephen, sprawled across the concrete alleyway, open-eyed and open-mouthed, blood gushing from a wide crack in the side of his cranium. Phillip’s legs cement to the spot, his log dropping to the floor, and the blood drains from his head, leaving him feeling dizzy and sick.

   ‘You... You killed him!’ He squeals at Ellis, who doesn’t look up from the staring eyes of Stephen. ‘He’s dead! You’ve killed him! Wh-what the fuck?!’

   Ellis slowly looks up at Phillip, seeming like a light that was switched on behind his eyes has suddenly been switched off, and then down at his branch. As if only just becoming aware of its existence, he instantly becomes sick of the sight of it and drops it to the floor, before also discovering the body of the boy he might just have killed and letting out a shriek. Sobbing violently, tears filling his eyes so that he can barely see where he is going, he turns and runs off into the night, as fast as he possibly can, with no destination and no plan of action except to run away forever.

   Phillip kneels by the body of Stephen, trying to nudge his face without getting covered in his hot blood.

   ‘Steve,’ he whispers, ‘Steve, wake up. Wake up, Stephen.’ He stays for a long time like this, trying to revive his friend, before he makes up his mind to evacuate. He looks up and down the alley, checking for witnesses, before hobbling off in a jog toward home, where he intends to tell no one what has happened, out of fear that he will be suspected of the murder of both the dog and the boy. With luck, his mother won’t even be awake to ask where he has been before he manages to reach the bathroom.

   As Phillip vacates the scene, the last witness remains: a small boy, no older than seven or eight, looks down on the alley from a window on the fourth floor of the nearest block of flats. He has been watching from the beginning, since the boys chased the puppy into the alleyway, and has remained their only avid viewer ever since. With the lights off in his bedroom and his pyjamas on, he watched the events unfold in silence, without emotion, as if watching it all through a clouded lens in a cartoon world. And now, as he sees the fat boy waddling off out of sight, he climbs back into bed, and prays for the soul of the slaughtered puppy.

No Apologies Necessary

thethemeis: Aftermath
theauthoris:  Deadbeat


"In other news, Jamie Barnes has been released from prison today after being cleared of all charges connect to the abduction and murder of 7 year old Jessica Trent 12 years ago. This comes after Sarah Trent, the girl's mother, gave a report to the police citing her ex-husband Peter as the perpetrator of the murder. After finally admitting his actions in court 2 days ago the police have sufficient grounds to grant James Barnes his freedom. The chief of police Donald Sutherton has apologised profusely to Mr. Barnes for the grave miscarriage of justice. It is believed Mr. Barnes could receive in excess of £2 million in compensation."

You'd be hard pressed to find a news report any longer than that on the subject. Sure, there had been pages and pages written about the new evidence coming to light and the subsequent arrest of Mr. Trent. Channel 4 were even commissioning a documentary on the whole saga, but in reference to the releasing an innocent man after 12 years of what can only be described as some kind of personal hell, you be lucky to find a full 2 paragraphs.

None of the tabloids had the audacity the put the story on the front pages. James' release was squashed down into the bottom two lines of stories with headlines such as "Animal Admits Daughter's Murder". Ironic really, given the extensive coverage they'd previously given their poster-boy of child murder. One of the more self-important broadsheets cast James as the protagonist in a "hard-hitting" expose of miscarriages of justice and failings in the legal system. It was nice to see them give a new role to their one-time star of a a piece explaining failings in Britain's orphanages which were capable of "churning out maladjusted and sick individuals into society".

I was impossible to find a quote from the man himself anywhere.

People in pubs and dinning rooms up and down the country struggled equally with discussing the news. The police often got a good bashing for their incompetence in the affair. How dare they allow the general public to vilify and launch a campaign of hate on an innocent man. There were no shortage of semi-drunk men giving graphic descriptions of what exactly they would do to the girls father if they got their hands on him. If was often exactly what semi-drunk men would have done to James 12 years ago. If anybody happened to bring up his name then it was generally agreed he was a lucky bastard to get so much money out of it.

Besides, he always looked a bit weird. "I wouldn't surprise me if he was into that sort of thing anyway."

The disappointing thing for most people was that it was so clear cut. If it had been a witness testimony which had become invalid, or some new DNA evidence that had been found then there could be some element of doubt over the whole thing which would mean nobody would have to change their opinion on the matter. Mind you, there were a few smug people who claimed to have know it was the parents all along. There nothing quite as satisfying as being able to spot a kiddie murderer just from a few press appearances. They should really have put some money on it.


----------------------------


I never got to see James after his release. The truth was, I didn't know him that well before his arrest, I just worked with the guy briefly. Even still, I found it hard to believe he'd done what they said at the time. Then again, I found it hard to believe anyone would do  that. I guess I just remained decidedly uninformed about the whole situation, whilst people all around me aired their thoughts on what happened.

I never heard or saw anything about him again after those reports.

Friday, 10 August 2012

The Man, The Myth


thethemeis: The London 2012 Olympic Games
theauthoris: LiamD
   00:00:00

   In the middle of the Olympic Stadium, where eighty thousand people hailing from two hundred and four different nations are holding their breath in suspense, a pistol is fired. At the London 2012 Olympics, the race is on.

   00:00:96

   It's August 1986 and in a modest dwelling in Sherwood Content, a young Jamaican woman has just given birth to a baby boy. The child is a week and a half late. This is the first and only time that Jennifer will think of him as slow.

   00:01:93

   My start isn't perfect. It's something the pundits and analysts will talk about, something they would surely dwell on if I'm not standing in the centre of the podium at the end of the session. I won't let that happen. I push my body to its limits.

   00:02:89

   Jennifer has been a mother for just three weeks but her father is certain his newborn grandson is destined for greatness. 'There is something about this child,' he says to her with a knowing smile. The child doesn't smile back, will not learn to for around eight months, but there is a glint of understanding in his eye. 'Something special...'

   00:03:85

   In this mad dash I am competing against four of the fastest men alive. Three of these men are Americans, the other is my training partner from Jamaica. All four of them reacted to the pistol before I could, but now I have fallen into my rhythm and moved up easily into sixth. Now, I am catching.

   00:04:82

   The child has grown and is now of schooling age. He enjoys playing football and cricket. One day, playing football with his brother Sadiki in their street, the boy and his sibling are approached by a small group of older children. 

   'Run away, baby.' They tell him. 'Your brother is in trouble.' 

   He looks at them with dark eyes and responds. 'One day I will run, faster than anyone has ever seen. But not today,' he tells them. 'Not from you.' 

   The group move in on them and a fight ensues. The brothers give as good as they get.

   00:05:78

   With every first stride I take a breath, every second stride force it out. I have moved up from sixth and the race is now so close it is impossible to tell who is in first place. The man running immediately to my left is the pantomime's villain, having previously been tested positive for banned substances. Today he is clean, but even with drugs he would not have beaten me. Today, Justin Gatlin will take the bronze medal.

   00:06:74

   At the age of twelve, the boy takes the title of his school's fastest runner. By fifteen, he is winning silver medals at the Inter-Secondary School Champs. It is not long before he begins to enter the larger competitions and continues to set a new personal best in every race. At the age of eighteen, the boy turns professional.

   00:07:70

   I am flying. There is no greater feeling than this. Gatlin falls behind me to my left and my training partner is the only athlete left to beat. He is fast, of course he is, but only because he trains with the best. I pass him somewhere during the seventh second and leave Yohan Blake to enjoy the silver medal he deserves.

   00:08:67

   The gold medals come in thick and fast. A new personal best strides triumphantly with each new race the young man competes in. In May 2008, in his fifth senior run over 100 metres, a thunderclap accompanies his record-breaking 9.74 second performance in New York City. It's a gift to the media, given his surname. In the next twelve months, he will set a new olympic record followed by a new world record in the same distance. 

   00:09:63

   Nine point six three seconds. In this short time, it is all over. It's a new olympic record, but that's not what's on my mind. Now I am thinking about the next race, the next faster opponents and my next fastest time. In four days I will enter the two hundred metres at this very venue and take the gold again, only missing my previous world record by two hundredths of a second. Still, it will not be enough. I shall always want to train harder, always want to run faster.

   My name is Usain Bolt, and I am the fastest man of all time.

An Imagined Affair

thethemeis: The London 2012 Olympic Games
theauthoris: Aaron Twentythree

   Hannah had tickets to the gymnastics with a few girls from work. She had been looking forward to it for weeks. She had been a gymnast at school, you see, training three times a week, and following a strict diet regime of the kind no one in their right mind could ever imagine committing themselves to. She was pretty good, too, back in the day; but never good enough to compete in any competition larger than the regionals. She still had the toned legs it had given her, and the tight stomach, but she hadn't even thought about doing it again for years. Life had got in the way; she had a job now, a fiancĂ©, bills to pay and friends to desperately try not to lose touch with. But she still took an interest in the sport, so she had been delighted when Greg had revealed the tickets to her, a grin on his face and a London 2012 cap on his head. Infinitely generous Greg, the love of her life, surprising her once again.

   And with her out of the house, Greg arranged to see Carla. He said he'd pick her up, and they could go for a drive. 

*

   When she stepped into the car, she seemed flustered and out of breath. Her cheeks glowed nearly as red as her thick, flowing hair, and she fanned herself with her petite hands. She had had an argument with her sister on the telephone about something very trivial, and it had left her irritated and with only twenty minutes to get ready. Having always had strong feelings for Greg, she would have liked more time. Not so that she could doll herself up with intentions to woo him, you understand; just because one would always like to appear at their best in front of an old flame, if only to be safe in the knowledge that one has not let oneself down. Her face, however, had other ideas; and was telling the whole story of her altercation with no words. He asked, Are you okay?

   Yeah. It's just been a funny old day. Are you as hot as I am right now?

   He smiled, holding eye contact. I don't think so, he replied.

   She kissed him on the cheek. So, where are we going?

   I'm not sure. Just, for a drive. It's been so long, hasn't it. 

   It has. It really has.

   They drove into the evening, the setting sun beating down the last of its heat onto the bonnet of the car in front of them and commentary from the games playing softly through the speakers. Once it reminded him too much of Hannah, he switched off the radio. 

   As they drove and exchanged small talk, updates from each other's worlds, pleasantries and inoffensive anecdotes, he couldn't help but let his mind wander to how the night would end. He was sure they both knew it, and its unspoken quality made it all the more exciting, as is done for all forbidden ideas. He pictured them kissing, her breasts pressing against his chest, vibrating with the heavy beat of her heart, rising and falling rapidly with the increased speed of her breath. He imagined his hand sliding under the elastic of her underwear, massaging her, his fingers acting as a controller for her spine, as it arched more and more with each rotation against her soft, warm

   What are you thinking? She asked.

   Oh, nothing. 

   He wondered if he had still been paying attention to the road on some cognitive level, while he drifted in and out of his fantasy.

*

   When they stopped, they were on a hill in Greenwich, facing a silhouette of London against a pink backdrop of setting summer sun. He was sure he heard her gasp as her big eyes fell upon it. 

   They sat in silence for long, warm moments.

   Finally, he asked, Do you think it's better to settle for less than spend your life alone?

   She looked at him. He was staring out at the skyline, as if asking the view to give him an answer. Excuse me? she said.

   I said, do you think it's better to settle for someone who you don't think was made for you than to live and die waiting for someone who is, knowing that that person might never appear?

   I'm not sure, she said. But I guess it doesn't matter for you anyway; you have Hannah. You two will always be happy. 

   He chuckled, still staring into middle distance.

   Why do you ask?

   He leaned on the steering wheel with both arms, placing his chin on his forearm and keeping his eyes on the sky. I suppose this is, like, my deathbed confession. 

   Deathbed confession?

   Yeah, in a way. 

   Greg, I don't understand what you mean by deathbed. Is something wrong?

   I'm getting married next week, Carla. And after that, my life as I know it is over. 

   And a new one will begin. The one you and Hannah have been planning for years. The one that all your love has built.

   Hmm, yeah.

   You're getting cold feet?

   It's a bit more than that.

   Then what is it?

   I always imagined that I'd find someone that I connected with on every level, someone that knew me better than anyone else and who I knew inside out. But with Hannah, I don't think I've found that. After all these years, I still feel unfulfilled. Is that wrong?

   Well, I wouldn't like to say. But are you sure this isn't just pre-wedding nerves kicking in? You're bound to feel jittery, this is the biggest day of your life coming up. 

   Yes. I'm sure. 

   Oh. 

   They sat in silence for a few seconds. 

   He began again. It's just, I don't think that a relationship can thrive on just physical attraction... 

   She giggled. You're the last person I'd expect to hear that from. 

   He didn't laugh. He continued, Well I don't. I think there has to be a strong foundation of respect, deep love and... I don't know... connection between you. And for all my effort, for all my trying, I just don't see it there. I don't think that we, that Hannah and I, know each other as well and as deeply as we'd like to think we do. I just feel like I might be about to throw my life away, and I only get one. 

   Erm, shouldn't you be talking to Hannah about this?

   No, I can't, it'd destroy her. She's so much more into it than I am, she always has been. To her, we're the perfect couple. Untouchable. 

   I see. 

   Haven't you ever thought about this before? About love, and how you think it should be perfect, but you're basing it on ideals you've never seen working in the real world? He was finally making eye contact, and now that he was, Carla found that she wished that he wasn't. 

   I guess, maybe. 

   We only get one life. It's what, eighty years maybe of living and then we're just dead forever. You get stuck with the wrong person and you may as well have never lived. I don't want to die regretting a decision I made this year that ruined my whole life afterwards. One mistake that begins a lifetime of regret. 

   I don't know why you're telling me this. 

   I'm telling you because I love you. 

   Oh. 

   Her face was burning red again. She looked down into her lap. 

   He lifted her chin with his fingers, and kissed her hard on the mouth, pulling her face to his with a hand on the back of her head. Leaning over the gear stick awkwardly, his free hand fumbled up her leg toward her crotch, hot and clammy and invasive, until she pushed his face away with one forceful hand and slapped the hand trying to force its way up her skirt with the other. 

   What the fuck are you doing?! she screamed.

   I thought...

   What the fuck, Greg?!

   I thought that we could...

   What? Thought that we could what? Run away? Elope, the week before your real wedding? 

   I thought that we could make love, one last time. One more time before we never can again. That's all.

   Her mouth hung open in disgust. What do you mean one last time? We have never fucked, Greg, and we never will. I don't know what sickens me more, that you'd betray Hannah like that or that you've got it into your sick head that we've made love. Where do you get this shit?

   I know, I know we haven't, but we've both imagined it so many times. I know we have. We both want it. 

   No we fucking don't, Greg. That time has passed. It's about time you grew up and got over it. You don't even know what you want. I'll tell you what your problem is: you never want to be happy. It's been like this since we were at school. You drifted from girl to girl, never feeling like they were right for you and always coming back to me to moan about it. All that time, that's when I wanted to be with you. But I moved on. I grew up and realised that sometimes you have to settle for what's damn good instead of throwing that away to wait for something perfect. But because you never learned that, you still don't know damn good even when it slaps you in the face. Hannah is the sweetest woman I've ever met. I can't believe you would do this to her, Greg. I thought you were better than that. 

   She was picking her bag off the floor and preparing to leave the car, so he grabbed her arm. Where are you going?

   I'm getting a cab home. I don't want to be around you anymore. She pulled her arm from his grasp, and opened the car door. 

   Please don't tell Hannah about this, he cried, over the sound of the door slamming behind her. 

   Greg sat staring out at the silhouette of the Olympic city through tear-drenched eyes. After a few seconds of stewing in his head, he yelped in frustration and slammed his hands onto the steering wheel four times, cursing under his shaky breath. 

   When his phone began to ring, he wiped his eyes with his sleeve and coughed to clear his throat. By the time he answered the call, he sounded almost normal. Normal enough to pass for a phone conversation. 

   Hi baby, he said. How were the gymnasts? As good as you? I doubt it. Want me to pick you up from the station?