Before returning to more civilised waters , I converted my ill-gotten gains to Krugerrands for safe passage.
In England, I became almost infamous for my after dinner tales.
I suppose compared to average folk who had to struggle day in day out just to pay their mortgage feed the kids and make their lawn look pretty, I must have seemed quite exotic.
If only these folk could have realised how lucky they were.
But we all need a change and a rest, so I wasn`t overly perturbed by their fond attention to me. In fact I was highly flattered.
It just seemed the more soirees I attended, the more people seemed to become addicted to my anecdotes.
I basked in the attention people gave me and almost felt like I was Blackbeard or some other pirate giving evidence in the dock.
Ironically, my proximity to the dock was pertinent.
One of my oldest and dearest friends who had facilitated my re-introduction into country life, while sitting in the wings as I blew hard on my amusing trumpet, surfaced in a dark and shady way.
Over the months that I enjoyed myself in England, he would of course be at some of the many, so-social events that I had become attached to.
For a casual listener, nothing I had said would have been at all self-incriminating, but for
a man in disagreement with the tax man, perhaps a collation of such information could be very valuable.
You, me, nobody would ever expect one's best friend to see one as a resource. But if a very heavy burden is put upon on one, perhaps the slow accumulation of mere facts that could save one's bacon, would become as tempting as a bacon sandwich.
I understand this form of weakness, but the underlying malaise is of such concern, that I found it essential never to communicate with Gordon again. Yes, I really miss the old him, the good times we had are not just memories but a serious part of my life. The decision to never deal with him again is one of the many hard calls I have had to shout.
.....Actually I quite fancy a bacon sandwich.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Saturday, September 10, 2011
there are missing pieces
To think that we didn`t have a good time on the boat would be wrong.
We would often play practical jokes upon each other to relieve the tedium of the endless waves.
One morning for example, Jonny had been a little late in getting up.
We all knew his unfortunate handicap. Shark o phobia. That`s ok for a land lubber, but here it was a reprimand-able offense.
We had already caught a few small babies, but then we got a biggy.
The captain suggested we plant this monster right above the stairway
that lead to Jonny`s cabin, tie it down and let it thrash. We hid ourselves, and then above the racket of the threshing angry shark, carefully placed at the stair entry to the deck, we used everything that we could find to awake Jonny. We made make a racket loud enough to awake Jonny and the dead.
To have see Jonny fight that git of a dying monster shark without losing his other arm kept us in fits of drunken laughter for weeks to come on that immense lonely sea.
We all knew Jonny would get us back, but hoped we wouldn`t lose a life or a limb on his reciprocal practical joke.
After having trusted Preston and Duncan, and having drunk with them on a regular basis, having let my guard down,
and become what I had thought of as good friends with them, and then to find everything was not as it appeared.
In fact I had been mislead, spied on and deceived. Also having known Jonny the hook for quite a long time, I had
what I thought an open and friendly relationship with him. To then be completely shocked to find he was not at all
the person I thought he was.
These experiences had made me deeply nervous on a subconscious level. And I became distrustful of people.
Don`t you hate it when that happens!
I began to find it difficult to be near people especially at close proximity.
I would become nervous to the point of having difficulty breathing normally.
I found it necessary to drink a lot of alcohol to calm myself and relax with people.
Even to this day, some of this anxiety raises its unacceptable head when in proximity to some people.
Especially double glazing salesmen.
I wandered around the ship to try and make it my own, if you know what I mean.
There were certain areas I felt uncomfortable in.
I held firm with my beliefs that the feelings I had were purely childlike and
quite understandably instinctual.
I deliberately pushed myself further on through the darkness to investigate ,
I forced myself to go against my instincts.
I could not accept my gut feelings, these corridors were nothing more than
dark dead lanes of past times.
They could have no power over me, especially if I refused to believe in their
power.
I was aware of the ability of metals and stone to absorb emotional
energy.My scientific understanding would surely keep me immune and safe.
This worked for a while, but there were certain areas where my logic was having
a hard time.
I went down a corridor on the third level and whatever I had said and told
myself ,logic just stopped working.
If you don`t believe in this stuff as I didn`t , then there was NO WAY you
should chicken out and walk away.(many would walk away without accepting or
excusing themselves.)
We are after all, when the skin is seen on the bone, quite fragile.
Unfortunately these disturbing feelings just got stronger and stronger.
Every ounce of my body was screaming to turn back please just go on deck and bathe in the
relative beauty of the mysterious green fog.
I didn`t expect things to be easy, but this was pushing me to the limit of my
non acceptance of the unacceptable.
Pigheadedly I continued down the dark, wet, black corridor of the third
level, with my comforting supportive torches.
As uncomfortable as I was in accepting to myself that there was something to
fear on this empty ship it still went against the grain to turn back.
Perhaps now I am wiser.You alone can be the judge of that.
I came to a door on the left , there were many doors on the left, but I felt
this one in particular was the more scary, I don`t know why, it just was.
I could not accept the inner fear that tried to prevent me from opening
it, so I forced myself to do so. My whole persona and credibility had been
built on having no fear . So how could I ever admit to myself,that I was scared
to enter a door on an empty dead ship?
I wandered around the ship to try and make it my own, if you know what I mean.
There were certain areas I felt uncomfortable in.
I held firm with my beliefs that the feelings I had were purely childlike and
quite understandably instinctual.
I deliberately pushed myself further on through the darkness to investigate ,
I forced myself to go against my instincts.
I could not accept my gut feelings, these corridors were nothing more than
dark dead lanes of past times.
They could have no power over me, especially if I refused to believe in their
power.
I was aware of the ability of metals and stone to absorb emotional
energy.My scientific understanding would surely keep me immune and safe.
This worked for a while, but there were certain areas where my logic was having
a hard time.
I went down a corridor on the third level and whatever I had said and told
myself ,logic just stopped working.
If you don`t believe in this stuff as I didn`t , then there was NO WAY you
should chicken out and walk away.(many would walk away without accepting or
excusing themselves.)
We are after all, when the skin is seen on the bone, quite fragile.
Unfortunately these disturbing feelings just got stronger and stronger.
Every ounce of my body was screaming to turn back please just go on deck and bathe in the
relative beauty of the mysterious green fog.
I didn`t expect things to be easy, but this was pushing me to the limit of my
non acceptance of the unacceptable.
Pigheadedly I continued down the dark, wet, black corridor of the third
level, with my comforting supportive torches.
As uncomfortable as I was in accepting to myself that there was something to
fear on this empty ship it still went against the grain to turn back.
Perhaps now I am wiser.You alone can be the judge of that.
I came to a door on the left , there were many doors on the left, but I felt
this one in particular was the more scary, I don`t know why, it just was.
I could not accept the inner fear that tried to prevent me from opening
it, so I forced myself to do so. My whole persona and credibility had been
built on having no fear . So how could I ever admit to myself,that I was scared
to enter a door on an empty dead ship?
My cold sweaty hand gripped the round brass handle to the door. I imagined it hadn`t had the warmth of a human touch for a very long time.
It felt icy .I turned it slowly as I summoned within myself that heroic fearless quality that can only come from stupidity or a deeply religious unfounded confidence. It is rare nowadays to witness such bravado.
As it happened this was pure pre programming that enabled me to go to such a fearless extreme.
The knob turned and clicked as it became free to enter.
I forced myself inside , the door quickly slammed behind me .
It was too late now.
The full force of an unrelenting, unforgiving, unacceptable force overcame me.
I was in a dimly lit cabin, quite unremarkable in it`s physical nature.
The only thing was, I couldn`t move. My body was frozen. Any movement was like moving in heavy treacle.
There was an immense feeling of dread pervading every essence; it surrounded the air, my body and my mind.
I tried to scream, but nothing came out.
I turned in a desperate attempt to escape, but everything was in slow, slow motion.
I thought I am strong , I can overcome this evil, but I couldn`t, I needed to get out of this room desperately, it`s power had completely diminished my own.
I was being sucked dry.
I slowly turned toward the door in a last ditched effort to escape.
but I was paralyzed.
The feeling of fear and dread was overwhelming.
Unless you had been in that room, it would be impossible to describe to you the overwhelming force that hid itself within. The struggle to exit from there was nothing more than a struggle to survive. To be weak now and remain in there was beyond question something one would forever regret.
The potential perpetual torment from the fear of the hidden terror was beyond imagination.
It was here and it was now.
I struggled against the dream like treacle resistance to every movement I made. My unfullfilled efforts to scream in this darkness, were something we all have to accept when the darkest of places come into our souls. The unrelenting inabilty to scream, the unrelenting knowledge there is no one there to scream to,listen, or care.
This is the room I regretted entering , I had to get out of here.
I used all of my will and strength, and turned ever so slowly back toward the door, I caught a glimpse of myself in an old and dusty mirror hanging on the wall some four yards away. What I saw in there gave me an added feeling of deep terror within. It was me in that mirror , but I looked some fifty years older, and the look on my wizened face, was a look I would never want to see on anyones face, let alone my own.
The sudden rush of adrenaline from this added terror, gave me the strength to fight my way through the treacle like air, and get out of the door.
I made it, the door slammed, hard and angry, behind me. I ran as fast as I could but everything was still in slow motion. I was desperate to get on deck and breath the air. As I struggled down the corridor with what seemed like lead weights strapped to my ankles, I had time to reflect on this horrific experience.
I found it impossible to compare the feelings that emanated from that extraordinary room,to anything from any normal world, and then it hit me like a hammer.
The only thing that perhaps could come close to creating within me such dread,
would be a midnight visit to the bedroom of Margaret Thatcher.
It was tough it was hard but I got back on deck.
I had been taught as child to get back on the horse.
This was a damn big horse by anyone's reckoning . This was dead reckoning.
I was happy, yet disturbed to be back on deck , because the green fog was still there as I had expected.
But my God this was good, compared to where I had been!
The horse was there,the stirrups were my torches.
I would get my breath back and I would ride that mother again.
Let me tell you , spooky , you don`t even know spooky.
I got back on the horse, I went straight down to the fourth level.
The atmosphere seemed ok.
Dark and cold and icy to the bone but OK.
I got half way down the corridor, I passed a door which made the hair on my head rise as if to an occasion
one could experience once or twice in a life time.
It was a completely different feeling , and certainly not so terrifying as before.
So I had no great difficulty in opening this cold brass handled door knob.
The cold knob drained the heat from my hand, I already knew that if I opened that door what lay behind would be more shocking than the room I had entered before.
The last door had stolen 50 years of my life, I now had nothing to lose, perhaps I could get those years back. It was in no way a sense of altruism that drove me; it was purely a desperate bid to regain my lost years.
It is one thing to age, and another thing to age without the benefit of time passing normally.
So I was very bold and I entered the room with the cold hard knob.
Once inside, I had no regret. I had plenty of fear but no regret.
It was a profound experience, it was nothing short of a revelation to be there. I will endeavour to describe what confronted me in that cold unbelievable space.
Initially, the door slammed behind me; it was not like the other room.
The slamming was almost a beckoning to come and see what was within.
There was a small table and chair there amongst the normal cabin-type furniture. It seemed to beckon me to sit, be at ease and watch.
It was very hard to tolorate at first.
There seemed to be some emergency lighting within the room, quite dim, but I was able to turn my torch off.
The light seemed a little eerie and greenish, but it was ok.
I had come to a point of being relatively unafraid. This, one could imagine, would be the case after experiencing room 309.
This room was 417. It was on the fourth level below deck.
I thought to myself "nobody would have the guts to come down here on the fourth level". But I had nothing to lose, I could only win from here in. So if the devil himself showed himself to me, that would be ok. Actually good.
It wasn`t the devil that showed his head, it was something much, much more interesting.
I sat at the small table and watched the room. Just the vibe in there was beyond anything I had ever experienced in my God-forsaken drunken, drugged, excessive life, the dullness of which I imagine was apparent in my younger face.
This room offered a new energy, a new experience, frightening beyond belief but yet entrancing. The feeling there was of youth and expectancy, something I had lost way, way back.
I felt content to sit and absorb the vibe of the room.
And then it began.
At first it was just letters in pencil on the ceiling, and then they flowed to the walls.
My obvious initial panic, due to my past experience, would to you be understandable.
After all, the first occurrence of writings such as these, were back on land. And they, if you remember, were the sole reason I left that place and became a seafaring pirate on the other side of the world.
Since that time these words had also appeared within my secret box, that secret box which had been made from an intricate weaving of exotic timbers, so-designed that a strong man with an axe would not be able to penetrate said box for 4 hours at least.
I sat there resigned in the knowledge that synchronicity had finally caught its prey, there was no longer an escape from these strange letters.
I chose to relax and fearlessly watched the letters dribble from the ceiling. The longer I sat there the more profound the lettering became.
Initially they were formulae referencing Pye, Fibonachi and Pythagorean geometry familiar to all with an education such as mine.
Soon the formulae became more advanced. I tried the best as I could to read and understand what was being written before my eyes.
Unfortunately, as much as I tried, I couldn`t keep up, I became quite desperate because I felt these advancing formulae were very important to understand.
I was now at the point where I had no fear of the writings, and at last realised it was a gift to see such a thing.
The intensity of the writings became overwhelming. The letters dribbled down unrelentingly. A lazy Sunday morning sprang to mind, and the broken jar of honey that was so difficult; it was that broken jar.
Each moment in time became an immense moment, each letter became a colour, each colour embraced a wall.
The colouring was intermittent. At moments there was an intense yellow warm orange such as a sunset. At these moments I felt warm, dreamy and safe, but, as suddenly as yellow was there, dark black clouds of infinite absolute darkness would arrive.
My entire being became one with the colours.
I felt at complete ease and at peace in these yellow moments. I had a strong feeling of love for the entire universe and all that would ever walk upon its cherished ground.
Time became irrelevant .
I was comfortable sitting there, well, I say comfortable, perhaps that is a relative word.
Slowly and gently as the words became more coloured and smaller and then smaller still. They became so small that they became pixellated.
Within the pixellation I began to see blurry moving pictures.
Pixellation is for computers, these walls are not computer-generated, they are physical walls. But still the only words of description I have access to are words of modern technology.
The definition became higher and higher to a point where I began to see my past in these mini-murals.
Sometimes there were several murals at the same time. At these moments they were too blurred to make much out . Occasionally, images showed themselves more clearly.
Sitting there became a reward.
I began to see small moments encapsulated on the wall. They were moments of my past.
I decided to settle myself down and ride this horse to the end of the rodeo. I now had nothing to lose. Potentially I could reverse the damage done to me by room 309.
I gently stroked the wall with the more extreme imagery, as I touched it, it seemed to give off an energy, or rather took a life energy from me. It became more clear , the more I stroked the wall the more precise and clear the image became.
I gently stroked the image until my hand started to pass through the wall. I knew this moment in time.
To think that we didn`t have a good time on the boat would be wrong.
We would often play practical jokes upon each other to relieve the tedium of the endless waves.
One morning for example, Jonny had been a little late in getting up.
We all knew his unfortunate handicap. Shark o phobia. That`s ok for a land lubber, but here it was a reprimandable offence.
We had already caught a few small babies, but then we got a biggy.
The captain suggested we plant this monster right above the stairway
that lead to Jonny`s cabin, tie it down and let it thrash. We hid ourselves, and then above the racket of the threshing angry shark, carefully placed at the stair entry to the deck, we used everything that we could find to awake Jonny. We made make a racket loud enough to awake Jonny and the dead.
To have see Jonny fight that git of a dying monster shark without losing his other arm kept us in fits of drunken laughter for weeks to come on that immense lonely sea.
We all knew Jonny would get us back, but hoped we wouldn`t lose a life or a limb on his reciprical practical joke.
The crisp crackling sound of burnt leaves under ones foot .
A shadowed sun effortlessly hiding behind a dark shower of potential.
These are the things that make one sing to the beauty of existence.
Cut short in their birth and inevitable immediate death.
They linger, their a taste lingers in the mouth, a taste of the past.
Instantaneously their memory bring one back, calls one back.
long lost memories of a past that was so beautiful, and yet it will forever
remain, ,un -re attainable.
these are a few of my favorite regrets.
Is it so true ?,truth and its bedfellow memory, have become so inter twinned
that reality could have little chance of grasping the true crystal nature of
existence?
.
Is acceptance hidden in that dark glass.
Attaining the golden days of youth, we can only dream of, as we look down from our clouded hilltops of insecurity.
through the mist, it was so bright, and so crystal?
After having thought I had seen Jonny briefly at Gatwick, I decided I couldn`t take any chances.
It seemed highly unlikely, as I covered my path to my hideaway very well.
But I knew these guys, they were good at what they did.
When I got home I decided to take some preliminary precautions.
Normally, the rule is flee immediately, but I thought this course was too extreme and involved a lot of upset and trouble. So I gambled that it wasn`t Jonny that I had glimpsed, and even if it was, I thought I would be able to manage the situation nevertheless.
Once back at my safe house, I embarked on a defensive early warning action, that would keep me ahead of the game.
Initially using a compass, I drew a hundred kilometre circle on a map, the centre of which was my house. I had bought the house under yet another false name, so there could be no trace there.
Every evening I would go to a town that fell within the circle.
I started from the extremity. It was a lot of work, but it had to be done, as I really liked my new found home, and would not quit it unless it became truly neccessary.This attachment in itself broke all the rules and made me very unneccessarily vulnerable.
Each evening I picked a town on the circular outskirts, I drove there, and sought out the local "scumbag bar".
I don`t mean this demeaningly, it`s just the way you may see such bars. They are the bars of the lowest common denominator.
They are the bars that me and Jonny would have frequented.
If Jonny was looking for me, he would look there.
I would spend an evening or two chatting with the locals and chumming up with the head Arab guy on many occasions.
By the end of an evening I would feel I had failed in my mission if I had not come to some arrangement whereby anyone resembling Jonny
would be noticed, and a pay-as-you go mobile phone number rung forthwith. This action being carried out would secure a payment of 50 euros.
Focus on the situation had already been achieved by a down payment of 20 euros, and all the alcohol said observer could drink, while he basked in my unreserved attention to him.
Eventually after six weeks my hard work paid off. I was at last ahead of the game.
My anonymous pay as you go mobile phone sang it`s tune.
It was just past midnight, and immediately I knew I owed a dodgy guy 50 euros.
I answered with bated breath. He told me the town, the bar, and his name for payment.
I quickly threw on some clothes and jumped in my van, armed with my Tom Tom, I would be there within the hour.
The hunted had once again become the hunter.
I arrived at my destination within 47 minutes. At that moment I realized all my shortfalls: I had no gloves, I had forgotten the folder that advised me of the best back entry to the bars.
It all didn`t matter, I remembered the bar and the best course of entry. There was a quiet alley at the back that ran to a bathroom window. I remembered my reconnaissance well, the window was glazed with 3 mill glass, as many French windows use this inadequate glazial protection. It was no barrier to me and my Chinese methodology.
I penetrated the glass quickly and almost silently, to open the catch on the window. Everything was going smoothly as I entered the washroom. I shut the window and hid myself in one of the two cubicles, to give myself the chance to plan my next move. A few minutes later my head was in gear and I knew what my approach to Jonny (if it was Jonny) would be. I exited the loo, went to the bar and quietly ordered a double Bloody Mary. I sat down in the corner and looked around.
There were about 45 people in the bar and it was cooking. I had remained unnoticed. This was one of those really cool bars where people were smoking. I spotted my Arab friend; he saw straight through my disguise, simply because he was expecting me. I saw the glint in his eye as he recognized me, it wasn`t just a 50 euro glint, it was the glint of friendship. That glint warmed my
heart and made my situation a little more tolerable. I had a sudden hope that if things worked out O.K. with Jonny we would be able to have a few beers and a laugh together. We would have to see.
The guy gave me a nod, and gestured to his left. I couldn't see my target initially, but tried to remain patient and sit still and unnoticed in the corner. The music was as loud as the exuberant chatter. Then I started getting warm and fuzzy as old Bowie tracks were coming through the over-powered P.A. system. 'Let's Dance', 'Ashes to Ashes', then 'The Jean Genie'. It was time to walk up to Jonny through the smoke of the now forbidden herb, and say "Hello".
So pushed myself through the crowd of smokey people until I was positioned behind a non-expecting bar-stool-leaning individual. He was clothed in a leather jacket that looked like it had seen
better days. I inhaled a breath of his surrounding air, and I swear to you I smelt the salty sea breeze of the Quadrangle of over 40 years ago. At that moment I really hoped he had forgotten the day me and my fellow pirates had tied that big shark on deck, just for a laugh. He still hadn`t got me back. I knew he would , sooner or later.
I decided to play it cool. I knew there were serious issues. He wasn`t hunting me down for the sake of nostalgia. He wanted something. There were so many things it could have been. It sounds ridiculous but things were a bit intense and weird back there, in the Quadrangle.
I thought I would play Mr Cool, so I just whispered in his ear: "Jonny"
As he turned to me, things just got stranger.
The music started to throb in my head , I felt faint, I took a grip on the bar and myself as I looked into his eyes.
For the uninitiated, looking into his eyes would have seemed just strange and scary, but for me it was much, much more.
It was cold black-blue.
Since this experience I have tried to write books, songs and paint. But still I have been unable to express that moment.
His face was very bronzed, and the wrinkles although as expressive
as a Norwegian coastline, were much fainter than one would expect of a man that must have experienced more than ninety years of sea-faring.
His secrets were well hidden behind his dead shark eyes.
It was going to be a tough encounter I thought.
It became obvious to me that my dream of bringing Jonny back to meet my friends and family , would be akin to being sent out to buy Kettle Chips, and coming home with Monster Munch.
He said in his usual drunken dead way, as if no time at all had passed "It's you matey"
His blend of pirate and metrosexual was impressive.
I had my body armour on before I left my house.
I hoped it had been an unneccessary precaution, but I hadn't stayed alive this long without a few precautions.
The converstaion was simplistic to say the least.
I managed to get a stool next to Jonny at the bar.
This was a bizarre experience.
We chatted over the loud Bowie.
Nothing was understood .
Later we went back to Najeeb's place.
It was quieter.
Much quieter, as nothing could be said.
Smoking was not allowed within the appartment , so me and Jonny and Najeeb went outside.
Grace to the fact that Najeebs English was underpar , me and Jonny
(Jonny and I) had a chat.
This converstation was highly illuminating for me.
Apparently "The book" had to be returned.
It was not some internet copy , but a limited edition, serial numbered item that Max should not have given me.
This particular copy could and would be traced directly to Max.
If It ever re-surfaced the consequence for Max would be terminalado.
And his italian marble sculptures would be buried deep in the sand.
Jonny explained that, as I had got Max so pissed and smashed on Sulphate ,Max had crossed the line by giving me the book.
I explained to Jonny that the book had gone missing from my safe box back in the early seventies on the Pointless Danger.
Jonny implied I was lying.
Things went down hill from there.
I pulled out my secret weapon, disguised as a line of our old friend- ,,, Sulphate (Amphetamine Sulphate).
Jonny couldn't resist it. I had laced it this time not with Vim (as you may remember for the bikers), but this time with Ketamine.
I knew one line of this baby would make Jonny as peacful as a lamb.
My second dose was a needle in the arm of Pethedrine, followed by Pentathol.
My plot was to find out who was behind the main game.
Najeeb and his misses had long since gone to bed, nearly all their friends had left. There were just one or two people asleep on the couches, if they awoke I was ready to inject large quantities of ketamine into them intraveniously, at very short, and professional notice.
Nobody woke up.
My discussions with Jonny were very Illuminating.
In fact he began to ramble. I didn't need to ask questions.
I didn't want to interupt.
I think he must have had some serious guilt issues.
He started talking about stuff I had no idea about.
He seemed to be obsessed about Aluminium.
He started talking about Chem trails.
I made some notes and underlined Chem trails, with a view to researching more about them on the internet.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you would like some of the background to these memoirs go to
http://memoirsofadrunkensailor.blogspot.com/
Cut and paste this into the address bar of your warm and cuddly browser.
We would often play practical jokes upon each other to relieve the tedium of the endless waves.
One morning for example, Jonny had been a little late in getting up.
We all knew his unfortunate handicap. Shark o phobia. That`s ok for a land lubber, but here it was a reprimand-able offense.
We had already caught a few small babies, but then we got a biggy.
The captain suggested we plant this monster right above the stairway
that lead to Jonny`s cabin, tie it down and let it thrash. We hid ourselves, and then above the racket of the threshing angry shark, carefully placed at the stair entry to the deck, we used everything that we could find to awake Jonny. We made make a racket loud enough to awake Jonny and the dead.
To have see Jonny fight that git of a dying monster shark without losing his other arm kept us in fits of drunken laughter for weeks to come on that immense lonely sea.
We all knew Jonny would get us back, but hoped we wouldn`t lose a life or a limb on his reciprocal practical joke.
After having trusted Preston and Duncan, and having drunk with them on a regular basis, having let my guard down,
and become what I had thought of as good friends with them, and then to find everything was not as it appeared.
In fact I had been mislead, spied on and deceived. Also having known Jonny the hook for quite a long time, I had
what I thought an open and friendly relationship with him. To then be completely shocked to find he was not at all
the person I thought he was.
These experiences had made me deeply nervous on a subconscious level. And I became distrustful of people.
Don`t you hate it when that happens!
I began to find it difficult to be near people especially at close proximity.
I would become nervous to the point of having difficulty breathing normally.
I found it necessary to drink a lot of alcohol to calm myself and relax with people.
Even to this day, some of this anxiety raises its unacceptable head when in proximity to some people.
Especially double glazing salesmen.
I wandered around the ship to try and make it my own, if you know what I mean.
There were certain areas I felt uncomfortable in.
I held firm with my beliefs that the feelings I had were purely childlike and
quite understandably instinctual.
I deliberately pushed myself further on through the darkness to investigate ,
I forced myself to go against my instincts.
I could not accept my gut feelings, these corridors were nothing more than
dark dead lanes of past times.
They could have no power over me, especially if I refused to believe in their
power.
I was aware of the ability of metals and stone to absorb emotional
energy.My scientific understanding would surely keep me immune and safe.
This worked for a while, but there were certain areas where my logic was having
a hard time.
I went down a corridor on the third level and whatever I had said and told
myself ,logic just stopped working.
If you don`t believe in this stuff as I didn`t , then there was NO WAY you
should chicken out and walk away.(many would walk away without accepting or
excusing themselves.)
We are after all, when the skin is seen on the bone, quite fragile.
Unfortunately these disturbing feelings just got stronger and stronger.
Every ounce of my body was screaming to turn back please just go on deck and bathe in the
relative beauty of the mysterious green fog.
I didn`t expect things to be easy, but this was pushing me to the limit of my
non acceptance of the unacceptable.
Pigheadedly I continued down the dark, wet, black corridor of the third
level, with my comforting supportive torches.
As uncomfortable as I was in accepting to myself that there was something to
fear on this empty ship it still went against the grain to turn back.
Perhaps now I am wiser.You alone can be the judge of that.
I came to a door on the left , there were many doors on the left, but I felt
this one in particular was the more scary, I don`t know why, it just was.
I could not accept the inner fear that tried to prevent me from opening
it, so I forced myself to do so. My whole persona and credibility had been
built on having no fear . So how could I ever admit to myself,that I was scared
to enter a door on an empty dead ship?
I wandered around the ship to try and make it my own, if you know what I mean.
There were certain areas I felt uncomfortable in.
I held firm with my beliefs that the feelings I had were purely childlike and
quite understandably instinctual.
I deliberately pushed myself further on through the darkness to investigate ,
I forced myself to go against my instincts.
I could not accept my gut feelings, these corridors were nothing more than
dark dead lanes of past times.
They could have no power over me, especially if I refused to believe in their
power.
I was aware of the ability of metals and stone to absorb emotional
energy.My scientific understanding would surely keep me immune and safe.
This worked for a while, but there were certain areas where my logic was having
a hard time.
I went down a corridor on the third level and whatever I had said and told
myself ,logic just stopped working.
If you don`t believe in this stuff as I didn`t , then there was NO WAY you
should chicken out and walk away.(many would walk away without accepting or
excusing themselves.)
We are after all, when the skin is seen on the bone, quite fragile.
Unfortunately these disturbing feelings just got stronger and stronger.
Every ounce of my body was screaming to turn back please just go on deck and bathe in the
relative beauty of the mysterious green fog.
I didn`t expect things to be easy, but this was pushing me to the limit of my
non acceptance of the unacceptable.
Pigheadedly I continued down the dark, wet, black corridor of the third
level, with my comforting supportive torches.
As uncomfortable as I was in accepting to myself that there was something to
fear on this empty ship it still went against the grain to turn back.
Perhaps now I am wiser.You alone can be the judge of that.
I came to a door on the left , there were many doors on the left, but I felt
this one in particular was the more scary, I don`t know why, it just was.
I could not accept the inner fear that tried to prevent me from opening
it, so I forced myself to do so. My whole persona and credibility had been
built on having no fear . So how could I ever admit to myself,that I was scared
to enter a door on an empty dead ship?
My cold sweaty hand gripped the round brass handle to the door. I imagined it hadn`t had the warmth of a human touch for a very long time.
It felt icy .I turned it slowly as I summoned within myself that heroic fearless quality that can only come from stupidity or a deeply religious unfounded confidence. It is rare nowadays to witness such bravado.
As it happened this was pure pre programming that enabled me to go to such a fearless extreme.
The knob turned and clicked as it became free to enter.
I forced myself inside , the door quickly slammed behind me .
It was too late now.
The full force of an unrelenting, unforgiving, unacceptable force overcame me.
I was in a dimly lit cabin, quite unremarkable in it`s physical nature.
The only thing was, I couldn`t move. My body was frozen. Any movement was like moving in heavy treacle.
There was an immense feeling of dread pervading every essence; it surrounded the air, my body and my mind.
I tried to scream, but nothing came out.
I turned in a desperate attempt to escape, but everything was in slow, slow motion.
I thought I am strong , I can overcome this evil, but I couldn`t, I needed to get out of this room desperately, it`s power had completely diminished my own.
I was being sucked dry.
I slowly turned toward the door in a last ditched effort to escape.
but I was paralyzed.
The feeling of fear and dread was overwhelming.
Unless you had been in that room, it would be impossible to describe to you the overwhelming force that hid itself within. The struggle to exit from there was nothing more than a struggle to survive. To be weak now and remain in there was beyond question something one would forever regret.
The potential perpetual torment from the fear of the hidden terror was beyond imagination.
It was here and it was now.
I struggled against the dream like treacle resistance to every movement I made. My unfullfilled efforts to scream in this darkness, were something we all have to accept when the darkest of places come into our souls. The unrelenting inabilty to scream, the unrelenting knowledge there is no one there to scream to,listen, or care.
This is the room I regretted entering , I had to get out of here.
I used all of my will and strength, and turned ever so slowly back toward the door, I caught a glimpse of myself in an old and dusty mirror hanging on the wall some four yards away. What I saw in there gave me an added feeling of deep terror within. It was me in that mirror , but I looked some fifty years older, and the look on my wizened face, was a look I would never want to see on anyones face, let alone my own.
The sudden rush of adrenaline from this added terror, gave me the strength to fight my way through the treacle like air, and get out of the door.
I made it, the door slammed, hard and angry, behind me. I ran as fast as I could but everything was still in slow motion. I was desperate to get on deck and breath the air. As I struggled down the corridor with what seemed like lead weights strapped to my ankles, I had time to reflect on this horrific experience.
I found it impossible to compare the feelings that emanated from that extraordinary room,to anything from any normal world, and then it hit me like a hammer.
The only thing that perhaps could come close to creating within me such dread,
would be a midnight visit to the bedroom of Margaret Thatcher.
It was tough it was hard but I got back on deck.
I had been taught as child to get back on the horse.
This was a damn big horse by anyone's reckoning . This was dead reckoning.
I was happy, yet disturbed to be back on deck , because the green fog was still there as I had expected.
But my God this was good, compared to where I had been!
The horse was there,the stirrups were my torches.
I would get my breath back and I would ride that mother again.
Let me tell you , spooky , you don`t even know spooky.
I got back on the horse, I went straight down to the fourth level.
The atmosphere seemed ok.
Dark and cold and icy to the bone but OK.
I got half way down the corridor, I passed a door which made the hair on my head rise as if to an occasion
one could experience once or twice in a life time.
It was a completely different feeling , and certainly not so terrifying as before.
So I had no great difficulty in opening this cold brass handled door knob.
The cold knob drained the heat from my hand, I already knew that if I opened that door what lay behind would be more shocking than the room I had entered before.
The last door had stolen 50 years of my life, I now had nothing to lose, perhaps I could get those years back. It was in no way a sense of altruism that drove me; it was purely a desperate bid to regain my lost years.
It is one thing to age, and another thing to age without the benefit of time passing normally.
So I was very bold and I entered the room with the cold hard knob.
Once inside, I had no regret. I had plenty of fear but no regret.
It was a profound experience, it was nothing short of a revelation to be there. I will endeavour to describe what confronted me in that cold unbelievable space.
Initially, the door slammed behind me; it was not like the other room.
The slamming was almost a beckoning to come and see what was within.
There was a small table and chair there amongst the normal cabin-type furniture. It seemed to beckon me to sit, be at ease and watch.
It was very hard to tolorate at first.
There seemed to be some emergency lighting within the room, quite dim, but I was able to turn my torch off.
The light seemed a little eerie and greenish, but it was ok.
I had come to a point of being relatively unafraid. This, one could imagine, would be the case after experiencing room 309.
This room was 417. It was on the fourth level below deck.
I thought to myself "nobody would have the guts to come down here on the fourth level". But I had nothing to lose, I could only win from here in. So if the devil himself showed himself to me, that would be ok. Actually good.
It wasn`t the devil that showed his head, it was something much, much more interesting.
I sat at the small table and watched the room. Just the vibe in there was beyond anything I had ever experienced in my God-forsaken drunken, drugged, excessive life, the dullness of which I imagine was apparent in my younger face.
This room offered a new energy, a new experience, frightening beyond belief but yet entrancing. The feeling there was of youth and expectancy, something I had lost way, way back.
I felt content to sit and absorb the vibe of the room.
And then it began.
At first it was just letters in pencil on the ceiling, and then they flowed to the walls.
My obvious initial panic, due to my past experience, would to you be understandable.
After all, the first occurrence of writings such as these, were back on land. And they, if you remember, were the sole reason I left that place and became a seafaring pirate on the other side of the world.
Since that time these words had also appeared within my secret box, that secret box which had been made from an intricate weaving of exotic timbers, so-designed that a strong man with an axe would not be able to penetrate said box for 4 hours at least.
I sat there resigned in the knowledge that synchronicity had finally caught its prey, there was no longer an escape from these strange letters.
I chose to relax and fearlessly watched the letters dribble from the ceiling. The longer I sat there the more profound the lettering became.
Initially they were formulae referencing Pye, Fibonachi and Pythagorean geometry familiar to all with an education such as mine.
Soon the formulae became more advanced. I tried the best as I could to read and understand what was being written before my eyes.
Unfortunately, as much as I tried, I couldn`t keep up, I became quite desperate because I felt these advancing formulae were very important to understand.
I was now at the point where I had no fear of the writings, and at last realised it was a gift to see such a thing.
The intensity of the writings became overwhelming. The letters dribbled down unrelentingly. A lazy Sunday morning sprang to mind, and the broken jar of honey that was so difficult; it was that broken jar.
Each moment in time became an immense moment, each letter became a colour, each colour embraced a wall.
The colouring was intermittent. At moments there was an intense yellow warm orange such as a sunset. At these moments I felt warm, dreamy and safe, but, as suddenly as yellow was there, dark black clouds of infinite absolute darkness would arrive.
My entire being became one with the colours.
I felt at complete ease and at peace in these yellow moments. I had a strong feeling of love for the entire universe and all that would ever walk upon its cherished ground.
Time became irrelevant .
I was comfortable sitting there, well, I say comfortable, perhaps that is a relative word.
Slowly and gently as the words became more coloured and smaller and then smaller still. They became so small that they became pixellated.
Within the pixellation I began to see blurry moving pictures.
Pixellation is for computers, these walls are not computer-generated, they are physical walls. But still the only words of description I have access to are words of modern technology.
The definition became higher and higher to a point where I began to see my past in these mini-murals.
Sometimes there were several murals at the same time. At these moments they were too blurred to make much out . Occasionally, images showed themselves more clearly.
Sitting there became a reward.
I began to see small moments encapsulated on the wall. They were moments of my past.
I decided to settle myself down and ride this horse to the end of the rodeo. I now had nothing to lose. Potentially I could reverse the damage done to me by room 309.
I gently stroked the wall with the more extreme imagery, as I touched it, it seemed to give off an energy, or rather took a life energy from me. It became more clear , the more I stroked the wall the more precise and clear the image became.
I gently stroked the image until my hand started to pass through the wall. I knew this moment in time.
To think that we didn`t have a good time on the boat would be wrong.
We would often play practical jokes upon each other to relieve the tedium of the endless waves.
One morning for example, Jonny had been a little late in getting up.
We all knew his unfortunate handicap. Shark o phobia. That`s ok for a land lubber, but here it was a reprimandable offence.
We had already caught a few small babies, but then we got a biggy.
The captain suggested we plant this monster right above the stairway
that lead to Jonny`s cabin, tie it down and let it thrash. We hid ourselves, and then above the racket of the threshing angry shark, carefully placed at the stair entry to the deck, we used everything that we could find to awake Jonny. We made make a racket loud enough to awake Jonny and the dead.
To have see Jonny fight that git of a dying monster shark without losing his other arm kept us in fits of drunken laughter for weeks to come on that immense lonely sea.
We all knew Jonny would get us back, but hoped we wouldn`t lose a life or a limb on his reciprical practical joke.
The crisp crackling sound of burnt leaves under ones foot .
A shadowed sun effortlessly hiding behind a dark shower of potential.
These are the things that make one sing to the beauty of existence.
Cut short in their birth and inevitable immediate death.
They linger, their a taste lingers in the mouth, a taste of the past.
Instantaneously their memory bring one back, calls one back.
long lost memories of a past that was so beautiful, and yet it will forever
remain, ,un -re attainable.
these are a few of my favorite regrets.
Is it so true ?,truth and its bedfellow memory, have become so inter twinned
that reality could have little chance of grasping the true crystal nature of
existence?
.
Is acceptance hidden in that dark glass.
Attaining the golden days of youth, we can only dream of, as we look down from our clouded hilltops of insecurity.
through the mist, it was so bright, and so crystal?
After having thought I had seen Jonny briefly at Gatwick, I decided I couldn`t take any chances.
It seemed highly unlikely, as I covered my path to my hideaway very well.
But I knew these guys, they were good at what they did.
When I got home I decided to take some preliminary precautions.
Normally, the rule is flee immediately, but I thought this course was too extreme and involved a lot of upset and trouble. So I gambled that it wasn`t Jonny that I had glimpsed, and even if it was, I thought I would be able to manage the situation nevertheless.
Once back at my safe house, I embarked on a defensive early warning action, that would keep me ahead of the game.
Initially using a compass, I drew a hundred kilometre circle on a map, the centre of which was my house. I had bought the house under yet another false name, so there could be no trace there.
Every evening I would go to a town that fell within the circle.
I started from the extremity. It was a lot of work, but it had to be done, as I really liked my new found home, and would not quit it unless it became truly neccessary.This attachment in itself broke all the rules and made me very unneccessarily vulnerable.
Each evening I picked a town on the circular outskirts, I drove there, and sought out the local "scumbag bar".
I don`t mean this demeaningly, it`s just the way you may see such bars. They are the bars of the lowest common denominator.
They are the bars that me and Jonny would have frequented.
If Jonny was looking for me, he would look there.
I would spend an evening or two chatting with the locals and chumming up with the head Arab guy on many occasions.
By the end of an evening I would feel I had failed in my mission if I had not come to some arrangement whereby anyone resembling Jonny
would be noticed, and a pay-as-you go mobile phone number rung forthwith. This action being carried out would secure a payment of 50 euros.
Focus on the situation had already been achieved by a down payment of 20 euros, and all the alcohol said observer could drink, while he basked in my unreserved attention to him.
Eventually after six weeks my hard work paid off. I was at last ahead of the game.
My anonymous pay as you go mobile phone sang it`s tune.
It was just past midnight, and immediately I knew I owed a dodgy guy 50 euros.
I answered with bated breath. He told me the town, the bar, and his name for payment.
I quickly threw on some clothes and jumped in my van, armed with my Tom Tom, I would be there within the hour.
The hunted had once again become the hunter.
I arrived at my destination within 47 minutes. At that moment I realized all my shortfalls: I had no gloves, I had forgotten the folder that advised me of the best back entry to the bars.
It all didn`t matter, I remembered the bar and the best course of entry. There was a quiet alley at the back that ran to a bathroom window. I remembered my reconnaissance well, the window was glazed with 3 mill glass, as many French windows use this inadequate glazial protection. It was no barrier to me and my Chinese methodology.
I penetrated the glass quickly and almost silently, to open the catch on the window. Everything was going smoothly as I entered the washroom. I shut the window and hid myself in one of the two cubicles, to give myself the chance to plan my next move. A few minutes later my head was in gear and I knew what my approach to Jonny (if it was Jonny) would be. I exited the loo, went to the bar and quietly ordered a double Bloody Mary. I sat down in the corner and looked around.
There were about 45 people in the bar and it was cooking. I had remained unnoticed. This was one of those really cool bars where people were smoking. I spotted my Arab friend; he saw straight through my disguise, simply because he was expecting me. I saw the glint in his eye as he recognized me, it wasn`t just a 50 euro glint, it was the glint of friendship. That glint warmed my
heart and made my situation a little more tolerable. I had a sudden hope that if things worked out O.K. with Jonny we would be able to have a few beers and a laugh together. We would have to see.
The guy gave me a nod, and gestured to his left. I couldn't see my target initially, but tried to remain patient and sit still and unnoticed in the corner. The music was as loud as the exuberant chatter. Then I started getting warm and fuzzy as old Bowie tracks were coming through the over-powered P.A. system. 'Let's Dance', 'Ashes to Ashes', then 'The Jean Genie'. It was time to walk up to Jonny through the smoke of the now forbidden herb, and say "Hello".
So pushed myself through the crowd of smokey people until I was positioned behind a non-expecting bar-stool-leaning individual. He was clothed in a leather jacket that looked like it had seen
better days. I inhaled a breath of his surrounding air, and I swear to you I smelt the salty sea breeze of the Quadrangle of over 40 years ago. At that moment I really hoped he had forgotten the day me and my fellow pirates had tied that big shark on deck, just for a laugh. He still hadn`t got me back. I knew he would , sooner or later.
I decided to play it cool. I knew there were serious issues. He wasn`t hunting me down for the sake of nostalgia. He wanted something. There were so many things it could have been. It sounds ridiculous but things were a bit intense and weird back there, in the Quadrangle.
I thought I would play Mr Cool, so I just whispered in his ear: "Jonny"
As he turned to me, things just got stranger.
The music started to throb in my head , I felt faint, I took a grip on the bar and myself as I looked into his eyes.
For the uninitiated, looking into his eyes would have seemed just strange and scary, but for me it was much, much more.
It was cold black-blue.
Since this experience I have tried to write books, songs and paint. But still I have been unable to express that moment.
His face was very bronzed, and the wrinkles although as expressive
as a Norwegian coastline, were much fainter than one would expect of a man that must have experienced more than ninety years of sea-faring.
His secrets were well hidden behind his dead shark eyes.
It was going to be a tough encounter I thought.
It became obvious to me that my dream of bringing Jonny back to meet my friends and family , would be akin to being sent out to buy Kettle Chips, and coming home with Monster Munch.
He said in his usual drunken dead way, as if no time at all had passed "It's you matey"
His blend of pirate and metrosexual was impressive.
I had my body armour on before I left my house.
I hoped it had been an unneccessary precaution, but I hadn't stayed alive this long without a few precautions.
The converstaion was simplistic to say the least.
I managed to get a stool next to Jonny at the bar.
This was a bizarre experience.
We chatted over the loud Bowie.
Nothing was understood .
Later we went back to Najeeb's place.
It was quieter.
Much quieter, as nothing could be said.
Smoking was not allowed within the appartment , so me and Jonny and Najeeb went outside.
Grace to the fact that Najeebs English was underpar , me and Jonny
(Jonny and I) had a chat.
This converstation was highly illuminating for me.
Apparently "The book" had to be returned.
It was not some internet copy , but a limited edition, serial numbered item that Max should not have given me.
This particular copy could and would be traced directly to Max.
If It ever re-surfaced the consequence for Max would be terminalado.
And his italian marble sculptures would be buried deep in the sand.
Jonny explained that, as I had got Max so pissed and smashed on Sulphate ,Max had crossed the line by giving me the book.
I explained to Jonny that the book had gone missing from my safe box back in the early seventies on the Pointless Danger.
Jonny implied I was lying.
Things went down hill from there.
I pulled out my secret weapon, disguised as a line of our old friend- ,,, Sulphate (Amphetamine Sulphate).
Jonny couldn't resist it. I had laced it this time not with Vim (as you may remember for the bikers), but this time with Ketamine.
I knew one line of this baby would make Jonny as peacful as a lamb.
My second dose was a needle in the arm of Pethedrine, followed by Pentathol.
My plot was to find out who was behind the main game.
Najeeb and his misses had long since gone to bed, nearly all their friends had left. There were just one or two people asleep on the couches, if they awoke I was ready to inject large quantities of ketamine into them intraveniously, at very short, and professional notice.
Nobody woke up.
My discussions with Jonny were very Illuminating.
In fact he began to ramble. I didn't need to ask questions.
I didn't want to interupt.
I think he must have had some serious guilt issues.
He started talking about stuff I had no idea about.
He seemed to be obsessed about Aluminium.
He started talking about Chem trails.
I made some notes and underlined Chem trails, with a view to researching more about them on the internet.
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If you would like some of the background to these memoirs go to
http://memoirsofadrunkensailor.blogspot.com/
Cut and paste this into the address bar of your warm and cuddly browser.
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Black Dark Wine
Black Dark Wine.
The crisp crackling sound of burn leaves under ones foot .
The shadowed sun effortlessly hides itself behind the dark shower of potential.
These are the things that make one sing in homage to the beauty of existance.
Cut short in their birth and inevitable immediate death.
They linger,as a taste lingers in the mouth, a taste of the past.
Instantaneously they bring one back, they call one back.
long lost memories of a past that was so beautifull, and yet it will forever
remain,,unreattainable.
these are a few of my favourite regrets.
Is it so true ?,truth and its bedfellow memory, have become so intertwinned that reality could have little chance of grasping the crystal true nature of existance.
An acceptance that one can never re attain those golden days of youth, where everything now seen from the clouded future appears so golden, so bright, and so crystal? Are these not the reflective thoughts of Black dark wine.
The crisp crackling sound of burn leaves under ones foot .
The shadowed sun effortlessly hides itself behind the dark shower of potential.
These are the things that make one sing in homage to the beauty of existance.
Cut short in their birth and inevitable immediate death.
They linger,as a taste lingers in the mouth, a taste of the past.
Instantaneously they bring one back, they call one back.
long lost memories of a past that was so beautifull, and yet it will forever
remain,,unreattainable.
these are a few of my favourite regrets.
Is it so true ?,truth and its bedfellow memory, have become so intertwinned that reality could have little chance of grasping the crystal true nature of existance.
An acceptance that one can never re attain those golden days of youth, where everything now seen from the clouded future appears so golden, so bright, and so crystal? Are these not the reflective thoughts of Black dark wine.
shut up
In a world that is at war in more than a few countries.
There is only one option for me .
And that it to shut up.
The only problem is. I am a drunken sailor.
So fuck the CIA fuck MI5
I
There is only one option for me .
And that it to shut up.
The only problem is. I am a drunken sailor.
So fuck the CIA fuck MI5
I
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Chilli sweats 6
Later in the evening I went back on deck knowing It was too late to get settled and have a chance at the card action.
I wondered around a bit and smelt the air , that cool non weird air that I had
been pinning for.
I decided to go to the galley and see what`s for dinner.
I seemed to get a quite short retort from the chef , who told me to stop
bothering him, apparently I had already asked him.
I thought no more of this and went back on deck. I could hear the shouts of
exuberance from the card game echoing the enjoyment of a winning hand through
the steel structure of the boat. That`s how serious these games were.
I went back to the stern to enjoy a little peace and reflection.I peered into
the distance and saw a black distant plume of what I guess was a badly
maintained diesel engined ship. I watched it for a while.
We were doing a fair few knots. After twenty minutes or so of relaxing and
cooling out , I started to get a twitch of paranoia.
The black smoke was still directly behind us and even seemed to be gaining.
Were we running from it? nobody had told me. but that was normal.
It seemed to me that everything was on a need to know basis here.
Lets face it, what we did was extremely dubious and probably not ever legal
even in the most out of the way of offshore waters.
My paranoia got the better of me, and I suddenly realised that things were not
quite right.
I began to imagine that perhaps the other axe wealding individual had got back
to the boat before me.
Suddenly a hot wave throbbed in my head. I could see only red, I grasped out
and gripped the cold steel hand rail as my head spun, all of the hair on my
body stood up as I fell to my knees.
The next thing I remember was waking up in the small tender adrift, with the
Pointless Danger miles away glinting in the distance.
I wondered around a bit and smelt the air , that cool non weird air that I had
been pinning for.
I decided to go to the galley and see what`s for dinner.
I seemed to get a quite short retort from the chef , who told me to stop
bothering him, apparently I had already asked him.
I thought no more of this and went back on deck. I could hear the shouts of
exuberance from the card game echoing the enjoyment of a winning hand through
the steel structure of the boat. That`s how serious these games were.
I went back to the stern to enjoy a little peace and reflection.I peered into
the distance and saw a black distant plume of what I guess was a badly
maintained diesel engined ship. I watched it for a while.
We were doing a fair few knots. After twenty minutes or so of relaxing and
cooling out , I started to get a twitch of paranoia.
The black smoke was still directly behind us and even seemed to be gaining.
Were we running from it? nobody had told me. but that was normal.
It seemed to me that everything was on a need to know basis here.
Lets face it, what we did was extremely dubious and probably not ever legal
even in the most out of the way of offshore waters.
My paranoia got the better of me, and I suddenly realised that things were not
quite right.
I began to imagine that perhaps the other axe wealding individual had got back
to the boat before me.
Suddenly a hot wave throbbed in my head. I could see only red, I grasped out
and gripped the cold steel hand rail as my head spun, all of the hair on my
body stood up as I fell to my knees.
The next thing I remember was waking up in the small tender adrift, with the
Pointless Danger miles away glinting in the distance.
Chilli sweats 5
Chilli Sweats 5
I left my cabin fully armed, to the teeth in fact, well prepared for any
trouble. When I got on deck, there was Wheels, there was Sid, there was
Silver Fox. They were just doing their jobs. I looked at the wheelhouse;
there was the Captain. She looked as happy as hell. She had a big smile on
her face. There was a mild swell; we were cutting through the waves. There
were the lovely, black slave girls, looking hot and luscious, as always. And
it was obviously time we were bringing in some swordfish. It was that time of
year. Everything was normal. Everything was cool. Was it possible I could
even say anything to anybody? Was that a dream?
Anyway, it just wasn’t the right time to say anything. I just lay back, stayed
cool, did my job. I had nets to mend. I knew I was way behind so I just got
on and started mending my nets. Everything was fine. I spent maybe two,
three, hours mending the nets. I didn’t say a word. I thought, “Err...best
leave it alone.”.
Anyway, later on, the sun was going down; it was time for a card session. So I
let everybody else go down, do the cards, and I stayed on deck for a while. I
just looked at the setting sun and watched it go down and thought, “Hey, that
was a close shave! I don’t know what that was, but it was a close shave.” So
I was feeling well, I don’t know, what can I tell you? It was a situation I
couldn’t really talk to anybody about, so I thought that maybe if I went down
below shortly and played some cards, I would be able to ask a few questions.
“What’s been happening?” You know. Maybe I’d got a bit drunk, passed out.
“You guys, what have you been doing? What’s been happening?” Just to try and
find out where the time line was.
So I went down the steps, down to the rec. room and everybody was in there.
Things were getting a bit hot, people were slamming cards down, money was
changing hands. Things were getting pretty damn interesting. I’d been missing
out on some early action. Not that I was that bothered ‘cos I had something
else on my mind. So I thought it certainly wasn’t the right time to say
anything. And as it happened, it never was the right time to say anything. It
never, ever was possible. It never felt right to say anything. So I had to
keep all of this stuff to myself.
Anyway, the only thing that was quite interesting was that while they were
playing cards – funnily enough it was a card game I had invented, called
“Waffle”. It’s a little bit like “Knock” but you lay the cards down in front
of you and ultimately it became quite famous. In fact, you may even meet
people that know “Waffle” and if I were to speak to them and say, “Hey, I
invented that!”, they would just laugh at me. It was that famous. Strange,
the way things happen.
Anyway, lots of money was changing hands. Since I wasn’t on the case I stayed
clear– especially when Wheels is playing – you have to be on the case. As soon
as he was losing, he would just shoot off at a tangent, telling stories, and
the next thing you knew, you were down all your money. You were down all your
money. It was that quick, that fast. He is a vrai expert.
What was I saying? Cards. Well, they had been talking about something. They
had been talking about something when I had walked into the room: “Black Crow.”
But as soon as I had walked into the room, they had stopped talking about it,
which made me suspicious. So obviously I was very interested. For some time
afterwards I wondered, “What is Black Crow?”. It was obvious I wasn’t going to
be told.
I left my cabin fully armed, to the teeth in fact, well prepared for any
trouble. When I got on deck, there was Wheels, there was Sid, there was
Silver Fox. They were just doing their jobs. I looked at the wheelhouse;
there was the Captain. She looked as happy as hell. She had a big smile on
her face. There was a mild swell; we were cutting through the waves. There
were the lovely, black slave girls, looking hot and luscious, as always. And
it was obviously time we were bringing in some swordfish. It was that time of
year. Everything was normal. Everything was cool. Was it possible I could
even say anything to anybody? Was that a dream?
Anyway, it just wasn’t the right time to say anything. I just lay back, stayed
cool, did my job. I had nets to mend. I knew I was way behind so I just got
on and started mending my nets. Everything was fine. I spent maybe two,
three, hours mending the nets. I didn’t say a word. I thought, “Err...best
leave it alone.”.
Anyway, later on, the sun was going down; it was time for a card session. So I
let everybody else go down, do the cards, and I stayed on deck for a while. I
just looked at the setting sun and watched it go down and thought, “Hey, that
was a close shave! I don’t know what that was, but it was a close shave.” So
I was feeling well, I don’t know, what can I tell you? It was a situation I
couldn’t really talk to anybody about, so I thought that maybe if I went down
below shortly and played some cards, I would be able to ask a few questions.
“What’s been happening?” You know. Maybe I’d got a bit drunk, passed out.
“You guys, what have you been doing? What’s been happening?” Just to try and
find out where the time line was.
So I went down the steps, down to the rec. room and everybody was in there.
Things were getting a bit hot, people were slamming cards down, money was
changing hands. Things were getting pretty damn interesting. I’d been missing
out on some early action. Not that I was that bothered ‘cos I had something
else on my mind. So I thought it certainly wasn’t the right time to say
anything. And as it happened, it never was the right time to say anything. It
never, ever was possible. It never felt right to say anything. So I had to
keep all of this stuff to myself.
Anyway, the only thing that was quite interesting was that while they were
playing cards – funnily enough it was a card game I had invented, called
“Waffle”. It’s a little bit like “Knock” but you lay the cards down in front
of you and ultimately it became quite famous. In fact, you may even meet
people that know “Waffle” and if I were to speak to them and say, “Hey, I
invented that!”, they would just laugh at me. It was that famous. Strange,
the way things happen.
Anyway, lots of money was changing hands. Since I wasn’t on the case I stayed
clear– especially when Wheels is playing – you have to be on the case. As soon
as he was losing, he would just shoot off at a tangent, telling stories, and
the next thing you knew, you were down all your money. You were down all your
money. It was that quick, that fast. He is a vrai expert.
What was I saying? Cards. Well, they had been talking about something. They
had been talking about something when I had walked into the room: “Black Crow.”
But as soon as I had walked into the room, they had stopped talking about it,
which made me suspicious. So obviously I was very interested. For some time
afterwards I wondered, “What is Black Crow?”. It was obvious I wasn’t going to
be told.
Chilli sweats 4
Chilli Sweats 4
Forgive the rough writing here, as it shows more the true nature of a drunken sailor.
Everything ran through my mind now. “This can’t be true.” Everything ran
through my mind. I had to compute so much; it was beyond me. After some
computing I realised: if that me got back to that boat, my boat, and went
away, I would be stuck on this giant, black, messy, evil hulk from hell! I had
to do something. I had to act. I didn’t have much time! Now! I have to
think! I have to do the math – what the hell am I going to do? If that me
goes down those steps, unties the boat and drives off, I’m stuck here! Here in
this big, black, armageddon of hulking, black mass of burnt-out iron.
What to do? I gently stepped back into the dining room. I left the door open
- I didn’t want to make any noise – just to give me time to think, because if
there was any time to think in this world, it was now. Finally I had made a
decision: I had to confront this, this me, this other me. I thought I would
put the axe down. I went out of the door and walked in the direction in which
the other me had passed. At first, I could see nothing, it was so foggy, but
then I made out a dark figure and I heard it shout, “Hello! Hello!”. I
cautiously, quietly said, “Hello.”, from behind it.
The figure turned. In that moment of its turning, everything that I had
thought changed. When it turned I saw the face. It was me but was much older
than me. I could see the wrinkles of the face. I could see the tired look in
the eyes. I could see stress and a darkness and something else I had never
seen. This face had been somewhere I hadn’t been.These eyes were dark and
hollow compared to mine. Then I had to think, “What should I say?” but I just
couldn’t think straight.
Fortunately,as the face turned to me - that wrinkled, grey, tired, spooky face
said to me, “Oh, I’m so glad. I’ve been trying to find you." The big, blue,
scary, starey eyes cut into my inner soul. And then this apparition said,
“Thank God! I’ve been looking for you. Thank God I’ve found you. I need to
tell you something. It’s really, really important.”
Until this point, my main motivation and fear had been that it was going to get
back to the boat, my boat, untie it and drive off, leaving me alone on this
big, black, scary hulk of a ship. Strangely, I felt suddenly relieved that this
wasn’t the situation. This was a new situation. I had to listen. But
suddenly, at this point, somebody kicked open one of the side doors, jumped
out, ran toward us and swung an axe, hitting the spooky apparition in the back.
I was sure it must have killed it. instantly. The perpetrator then ran away
very quickly, so fast that I couldn’t see who it was. It was so foggy, it was
dark with fog.
My immediate thought was, “Oh my God! I was going to learn something really,
very important.” And this other perpetrator had stopped some very important
information being imparted to me. My first feelings were absolute shock but,
more than that, disappointment. I really had believed that this other older me
had been going to tell me something so crucial to my future that everything
would depended upon it. Everything!
The perpetrator had proceeded to run away at a very fast speed and disappear
into the deep fog. I could hear the footsteps fading into the distance. I had
no inclination in me to follow. After all, I had put my axe down. God! What a
joke this was, the realisation that I could not follow and my only hope of
finding out what was going on was lying on the floor bleeding with an axe in
the back. The situation was getting worse and worse. Initially I had just
been worried about getting back to the boat. Who was this? Was my boat going
to be stolen? Was I going to be stuck? My biggest concern was that I was
going to be stuck here, on this damned boat, this ship, this black hulk.
I went back and got my axe, just for protection and decided quite quickly and
cleanly, “Just get back to my boat, and get the hell out of here.”, so that’s
what I did. I got my axe, picked it up and gripped it, did some practice
swings, left over shoulder, right over shoulder. I used some Wing Chun Kung Fu
and Tai Chi moves, anything just to warm up. I was in trouble here. Then I
got out of the door and started walking cautiously along the gangway.
I stepped over the body. It was dead; It was gone; It was finished. Whatever
It had had to say to me, it was too damned late. All I had to concern myself
with was getting back to my boat and getting the hell out of here, hopefully
without that other axe-murdering maniac stepping onto my boat. Anyway, it felt
like a quarter of a mile or a half a mile to get back to the stairway. I got
there moving slowly and, obviously carefully.
Once I got there, I stepped onto the stairway. It rattled, which upset me a
little bit, banging against the side, made noise. I did not need noise right
now. I needed stealth, so I tip toed down that stairway like I’d never tip
toed before. I needed to get back on my boat, get the hell out of Dodge. I
got halfway down and I stopped and listened. This time there was nothing. No,
“Hello!”. No nothing. Thank God! I carried on down. It would have been easy
to be sloppy but I kept my concentration. I did not make a single sound on
that stairway, I swear to you.
I got back to the bottom of the stairway, untied the knot I had made,
carefully. It’s a kind of reef knot of complexity that’s easy-peasy but so
efficient. It seems to me that many sailors have many knots but I have just
one. It’s super-duper efficient and it’s very simple. I just pulled the end
and the rope came undone, as it should and always does.
I jumped, only a meter onto the boat. Phew! I thought, “I’ll worry about the
over-unity motors later; I’ll get them working later. Obviously, I’ll run out
of diesel, that’s a secondary thing. Number One is: Get the hell away from
this black, steel hulk and whoever the hell that was.” Anyway, once I’d gone
down and turned the diesel back on, the motors started up immediately.
Fortunately the turbos hadn’t blown the diesel motors, so everything was cool.
Chug, chug, chug, chug ... off we went. We moved lovelly, beautifully away.
My heart was lifted as I stood on the bridge, and – chug, chug, chug, chug –
off we went. Maybe six knots, seven knots, that was fine ...just get the
bloody hell out of here. It was actually dark now, it wasn’t just fog, it was
dark . I was tempted to turn the spots on but I thought, “No, just get away.
Don’t give any sign of where or what you are, just get away.” And that’s what I
did.
I was at least half a mile away and I flicked the spots on, just to have a
quick look ahead of me, but it was pointless. The light just reflected back
from the fog, so I turned the spots off. I thought I’d just drive blind and
trust to the fact that anywhere would be better than there. I chugged away and
the further I got away from that boat, the better I felt.
After half an hour of moving away, during which I’d turned the engines up and
had been getting up to about twenty knots, we were moving away seriously. I
must have been several good kilometres away from that bugger. I was feeling a
little bit brighter and really felt: “God! I’ve just been through the mill
here. Things were pretty grim and I’m out of there. I’m safe. I’m out of
there, I’m safe.” I hadn’t even had the time to think: “Where is everybody?
What’s going on? Why’s it dark?” That was a different issue.
I thought now: “We’re in the middle of the Indian Ocean. I could turn it onto
auto-pilot and it would be cool. So that’s what I did. I turned on the auto-
pilot, set a course,for Uvongo beach, I thought I’d get the hell out of there.
It was going to be four, five, six hours before I arrived there, so I thought
I’d go and get some shut-eye. I was away from some real, deep shit, and I
thought I’d worry about it in the morning. I felt a little bit safe; it felt
safe. So I just turned on the auto-pilot –okay, it was very primitive, fuck
me, it was not nineteen nineties stuff, it was maybe ‘sixty eight, maybe
‘seventy five, stuff. We just didn’t have GPS. So the auto-pilot would keep
the steering straight and I’d got radar set up previously so that if anything
came up on the radar, a beep-beep-beep alarm would go off in my cabin. It was
pretty cool.
So everything was pretty cool. I thought I’d go and get some shut-eye and
everything would look better in the morning. The sun would come up. For God’s
sake, the sun would come up. The fog would clear and I would see some sense
and sensibility, some bloody reality. Fair enough, I felt fairly confident I
could leave the bridge, we were literally miles from anywhere. I could let the
thing tick over – bom, bom, bom. My only concern was, the next morning I must
sort out the over-unity device because I was going to run out of diesel. I
couldn’t even get to shore with the diesel I had. We’d been so reliant on that
thing.
I set all the controls to neutral, plotted a course for Uvongo and I went down
the stairway to my cabin and thought: “Sod it, I’ll get some sleep. I need
some sleep. It’s freaking me out, this. I’ll get some sleep and everything
will be fine tomorrow.” I slept like a baby.
I woke with the sun shining through my porthole. My eyes were a little bit
crusty as I opened them up. Maybe I had been crying in my sleep. Shocking,
shocking time. Anyway, it was sunny. The relief! Actually, when you wake,
you just feel calm and normal. It’s only when you think of what’s been
happening it soaks in whether you should feel happy, sad, frightened, shocked
... or terrified! As it happened, that morning I just felt relieved. I could
hear the chugging of the engines; they weren’t going crazy, that was good. It
wasn’t foggy, it was sunny, it was good. I felt warm and safe in my bed, that
was good. So I rested there for a moment, trying to absorb what had happened,
not that I could really. Realistically, I think it would have been impossible
for anybody to absorb.
I lay there for a moment, thinking. Reflecting: what had happened? I felt
okay enough just to lie there for a while. I was avoiding reality. There was
nobody on the bridge, not unless things had gone back to the normal world,
which had parted company with me some time back. Ha!so what if there was
nobody on the bridge. The engines were ticking over, we were doing maybe
nine, ten, knots, I don’t know, but normally you’d have somebody up there
keeping an eye open, you know, keeping a watch. Obviously, there was nobody
watching, unless things had returned to normal and I thought that was a little
bit too much to hope for.
So, anyway, I lay there. I tried to relax. I thought I’d give myself the
luxury of meditating for a moment, just to get some perspective. If I could
just meditate myself into a situation where I was just an observer, as the
reality really is, and if I was just consciousness, everything would be fine.
But, as we often find out, good as you may be at meditating – or anything else
– reality can kick you in the arse. I was fully aware of this. So I lay there
anyway and tried to relax my toes, relax my feet, relax my calves, relax my
thighs, relax my hips, relax my stomach, relax my chest, relax my arms, relax
my shoulders, relax my eyes, relax my face, etc., etc....anybody that knows
about meditation will know this. I was finding it a little bit difficult but I
was calming and accepted that meditation might be the best way of dealing with
my extreme situation. Often it is.
Anyway, it was working, everything was peaceful. Then I just heard something
walk by the door. My door. It threw my meditation quite severely because I
thought, “Hey! I don’t know what situation I’m in – maybe it’s just normal,
maybe it’s cool, or are we still back in Weird City? I don’t know.” I didn’t
know. I couldn’t know without finding out. So that actually absolutely ruined
my meditation . I was disappointed because I was just at that point where
things were feeling pretty good. I had felt calm, I was just an observer of
this lunacy of the universe and then suddenly I had to protect my essence, my
life, my vital force. I had to make sure I was okay. After all, it is our
job. It is our fundamental job as human beings to survive.
So, with that in mind, I jumped out of bed. I forced myself. I put on some
basic clothes and sat down on my bench and thought about what course of action
I should take. How should I approach this situation, which could be absolutely
normal or absolutely: that is an axe murderer outside of my door. Difficult
decisions. I erred on the side of caution and decided that it was more
probably the axe murderer and, knowing my luck, it would be the axe murderer
and not normality that had returned. I would probably have to throw ten dice
rolling sixes all at once to get back to normality, the way things had gone. I
had crossed the bloody line with the over-unity, the dark energy.
Whatever! So what? My fault. Let’s get over it. Let’s face it. Let’s deal
with it. After all, it was my job. I had been dealing with this shit all my
life. So, what did I expect? I tell you what I expected. I expected the
bloody worst! So this had gone through my mind. I put on my trousers, put on
my shoes, put on my shirt and I started thinking: “Hey, I’d better start arming
myself pretty damn well.” Let me tell you one thing, it’s all very well to
think, “That’s a good weapon.” Wham, bam, whatever – butterfly knives, swords,
this knife, that knife, guns, whatever. But at the end of the day, when it
comes down to really having to do the deal, all that is bullshit. At that
moment in time you’ve got to weigh up which sword is lighter, sharper, faster –
but what’s the situation? It’s quite a hard decision to make and I had limited
access to weaponry in my cabin. Personally, on reflection, I think that a
forty-five or a nine millimeter handgun is very efficient. Unfortunately, I
didn’t have access to a forty-five or a nine millimeter handgun. A thirty-
eight would have done, but unfortunately I didn’t have access to that either.
The only things that I had access to were some short swords, kung fu swords,
some knives – and that’s fine if you’re A1 at kung fu, and really fit, and very
on-the-ball. They’re bloody heavy to swing around really fast...I would have
... oh, I wished I had a thirty-eight or a forty-five! Or a nine millimeter.
I had to face reality: I didn’t. So I’d got my pants on, my socks on, my shoes
on, they’re the best weapons you’ve got, for starters. They make you feel
safe. You’re not naked. That’s a damn good start.
My butterfly knife was nearby. I had left it out of the box that I’d lost the
key to. I picked that up. I was pretty fucking hot wih that but – God
Almighty! – it’s all show, show, show. You can make it spin round like a fan
blade, it doesn’t mean a thing. Unless it’s in your mind to cut somebody’s
throat, you have nothing. Personally; I’m happier with a sword or something,
you know. I had a thirty-eight inch sword. I put that in my belt. It was
Malaysian, a very nice antique, a very sharp, engraved sword that I put in my
belt. Of course, I put my butterfly knife on board as well. But, really, I
felt very under-armed for the sort of darkness that I might have to face.
Quite honestly, if you see an axe coming, you can’t beat it with a knife or a
sword. But... I don’t know, the intent, the intent is the think to deal with...
The game is about intent. The power of intent is greater than the pre-
meditated spinning knives around like a prat.
Anyway, I armed myself as best I could with what I had. It consisted of a
thirty-eight inch Malaysian sword with twin-edged blades, sharpened like a
razor. Well manufactured, well balanced. That was okay, I felt that was a
good weapon. I thought I could handle anybody with that weapon. I put the
butterfly knife – it’s all very well, but if you put a butterfly knife in your
pocket, in the second it takes you to pull it out, you’re dead! It’s too late!
I had it there anyway as a back-up. It’s all I had. That’s all I had to face
this axe murderer...potentially. Or, potentially, everything would be fine. It
would be sunny, the slave girls would be up there cleaning fish. The Captain,
in her stinky tabbard, would be there, everything would be fine. That’s what I
hoped, but I knew: life ain’t that easy.
I prepared myself. I swung my sword around. I flicked my butterfly knife,
changed hands with it. Whum, whum, whum, whum, fwi, fwi fwi, fwi, fwi like a
butterfly. They are very cool but – you know – they’re more for show, more for
Hollywood. Well, they’re fucking deadly, don’t get me wrong, but, as I say,
it’s intent that’s much more important than the weapon you carry. Personally,
being a peaceful person, my murderous intent is fairly low on the agenda.
I thought I was as armed as I could be, as I carefully unlatched the door and
opened it without it squeaking. Whoever had walked by my door had been gone at
least a minute or so. They could have been on deck, they could have been
below,I didn’t know. I thought that maybe I should just stay where I was and
wait things out. That would be the wise thing to do. At that moment in time,
the wise thing to do, actually, would have been much wiser than it sounds.
Really what I should have done was wait, and wait, and to learn as much as
possible about what was actually going on. But one tends to get a little bit
bored, tense, anxious and one is tempted to open one’s door and go and find out
what the hell is going on. So that’s what I did.
Forgive the rough writing here, as it shows more the true nature of a drunken sailor.
Everything ran through my mind now. “This can’t be true.” Everything ran
through my mind. I had to compute so much; it was beyond me. After some
computing I realised: if that me got back to that boat, my boat, and went
away, I would be stuck on this giant, black, messy, evil hulk from hell! I had
to do something. I had to act. I didn’t have much time! Now! I have to
think! I have to do the math – what the hell am I going to do? If that me
goes down those steps, unties the boat and drives off, I’m stuck here! Here in
this big, black, armageddon of hulking, black mass of burnt-out iron.
What to do? I gently stepped back into the dining room. I left the door open
- I didn’t want to make any noise – just to give me time to think, because if
there was any time to think in this world, it was now. Finally I had made a
decision: I had to confront this, this me, this other me. I thought I would
put the axe down. I went out of the door and walked in the direction in which
the other me had passed. At first, I could see nothing, it was so foggy, but
then I made out a dark figure and I heard it shout, “Hello! Hello!”. I
cautiously, quietly said, “Hello.”, from behind it.
The figure turned. In that moment of its turning, everything that I had
thought changed. When it turned I saw the face. It was me but was much older
than me. I could see the wrinkles of the face. I could see the tired look in
the eyes. I could see stress and a darkness and something else I had never
seen. This face had been somewhere I hadn’t been.These eyes were dark and
hollow compared to mine. Then I had to think, “What should I say?” but I just
couldn’t think straight.
Fortunately,as the face turned to me - that wrinkled, grey, tired, spooky face
said to me, “Oh, I’m so glad. I’ve been trying to find you." The big, blue,
scary, starey eyes cut into my inner soul. And then this apparition said,
“Thank God! I’ve been looking for you. Thank God I’ve found you. I need to
tell you something. It’s really, really important.”
Until this point, my main motivation and fear had been that it was going to get
back to the boat, my boat, untie it and drive off, leaving me alone on this
big, black, scary hulk of a ship. Strangely, I felt suddenly relieved that this
wasn’t the situation. This was a new situation. I had to listen. But
suddenly, at this point, somebody kicked open one of the side doors, jumped
out, ran toward us and swung an axe, hitting the spooky apparition in the back.
I was sure it must have killed it. instantly. The perpetrator then ran away
very quickly, so fast that I couldn’t see who it was. It was so foggy, it was
dark with fog.
My immediate thought was, “Oh my God! I was going to learn something really,
very important.” And this other perpetrator had stopped some very important
information being imparted to me. My first feelings were absolute shock but,
more than that, disappointment. I really had believed that this other older me
had been going to tell me something so crucial to my future that everything
would depended upon it. Everything!
The perpetrator had proceeded to run away at a very fast speed and disappear
into the deep fog. I could hear the footsteps fading into the distance. I had
no inclination in me to follow. After all, I had put my axe down. God! What a
joke this was, the realisation that I could not follow and my only hope of
finding out what was going on was lying on the floor bleeding with an axe in
the back. The situation was getting worse and worse. Initially I had just
been worried about getting back to the boat. Who was this? Was my boat going
to be stolen? Was I going to be stuck? My biggest concern was that I was
going to be stuck here, on this damned boat, this ship, this black hulk.
I went back and got my axe, just for protection and decided quite quickly and
cleanly, “Just get back to my boat, and get the hell out of here.”, so that’s
what I did. I got my axe, picked it up and gripped it, did some practice
swings, left over shoulder, right over shoulder. I used some Wing Chun Kung Fu
and Tai Chi moves, anything just to warm up. I was in trouble here. Then I
got out of the door and started walking cautiously along the gangway.
I stepped over the body. It was dead; It was gone; It was finished. Whatever
It had had to say to me, it was too damned late. All I had to concern myself
with was getting back to my boat and getting the hell out of here, hopefully
without that other axe-murdering maniac stepping onto my boat. Anyway, it felt
like a quarter of a mile or a half a mile to get back to the stairway. I got
there moving slowly and, obviously carefully.
Once I got there, I stepped onto the stairway. It rattled, which upset me a
little bit, banging against the side, made noise. I did not need noise right
now. I needed stealth, so I tip toed down that stairway like I’d never tip
toed before. I needed to get back on my boat, get the hell out of Dodge. I
got halfway down and I stopped and listened. This time there was nothing. No,
“Hello!”. No nothing. Thank God! I carried on down. It would have been easy
to be sloppy but I kept my concentration. I did not make a single sound on
that stairway, I swear to you.
I got back to the bottom of the stairway, untied the knot I had made,
carefully. It’s a kind of reef knot of complexity that’s easy-peasy but so
efficient. It seems to me that many sailors have many knots but I have just
one. It’s super-duper efficient and it’s very simple. I just pulled the end
and the rope came undone, as it should and always does.
I jumped, only a meter onto the boat. Phew! I thought, “I’ll worry about the
over-unity motors later; I’ll get them working later. Obviously, I’ll run out
of diesel, that’s a secondary thing. Number One is: Get the hell away from
this black, steel hulk and whoever the hell that was.” Anyway, once I’d gone
down and turned the diesel back on, the motors started up immediately.
Fortunately the turbos hadn’t blown the diesel motors, so everything was cool.
Chug, chug, chug, chug ... off we went. We moved lovelly, beautifully away.
My heart was lifted as I stood on the bridge, and – chug, chug, chug, chug –
off we went. Maybe six knots, seven knots, that was fine ...just get the
bloody hell out of here. It was actually dark now, it wasn’t just fog, it was
dark . I was tempted to turn the spots on but I thought, “No, just get away.
Don’t give any sign of where or what you are, just get away.” And that’s what I
did.
I was at least half a mile away and I flicked the spots on, just to have a
quick look ahead of me, but it was pointless. The light just reflected back
from the fog, so I turned the spots off. I thought I’d just drive blind and
trust to the fact that anywhere would be better than there. I chugged away and
the further I got away from that boat, the better I felt.
After half an hour of moving away, during which I’d turned the engines up and
had been getting up to about twenty knots, we were moving away seriously. I
must have been several good kilometres away from that bugger. I was feeling a
little bit brighter and really felt: “God! I’ve just been through the mill
here. Things were pretty grim and I’m out of there. I’m safe. I’m out of
there, I’m safe.” I hadn’t even had the time to think: “Where is everybody?
What’s going on? Why’s it dark?” That was a different issue.
I thought now: “We’re in the middle of the Indian Ocean. I could turn it onto
auto-pilot and it would be cool. So that’s what I did. I turned on the auto-
pilot, set a course,for Uvongo beach, I thought I’d get the hell out of there.
It was going to be four, five, six hours before I arrived there, so I thought
I’d go and get some shut-eye. I was away from some real, deep shit, and I
thought I’d worry about it in the morning. I felt a little bit safe; it felt
safe. So I just turned on the auto-pilot –okay, it was very primitive, fuck
me, it was not nineteen nineties stuff, it was maybe ‘sixty eight, maybe
‘seventy five, stuff. We just didn’t have GPS. So the auto-pilot would keep
the steering straight and I’d got radar set up previously so that if anything
came up on the radar, a beep-beep-beep alarm would go off in my cabin. It was
pretty cool.
So everything was pretty cool. I thought I’d go and get some shut-eye and
everything would look better in the morning. The sun would come up. For God’s
sake, the sun would come up. The fog would clear and I would see some sense
and sensibility, some bloody reality. Fair enough, I felt fairly confident I
could leave the bridge, we were literally miles from anywhere. I could let the
thing tick over – bom, bom, bom. My only concern was, the next morning I must
sort out the over-unity device because I was going to run out of diesel. I
couldn’t even get to shore with the diesel I had. We’d been so reliant on that
thing.
I set all the controls to neutral, plotted a course for Uvongo and I went down
the stairway to my cabin and thought: “Sod it, I’ll get some sleep. I need
some sleep. It’s freaking me out, this. I’ll get some sleep and everything
will be fine tomorrow.” I slept like a baby.
I woke with the sun shining through my porthole. My eyes were a little bit
crusty as I opened them up. Maybe I had been crying in my sleep. Shocking,
shocking time. Anyway, it was sunny. The relief! Actually, when you wake,
you just feel calm and normal. It’s only when you think of what’s been
happening it soaks in whether you should feel happy, sad, frightened, shocked
... or terrified! As it happened, that morning I just felt relieved. I could
hear the chugging of the engines; they weren’t going crazy, that was good. It
wasn’t foggy, it was sunny, it was good. I felt warm and safe in my bed, that
was good. So I rested there for a moment, trying to absorb what had happened,
not that I could really. Realistically, I think it would have been impossible
for anybody to absorb.
I lay there for a moment, thinking. Reflecting: what had happened? I felt
okay enough just to lie there for a while. I was avoiding reality. There was
nobody on the bridge, not unless things had gone back to the normal world,
which had parted company with me some time back. Ha!so what if there was
nobody on the bridge. The engines were ticking over, we were doing maybe
nine, ten, knots, I don’t know, but normally you’d have somebody up there
keeping an eye open, you know, keeping a watch. Obviously, there was nobody
watching, unless things had returned to normal and I thought that was a little
bit too much to hope for.
So, anyway, I lay there. I tried to relax. I thought I’d give myself the
luxury of meditating for a moment, just to get some perspective. If I could
just meditate myself into a situation where I was just an observer, as the
reality really is, and if I was just consciousness, everything would be fine.
But, as we often find out, good as you may be at meditating – or anything else
– reality can kick you in the arse. I was fully aware of this. So I lay there
anyway and tried to relax my toes, relax my feet, relax my calves, relax my
thighs, relax my hips, relax my stomach, relax my chest, relax my arms, relax
my shoulders, relax my eyes, relax my face, etc., etc....anybody that knows
about meditation will know this. I was finding it a little bit difficult but I
was calming and accepted that meditation might be the best way of dealing with
my extreme situation. Often it is.
Anyway, it was working, everything was peaceful. Then I just heard something
walk by the door. My door. It threw my meditation quite severely because I
thought, “Hey! I don’t know what situation I’m in – maybe it’s just normal,
maybe it’s cool, or are we still back in Weird City? I don’t know.” I didn’t
know. I couldn’t know without finding out. So that actually absolutely ruined
my meditation . I was disappointed because I was just at that point where
things were feeling pretty good. I had felt calm, I was just an observer of
this lunacy of the universe and then suddenly I had to protect my essence, my
life, my vital force. I had to make sure I was okay. After all, it is our
job. It is our fundamental job as human beings to survive.
So, with that in mind, I jumped out of bed. I forced myself. I put on some
basic clothes and sat down on my bench and thought about what course of action
I should take. How should I approach this situation, which could be absolutely
normal or absolutely: that is an axe murderer outside of my door. Difficult
decisions. I erred on the side of caution and decided that it was more
probably the axe murderer and, knowing my luck, it would be the axe murderer
and not normality that had returned. I would probably have to throw ten dice
rolling sixes all at once to get back to normality, the way things had gone. I
had crossed the bloody line with the over-unity, the dark energy.
Whatever! So what? My fault. Let’s get over it. Let’s face it. Let’s deal
with it. After all, it was my job. I had been dealing with this shit all my
life. So, what did I expect? I tell you what I expected. I expected the
bloody worst! So this had gone through my mind. I put on my trousers, put on
my shoes, put on my shirt and I started thinking: “Hey, I’d better start arming
myself pretty damn well.” Let me tell you one thing, it’s all very well to
think, “That’s a good weapon.” Wham, bam, whatever – butterfly knives, swords,
this knife, that knife, guns, whatever. But at the end of the day, when it
comes down to really having to do the deal, all that is bullshit. At that
moment in time you’ve got to weigh up which sword is lighter, sharper, faster –
but what’s the situation? It’s quite a hard decision to make and I had limited
access to weaponry in my cabin. Personally, on reflection, I think that a
forty-five or a nine millimeter handgun is very efficient. Unfortunately, I
didn’t have access to a forty-five or a nine millimeter handgun. A thirty-
eight would have done, but unfortunately I didn’t have access to that either.
The only things that I had access to were some short swords, kung fu swords,
some knives – and that’s fine if you’re A1 at kung fu, and really fit, and very
on-the-ball. They’re bloody heavy to swing around really fast...I would have
... oh, I wished I had a thirty-eight or a forty-five! Or a nine millimeter.
I had to face reality: I didn’t. So I’d got my pants on, my socks on, my shoes
on, they’re the best weapons you’ve got, for starters. They make you feel
safe. You’re not naked. That’s a damn good start.
My butterfly knife was nearby. I had left it out of the box that I’d lost the
key to. I picked that up. I was pretty fucking hot wih that but – God
Almighty! – it’s all show, show, show. You can make it spin round like a fan
blade, it doesn’t mean a thing. Unless it’s in your mind to cut somebody’s
throat, you have nothing. Personally; I’m happier with a sword or something,
you know. I had a thirty-eight inch sword. I put that in my belt. It was
Malaysian, a very nice antique, a very sharp, engraved sword that I put in my
belt. Of course, I put my butterfly knife on board as well. But, really, I
felt very under-armed for the sort of darkness that I might have to face.
Quite honestly, if you see an axe coming, you can’t beat it with a knife or a
sword. But... I don’t know, the intent, the intent is the think to deal with...
The game is about intent. The power of intent is greater than the pre-
meditated spinning knives around like a prat.
Anyway, I armed myself as best I could with what I had. It consisted of a
thirty-eight inch Malaysian sword with twin-edged blades, sharpened like a
razor. Well manufactured, well balanced. That was okay, I felt that was a
good weapon. I thought I could handle anybody with that weapon. I put the
butterfly knife – it’s all very well, but if you put a butterfly knife in your
pocket, in the second it takes you to pull it out, you’re dead! It’s too late!
I had it there anyway as a back-up. It’s all I had. That’s all I had to face
this axe murderer...potentially. Or, potentially, everything would be fine. It
would be sunny, the slave girls would be up there cleaning fish. The Captain,
in her stinky tabbard, would be there, everything would be fine. That’s what I
hoped, but I knew: life ain’t that easy.
I prepared myself. I swung my sword around. I flicked my butterfly knife,
changed hands with it. Whum, whum, whum, whum, fwi, fwi fwi, fwi, fwi like a
butterfly. They are very cool but – you know – they’re more for show, more for
Hollywood. Well, they’re fucking deadly, don’t get me wrong, but, as I say,
it’s intent that’s much more important than the weapon you carry. Personally,
being a peaceful person, my murderous intent is fairly low on the agenda.
I thought I was as armed as I could be, as I carefully unlatched the door and
opened it without it squeaking. Whoever had walked by my door had been gone at
least a minute or so. They could have been on deck, they could have been
below,I didn’t know. I thought that maybe I should just stay where I was and
wait things out. That would be the wise thing to do. At that moment in time,
the wise thing to do, actually, would have been much wiser than it sounds.
Really what I should have done was wait, and wait, and to learn as much as
possible about what was actually going on. But one tends to get a little bit
bored, tense, anxious and one is tempted to open one’s door and go and find out
what the hell is going on. So that’s what I did.
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Chilli sweats3
Chilli Sweats 3
The whisky began to take effect, so I gulped a few more. That black hole
within was beginning to warm. I jumped to my feet and thought quickly, “I’ll
turn right, go straight to the engine room, attack the engines and cut off the
power to the primary coil. This should save me some time.” I couldn’t afford
to risk running into that big rock again. Everything was depending on speed
and efficiency to stop the engines.
I ran down the corridor. I grabbed the fire axe, that was nestled in the wall,
on my way by. I thought that this would suffice to cut the cables. Then I
realised: “I hope I can remember exactly how it was wired.” because there were
a multitude of capacitors and cabling left, right and centre and it was months
before that I had initially wired it.
I stopped in my tracks and thought I would run back, open the box and get out
the wiring diagram I had used. So I ran back to the cabin and felt in my
pockets for the key but I couldn’t find it. It was ridiculous! I had had it
there a minute ago, what the hell had I done with it? I lifted the axe to
swing it at the box and then suddenly remembered how futile that would be: the
box had been built to withstand an axe for four hours! “How ironic!”, I
thought. So I went straight back into the corridor, turned right and carried
on running to the engine room.
I arrived at the engine room; it was a bit late, the noise was deafening.
Everything was shaking. It was frightening to approach closer, but I had to.
I could see the diesel engines were burning oil. Possibly it was being sucked
in from the rough turbo I had made myself. That meant the oil was being used
as a fuel and the engines had little time left once they had drained all the
oil from the sump. The diesel engines were doomed.
My instinct was to cover my ears and run the other way, to get off the boat
before it blew up, but I knew I had to do more than that. I approached the
over-unity device and started looking at the wiring through the smoke. I could
just about make out what was going on. I was pretty sure I could spot the
battery connection to the primary coil. I believed that, if I managed to sever
this, the over-unity device would slowly come to a halt but I couldn’t be sure.
I picked up the axe and swung it, hard, dividing the cable in one sharp,
snapping cut. I was expecting sparks to fly and God knows what but, in fact,
nothing much happened because there were only 12 volts running the bloody
thing! All the power was coming on the other side of the coils.
There was no immediate effect but this wasn’t surprising because just the
momentum of those heavy magnets would keep the thing running for ages. Next, I
went to the diesel engines’ fuel tank and I cut the fuel to the diesel engines.
I managed to do this with the tap, rather than swinging the axe, because I
knew I would need some form of power to steer the boat.
I thought at that point that I had done all I could down there. If it wasn’t
going to stop, it wasn’t going to stop, and it was hell down there. I thought
I would get back up on deck and see what the situation was. I ran along the
corridors, turned right, turned left and up the small staircase onto the deck.
When I got there, things were not quite as I had expected. It wasn’t dark and
the waves were not the same: they were much smaller. But what there was, was
heavy fog. It was quite unusual. I thought that perhaps the nature of the
loop had been broken here.
The engines were still going crazy. I could feel the vibration on the rail of
the boat. I thought I would run up to the wheelhouse. Again nobody could be
seen - what was going on, I don’t know – I ran up the rickety stairs to the
wheelhouse and this time, when I grabbed the wheel it did, in fact, move.
Things had changed, maybe I had changed them by cutting the cable. I pulled
the throttles back to cut the engines. Nothing happened intially but I did
think that they were reluctantly beginning to slow down. Yes, I was sure that
they were slowing down.
I looked out of the window and I could see, ahead, thick, gloomy fog. It
almost had a green tinge. Yes, now the engines were definitely slowing. I
could feel them, I thought they might even stall. I swung the wheel to the
left, believing that if that rock were still there, I would miss it by doing
so. I could just about make out a big, dark, black object. We seemed to be
approaching at a fair rate of knots, although the boat was slowing, it was
still going to hit it. So, again, I swung the wheel, this time to the right,
with a view to pulling up alongside the huge, black object.
The fog seemed to be glowing green. It was a strange fog, something I hadn’t
seen before, but I wasn’t overly concerned because I knew that things weren’t
quite as they were meant to be yet. I thought that normality would return but
that it would take a little while yet. These quantum anomalies can take a
little time to settle down. I tweaked the throttles to give me a little extra
power into the turn. I was fully turned to starboard and was hoping just to
brush up against this large object.
Fortunately this is what did happen. I brushed up alongside of it and it made
a hollow, metal clank as I did so. Just from the noise, I realised what it
was. It was clear to me that it was a large ship and I just couldn’t see
enough of it through the fog to make it out, to judge exactly how big it really
was. I eased my boat along the side of this big, black metal cliff until I
came to a stairway that I imagined was leading up onto the deck of this
machine. The fog seemed to make it more spooky, more eerie, than perhaps it
really was but, to be honest, I felt like going back and getting the bottle of
whisky to give me some Dutch courage.
I cut the engines and let the boat come to a halt just by the stairway. I
threw a line over the stairway and jumped to it. I tied the boat off, I
thought that that would do for the moment. The boat was going nowhere. The sea
was now quite calm, strangely, although the fog hadn’t lifted. I made my way
up the stairway. It was a little bit rickety; It seemed to my mind that it
should have been replaced some ten years ago ideally. I had no idea what I
would find on board but I just couldn’t resist finding out.
I went up the stairway being fairly cautious. I didn’t want to fall off.
There could be nothing worse than falling into that cold, wet sea in the dim
fog. Of what I was going to find, I had no idea, but hopefully it would be
just a bunch of crew and a little bit of normality.My present mood,being a bit
negative I thought that was a little bit unlikely.Anyway, at last, I attained
the height of the deck.
I climbed up onto it. There was nobody to be seen. The ship looked like it
had been left for years on end. There was rust. There was dirt. It actually
looked a bit of a wreck. I thought my best chance of finding anybody was to go
to the wheelhouse. Surely, on a ship of this size, there must be someone
around. There was no sunlight.It was still foggy and cold and the damp was
cutting into my bones. My God, this was a big boat!
I broke into a trot to try and reach the wheelhouse. I passed nobody on the
way. I climbed the exterior stairway. There were several flights to it, three
or four flights. I got to the door that would enter the wheelhouse. It was
rusted and very difficult to open. I tugged at it. It wasn’t really going
anywhere. I thought perhaps I would try the other side, so I ran back down,
opened one of the interior corridor doors and went inside.
It was pretty dark in there. I thought I wouldn’t do any investigation, I
would go straight to the wheelhouse. It was quite spooky in there. I crossed
the whole width of the ship and went out of the door on the other side and
began to climb the stairway to the wheelhouse, the bridge.
Fortunately, this time the door opened fairly easily, despite the signs of
quite a lot of rust, and I went in. There was no noise; there was nobody to
be seen. It was cold; it was damp. I walked over to the wheel. I could see
the compass from here; it was gently spinning round. Oh, what a surprise. I
decided to look in the multiple cupboards that were spread around the
wheelhouse, on the bridge. Opening them, I began throwing out lifejackets, all
sorts of bits and pieces, flare guns, and then I found out what I was looking
for: powerful torches.
I picked up two of these torches and checked them. Both were working; I was
surprised. I thought I would go below and have a quick recce, to see if there
was anything of interest there. I used the interior staircase to go into the
bowels of the ship. It was dark and eerie and every noise I made seemed to
echo. I shouted out, “Hello!” several times. Nothing came back. I wandered
along a dark corridor. It was very long and there seemed to be cabins on
either side. Every now and again I would kick a cabin door open and shine the
torch in to see if there was anything there. But there was nothing special,
just the usual things you see in a cabin: a bunk, a sink and a shower cubical,
a chest of drawers. All very normal really, which seemed out of place in such
a dead, abnormal ship. Perhaps I was expecting some horrific scene of bodies
scattered everywhere and blood, but nothing like that was there.
I began to wonder what the hell had happened to everybody. Oh, well, I carried
on. I got to the end of the corridor and went down the set of stairs. There
again, there was another long corridor with cabins on either side. Again, I
ran down the corridor quite fast, pushing open some of the cabin doors, just to
check there was nobody about. I shouted occasionally, “Hello! Hello! Anybody
there?”, but no reply came back..
After a while, I decided this was pointless and felt that perhaps nobody was
here at all. The ship was deserted. It was one of those famous ghost ships
you hear about. I had thought they were just fiction. Obviously not. I
decided to make my way back onto the deck. I thought I would take the corridor
to the right. I should find a staircase there, leading up. I did. Eventually
I got back out on deck. The fog still hadn’t lifted. It was damp, it was wet
but now there seemed to be a slight breeze, which made it feel colder. It was
a this point that I wished I had bought that Asda jacket. How many times had I
regretted not buying that jacket! It would have been have been ideal in this
situation.
I thought that this was a pointless venture and that it was about time I got
back to my boat and got the hell away from this weird vessel. Again, I was not
filled with optimism about my return to the boat because things were not
exactly normal back there. Anyway, perhaps I could get back on my boat, get
away from this big hulk and eventually get out of this fog and see some
sunshine. Hopefully things would return to a more normal state of affairs. So
that is exactly what I did: I went back to the rickety stairway and started to
go down. Halfway down, I could have sworn I heard somebody shout. I thought
they said, “Hello!”. I stopped in my tracks, was that my imagination or did I
really hear that? Just as I was about to continue down, believing it had been
just my imagination playing games with me, I heard it again: “Hello!”. It was
quite ghostly.
I turned on my heels, took two steps up and then I thought better of it. I
paused, I waited. I thought, “I’d better have a think, here.”. It couldn’t be
anything that good in such a strange vessel. For all I knew, it could be an
axe murderer! I thought I’d pop back down and get the axe before continuing to
investigate. I got back on board my boat, found the axe, swung it over my
shoulder and jumped back onto the steps. I cautiously went up the steps as
quietly as possible, so as not to alert any potential adversary.
When I got to the top, I climbed onto the deck and had a good look around. I
had kept one of the flashlights with me, just in case I needed it. Now I shone
it into the gloom. Unfortunately, the light just bounced back, reflected by the
fog. It was no use, it was a bit like having car headlights on full beam. I
turned it off, so as not to alert anybody. It could have caused me loss of the
advantage of surprise. I cautiously walked along the deck. I listened with
both of my ears, as hard as I could. I opened my mouth to increase my hearing
ability and gently swung my head from left to right. But I could hear nothing.
Then, again, came an eerie, “Hello!”. It sounded like it came from maybe fifty
yards on. A chill went through my heart. This didn’t feel good. I had tried
to pay attention to my gut feelings in the past and when I hadn’t I had
regretted it. So I walked along with extreme caution and readied the axe with
both hands. I kept the torch in my pocket, ready to pull out very quickly, if
necessary.
Again, I heard that, “Hello!”, spooky, “Hello!”. I decided just to pull of to
the left, behind one of the doors and just wait to see what came past. Perhaps
it would be safer that way. I did exactly that. I carefully opened one of the
doors on the left. It squeaked a bit, but not too badly. I stepped inside,
pulled the torch from my pocket and shone it around, just to make sure that
there was nothing that could harm me. It was all right, it was just some form
of large dining room. There was nobody about so I wasn’t too worried and I
stood there, silently, waiting to see if I could see the person who was
shouting.
I stood stiff as a board, breathing very shallowly. I didn’t know what to
expect but I knew I was in the right position because I heard the “Hello!”
again and I could hear footsteps. Beads of sweat were beginning to trickle
down my forehead. I was very tense and was gripping the axe now with both
hands, ready to defend myself, or attack if necessary. I stood there silently
for what seemed like ages, but it was really just a minute or so, I guess.
The footsteps got louder and louder, approaching me. I tried to stay calm,
keep quiet, waiting to see who it was. Then it walked by me. I peered my head
out of the door. “Oh my God, who is that? ....... It was me!”
The whisky began to take effect, so I gulped a few more. That black hole
within was beginning to warm. I jumped to my feet and thought quickly, “I’ll
turn right, go straight to the engine room, attack the engines and cut off the
power to the primary coil. This should save me some time.” I couldn’t afford
to risk running into that big rock again. Everything was depending on speed
and efficiency to stop the engines.
I ran down the corridor. I grabbed the fire axe, that was nestled in the wall,
on my way by. I thought that this would suffice to cut the cables. Then I
realised: “I hope I can remember exactly how it was wired.” because there were
a multitude of capacitors and cabling left, right and centre and it was months
before that I had initially wired it.
I stopped in my tracks and thought I would run back, open the box and get out
the wiring diagram I had used. So I ran back to the cabin and felt in my
pockets for the key but I couldn’t find it. It was ridiculous! I had had it
there a minute ago, what the hell had I done with it? I lifted the axe to
swing it at the box and then suddenly remembered how futile that would be: the
box had been built to withstand an axe for four hours! “How ironic!”, I
thought. So I went straight back into the corridor, turned right and carried
on running to the engine room.
I arrived at the engine room; it was a bit late, the noise was deafening.
Everything was shaking. It was frightening to approach closer, but I had to.
I could see the diesel engines were burning oil. Possibly it was being sucked
in from the rough turbo I had made myself. That meant the oil was being used
as a fuel and the engines had little time left once they had drained all the
oil from the sump. The diesel engines were doomed.
My instinct was to cover my ears and run the other way, to get off the boat
before it blew up, but I knew I had to do more than that. I approached the
over-unity device and started looking at the wiring through the smoke. I could
just about make out what was going on. I was pretty sure I could spot the
battery connection to the primary coil. I believed that, if I managed to sever
this, the over-unity device would slowly come to a halt but I couldn’t be sure.
I picked up the axe and swung it, hard, dividing the cable in one sharp,
snapping cut. I was expecting sparks to fly and God knows what but, in fact,
nothing much happened because there were only 12 volts running the bloody
thing! All the power was coming on the other side of the coils.
There was no immediate effect but this wasn’t surprising because just the
momentum of those heavy magnets would keep the thing running for ages. Next, I
went to the diesel engines’ fuel tank and I cut the fuel to the diesel engines.
I managed to do this with the tap, rather than swinging the axe, because I
knew I would need some form of power to steer the boat.
I thought at that point that I had done all I could down there. If it wasn’t
going to stop, it wasn’t going to stop, and it was hell down there. I thought
I would get back up on deck and see what the situation was. I ran along the
corridors, turned right, turned left and up the small staircase onto the deck.
When I got there, things were not quite as I had expected. It wasn’t dark and
the waves were not the same: they were much smaller. But what there was, was
heavy fog. It was quite unusual. I thought that perhaps the nature of the
loop had been broken here.
The engines were still going crazy. I could feel the vibration on the rail of
the boat. I thought I would run up to the wheelhouse. Again nobody could be
seen - what was going on, I don’t know – I ran up the rickety stairs to the
wheelhouse and this time, when I grabbed the wheel it did, in fact, move.
Things had changed, maybe I had changed them by cutting the cable. I pulled
the throttles back to cut the engines. Nothing happened intially but I did
think that they were reluctantly beginning to slow down. Yes, I was sure that
they were slowing down.
I looked out of the window and I could see, ahead, thick, gloomy fog. It
almost had a green tinge. Yes, now the engines were definitely slowing. I
could feel them, I thought they might even stall. I swung the wheel to the
left, believing that if that rock were still there, I would miss it by doing
so. I could just about make out a big, dark, black object. We seemed to be
approaching at a fair rate of knots, although the boat was slowing, it was
still going to hit it. So, again, I swung the wheel, this time to the right,
with a view to pulling up alongside the huge, black object.
The fog seemed to be glowing green. It was a strange fog, something I hadn’t
seen before, but I wasn’t overly concerned because I knew that things weren’t
quite as they were meant to be yet. I thought that normality would return but
that it would take a little while yet. These quantum anomalies can take a
little time to settle down. I tweaked the throttles to give me a little extra
power into the turn. I was fully turned to starboard and was hoping just to
brush up against this large object.
Fortunately this is what did happen. I brushed up alongside of it and it made
a hollow, metal clank as I did so. Just from the noise, I realised what it
was. It was clear to me that it was a large ship and I just couldn’t see
enough of it through the fog to make it out, to judge exactly how big it really
was. I eased my boat along the side of this big, black metal cliff until I
came to a stairway that I imagined was leading up onto the deck of this
machine. The fog seemed to make it more spooky, more eerie, than perhaps it
really was but, to be honest, I felt like going back and getting the bottle of
whisky to give me some Dutch courage.
I cut the engines and let the boat come to a halt just by the stairway. I
threw a line over the stairway and jumped to it. I tied the boat off, I
thought that that would do for the moment. The boat was going nowhere. The sea
was now quite calm, strangely, although the fog hadn’t lifted. I made my way
up the stairway. It was a little bit rickety; It seemed to my mind that it
should have been replaced some ten years ago ideally. I had no idea what I
would find on board but I just couldn’t resist finding out.
I went up the stairway being fairly cautious. I didn’t want to fall off.
There could be nothing worse than falling into that cold, wet sea in the dim
fog. Of what I was going to find, I had no idea, but hopefully it would be
just a bunch of crew and a little bit of normality.My present mood,being a bit
negative I thought that was a little bit unlikely.Anyway, at last, I attained
the height of the deck.
I climbed up onto it. There was nobody to be seen. The ship looked like it
had been left for years on end. There was rust. There was dirt. It actually
looked a bit of a wreck. I thought my best chance of finding anybody was to go
to the wheelhouse. Surely, on a ship of this size, there must be someone
around. There was no sunlight.It was still foggy and cold and the damp was
cutting into my bones. My God, this was a big boat!
I broke into a trot to try and reach the wheelhouse. I passed nobody on the
way. I climbed the exterior stairway. There were several flights to it, three
or four flights. I got to the door that would enter the wheelhouse. It was
rusted and very difficult to open. I tugged at it. It wasn’t really going
anywhere. I thought perhaps I would try the other side, so I ran back down,
opened one of the interior corridor doors and went inside.
It was pretty dark in there. I thought I wouldn’t do any investigation, I
would go straight to the wheelhouse. It was quite spooky in there. I crossed
the whole width of the ship and went out of the door on the other side and
began to climb the stairway to the wheelhouse, the bridge.
Fortunately, this time the door opened fairly easily, despite the signs of
quite a lot of rust, and I went in. There was no noise; there was nobody to
be seen. It was cold; it was damp. I walked over to the wheel. I could see
the compass from here; it was gently spinning round. Oh, what a surprise. I
decided to look in the multiple cupboards that were spread around the
wheelhouse, on the bridge. Opening them, I began throwing out lifejackets, all
sorts of bits and pieces, flare guns, and then I found out what I was looking
for: powerful torches.
I picked up two of these torches and checked them. Both were working; I was
surprised. I thought I would go below and have a quick recce, to see if there
was anything of interest there. I used the interior staircase to go into the
bowels of the ship. It was dark and eerie and every noise I made seemed to
echo. I shouted out, “Hello!” several times. Nothing came back. I wandered
along a dark corridor. It was very long and there seemed to be cabins on
either side. Every now and again I would kick a cabin door open and shine the
torch in to see if there was anything there. But there was nothing special,
just the usual things you see in a cabin: a bunk, a sink and a shower cubical,
a chest of drawers. All very normal really, which seemed out of place in such
a dead, abnormal ship. Perhaps I was expecting some horrific scene of bodies
scattered everywhere and blood, but nothing like that was there.
I began to wonder what the hell had happened to everybody. Oh, well, I carried
on. I got to the end of the corridor and went down the set of stairs. There
again, there was another long corridor with cabins on either side. Again, I
ran down the corridor quite fast, pushing open some of the cabin doors, just to
check there was nobody about. I shouted occasionally, “Hello! Hello! Anybody
there?”, but no reply came back..
After a while, I decided this was pointless and felt that perhaps nobody was
here at all. The ship was deserted. It was one of those famous ghost ships
you hear about. I had thought they were just fiction. Obviously not. I
decided to make my way back onto the deck. I thought I would take the corridor
to the right. I should find a staircase there, leading up. I did. Eventually
I got back out on deck. The fog still hadn’t lifted. It was damp, it was wet
but now there seemed to be a slight breeze, which made it feel colder. It was
a this point that I wished I had bought that Asda jacket. How many times had I
regretted not buying that jacket! It would have been have been ideal in this
situation.
I thought that this was a pointless venture and that it was about time I got
back to my boat and got the hell away from this weird vessel. Again, I was not
filled with optimism about my return to the boat because things were not
exactly normal back there. Anyway, perhaps I could get back on my boat, get
away from this big hulk and eventually get out of this fog and see some
sunshine. Hopefully things would return to a more normal state of affairs. So
that is exactly what I did: I went back to the rickety stairway and started to
go down. Halfway down, I could have sworn I heard somebody shout. I thought
they said, “Hello!”. I stopped in my tracks, was that my imagination or did I
really hear that? Just as I was about to continue down, believing it had been
just my imagination playing games with me, I heard it again: “Hello!”. It was
quite ghostly.
I turned on my heels, took two steps up and then I thought better of it. I
paused, I waited. I thought, “I’d better have a think, here.”. It couldn’t be
anything that good in such a strange vessel. For all I knew, it could be an
axe murderer! I thought I’d pop back down and get the axe before continuing to
investigate. I got back on board my boat, found the axe, swung it over my
shoulder and jumped back onto the steps. I cautiously went up the steps as
quietly as possible, so as not to alert any potential adversary.
When I got to the top, I climbed onto the deck and had a good look around. I
had kept one of the flashlights with me, just in case I needed it. Now I shone
it into the gloom. Unfortunately, the light just bounced back, reflected by the
fog. It was no use, it was a bit like having car headlights on full beam. I
turned it off, so as not to alert anybody. It could have caused me loss of the
advantage of surprise. I cautiously walked along the deck. I listened with
both of my ears, as hard as I could. I opened my mouth to increase my hearing
ability and gently swung my head from left to right. But I could hear nothing.
Then, again, came an eerie, “Hello!”. It sounded like it came from maybe fifty
yards on. A chill went through my heart. This didn’t feel good. I had tried
to pay attention to my gut feelings in the past and when I hadn’t I had
regretted it. So I walked along with extreme caution and readied the axe with
both hands. I kept the torch in my pocket, ready to pull out very quickly, if
necessary.
Again, I heard that, “Hello!”, spooky, “Hello!”. I decided just to pull of to
the left, behind one of the doors and just wait to see what came past. Perhaps
it would be safer that way. I did exactly that. I carefully opened one of the
doors on the left. It squeaked a bit, but not too badly. I stepped inside,
pulled the torch from my pocket and shone it around, just to make sure that
there was nothing that could harm me. It was all right, it was just some form
of large dining room. There was nobody about so I wasn’t too worried and I
stood there, silently, waiting to see if I could see the person who was
shouting.
I stood stiff as a board, breathing very shallowly. I didn’t know what to
expect but I knew I was in the right position because I heard the “Hello!”
again and I could hear footsteps. Beads of sweat were beginning to trickle
down my forehead. I was very tense and was gripping the axe now with both
hands, ready to defend myself, or attack if necessary. I stood there silently
for what seemed like ages, but it was really just a minute or so, I guess.
The footsteps got louder and louder, approaching me. I tried to stay calm,
keep quiet, waiting to see who it was. Then it walked by me. I peered my head
out of the door. “Oh my God, who is that? ....... It was me!”
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Jonny`s Memoirs
I had the sad task , myself being a newbee, to clean out
Jonny`s locker and cabin.
Nobody wanted to do it, so I had the short f``ing straw.
I would admit to nobody , I cried profusely, and things were
made worse when I found the letter, that until this moment I
had never told nobody of it`s existence .
I include it here dear reader,
I found it profound and shocking. I had always thought of Jonny the Hook as a simple
man, but this letter said more than he would ever be able to
say under normal circumstances to his shipmates.His memoirs were quite prolific ,and I reference them in my own story.
They were after time , so disturbing to me I eventually
burnt them.Perhaps this was one of the more severe errors I
have made in my life. I am not sure.
What rested within them perhaps should never sea the light
of day. I will cautiously transcribe the one page that I retained
Jonny`s locker and cabin.
Nobody wanted to do it, so I had the short f``ing straw.
I would admit to nobody , I cried profusely, and things were
made worse when I found the letter, that until this moment I
had never told nobody of it`s existence .
I include it here dear reader,
I found it profound and shocking. I had always thought of Jonny the Hook as a simple
man, but this letter said more than he would ever be able to
say under normal circumstances to his shipmates.His memoirs were quite prolific ,and I reference them in my own story.
They were after time , so disturbing to me I eventually
burnt them.Perhaps this was one of the more severe errors I
have made in my life. I am not sure.
What rested within them perhaps should never sea the light
of day. I will cautiously transcribe the one page that I retained
and hid in the wooden box.
I should just clarify for any reader that has occasioned
upon my memoirs.
Perhaps I should put things straight, as I am sure you have
missed a chapter or two which may have pertained to the
unrelenting tasks that throughout history show the power of
human survival and endurance which I choose now to describe
and call a memoir.
I had been brought up as any child could have been, I had
the benefit of an education that in these days seems rare.
To me it had been no more than an education.
It was an all encompassing hell in my young opinion . But
now perhaps I see the point.
I say cautiously that I was not as brainwashed as the others that follow me.
In my estimation they have no chance to think.
The dominance of myself was less subtle and more self useful,
now the dominance of education is more extreme.
I feel I have been poisoned.
I am concerned the poisons within me will profoundly inhibit
my over late and complex warning to you, the reader.
That is a mercurial teeth issue.and many other toxins that
are nearly impossible to avoid.
Now I remember more . It took me years of re-self education
to break the bond that had tied my mind.
I had forgotten the extremes I have been through , and still
after many years of looking for enlightenment I have still
struggled with my pre inserted control formatting.
LSD has helped,but also caused a huge amount of uncontrolled
damage .
It is so long and so far away now, I seem to have forgotten
that I was under control.
I have been controlled. I have forgotten how powerful it
is, and was.
Now,when I remember, it is shocking how much re education of
myself I had to make.
Stupidly |I assume others are as enlightened as me , but in
the cold light of reality ,how could they be.They must still
be under the heavy influence of their parental and
educational background. I am so far from this , I have
forgotten how hard and unlikely it is for normal folk to
break these simplistic sacred bonds. These are the bonds of
guarantee of our servitude to to authority.
It Is for this reason I freely sacrifice myself to the shark
that has relentlessly hunted me and caused my shipmates so
much concern.
Sea you beyond love Jonny.
The biggest thing I had a problem with was imagining Jonny
with his extreme old school pirate accent saying this girly
stuff. I needed a stiff drink.
I should just clarify for any reader that has occasioned
upon my memoirs.
Perhaps I should put things straight, as I am sure you have
missed a chapter or two which may have pertained to the
unrelenting tasks that throughout history show the power of
human survival and endurance which I choose now to describe
and call a memoir.
I had been brought up as any child could have been, I had
the benefit of an education that in these days seems rare.
To me it had been no more than an education.
It was an all encompassing hell in my young opinion . But
now perhaps I see the point.
I say cautiously that I was not as brainwashed as the others that follow me.
In my estimation they have no chance to think.
The dominance of myself was less subtle and more self useful,
now the dominance of education is more extreme.
I feel I have been poisoned.
I am concerned the poisons within me will profoundly inhibit
my over late and complex warning to you, the reader.
That is a mercurial teeth issue.and many other toxins that
are nearly impossible to avoid.
Now I remember more . It took me years of re-self education
to break the bond that had tied my mind.
I had forgotten the extremes I have been through , and still
after many years of looking for enlightenment I have still
struggled with my pre inserted control formatting.
LSD has helped,but also caused a huge amount of uncontrolled
damage .
It is so long and so far away now, I seem to have forgotten
that I was under control.
I have been controlled. I have forgotten how powerful it
is, and was.
Now,when I remember, it is shocking how much re education of
myself I had to make.
Stupidly |I assume others are as enlightened as me , but in
the cold light of reality ,how could they be.They must still
be under the heavy influence of their parental and
educational background. I am so far from this , I have
forgotten how hard and unlikely it is for normal folk to
break these simplistic sacred bonds. These are the bonds of
guarantee of our servitude to to authority.
It Is for this reason I freely sacrifice myself to the shark
that has relentlessly hunted me and caused my shipmates so
much concern.
Sea you beyond love Jonny.
The biggest thing I had a problem with was imagining Jonny
with his extreme old school pirate accent saying this girly
stuff. I needed a stiff drink.
Saturday, February 19, 2011
full moon precautions
I have just remembered what I was trying to say.
When one has a wee outside.( I understand why many females don`t do this so often), but for me, it`s a primordial drive.
If it is a full moon (which it is tonight) or even moon lit .
It is very wise ( or overcautious ) to piss with the moon behind oneself.
A full and uncompromising view of shadows which will warn one of unexpected arrivals from either left or right will most certainly be cast in the grass.
For those who shit in the woods I recommend Wickes`s 500watt work light
When one has a wee outside.( I understand why many females don`t do this so often), but for me, it`s a primordial drive.
If it is a full moon (which it is tonight) or even moon lit .
It is very wise ( or overcautious ) to piss with the moon behind oneself.
A full and uncompromising view of shadows which will warn one of unexpected arrivals from either left or right will most certainly be cast in the grass.
For those who shit in the woods I recommend Wickes`s 500watt work light
converstations with a friend
From my early realization that John`s amps had something
special.
The clarity of sound , the overwhelming warmth of those
valves,the intuitive configuration John had manufactured
from his dream,that had the end result of just kicking
ass.If one had the luxury of playing a Les Paul through
those babies, you would know what I mean.
It was purely this that drove me to meet the guy. And I
admit If all went well, I would use Black ops hypnosis on
him
My end game was all that really mattered.
In all honesty I can`t but for the life of me remember which
of the many names I used with Bedini.
OK I have taken the step that leaves me completely open.
Names perhaps should never be specified?
Maybe I have been kidding myself anyway, and have been for
the last 7 years.
Maybe too many helicopters fly over? I don`t know.Is there a
mathematical formula to ascertain the quantity of
helicopters flying over ones house that would enable one to
judge the subtle difference between paranoia and the
rational and wise choice of wearing brown underwear and
carrying small arms. Lets face it, we all need to go shopping for veg.
If such a formula exists I am truly unaware of it.
Anyway I digress.
For the point of explanation for those of you who are unaware.
The less publicized reason d`etre of John in the more recent
past, is his obsession with overunity.
It is possible I had some input to encourage his
obsession.Who knows?
Anyway from my experience of designing the boat`s
electromagnetic overunity device, grace to a great scientist.
Electromagnetic force had at that time become a constant preoccupation.
It`s almost becoming a habit of mine , to stand on the
shoulders of giants, I have done it so much now I am worried
those shoulders are chaffed and sore , or perhaps I am causing them Carpel
tunnel syndrome.
Anyway It`s late and I am frustrated ,as I still haven`t managed to say half of what I wanted to say.
special.
The clarity of sound , the overwhelming warmth of those
valves,the intuitive configuration John had manufactured
from his dream,that had the end result of just kicking
ass.If one had the luxury of playing a Les Paul through
those babies, you would know what I mean.
It was purely this that drove me to meet the guy. And I
admit If all went well, I would use Black ops hypnosis on
him
My end game was all that really mattered.
In all honesty I can`t but for the life of me remember which
of the many names I used with Bedini.
OK I have taken the step that leaves me completely open.
Names perhaps should never be specified?
Maybe I have been kidding myself anyway, and have been for
the last 7 years.
Maybe too many helicopters fly over? I don`t know.Is there a
mathematical formula to ascertain the quantity of
helicopters flying over ones house that would enable one to
judge the subtle difference between paranoia and the
rational and wise choice of wearing brown underwear and
carrying small arms. Lets face it, we all need to go shopping for veg.
If such a formula exists I am truly unaware of it.
Anyway I digress.
For the point of explanation for those of you who are unaware.
The less publicized reason d`etre of John in the more recent
past, is his obsession with overunity.
It is possible I had some input to encourage his
obsession.Who knows?
Anyway from my experience of designing the boat`s
electromagnetic overunity device, grace to a great scientist.
Electromagnetic force had at that time become a constant preoccupation.
It`s almost becoming a habit of mine , to stand on the
shoulders of giants, I have done it so much now I am worried
those shoulders are chaffed and sore , or perhaps I am causing them Carpel
tunnel syndrome.
Anyway It`s late and I am frustrated ,as I still haven`t managed to say half of what I wanted to say.
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
chilli sweats 2
Hi Wheels,
Thanks for the card, I thought it very appropriate.Elephants
never forget. I hope you will forgive my audacity in
tracking you down.But you did the same. They were good days.
I`ve been reminiscing, and writing a few things down.
Obviously not giving anything away. I am playing a bit of
music again, what are you up to? do you still see Speilberg?
and the others?
Anyhoo, I`m going to cut you into one of the weird sessions
on the boat.
I woke cold and drenched, It took me a few moments to
realise it was just a dream. Once back in the now , the
feeling of relief was completely overwhelming.
I could see the sun through my porthole, and needed to get
straight up on deck and breathe the fresh sea air.
I couldn`t wait. As fast as possible, I got there and inhaled
with all my might the fresh clean salty air.
My head was clearing from that terrible nightmare, the
relief was tangible.
The beauty of the sunshine struck me, a fresh breeze stroked
my still wet face, at last I could breathe again.
There were a few crew busying themselves with their duties
but all was calm and correct.
Then the thought came to me . I could do with a drink. If
for nothing more than to celebrate my continued existence
against all odds, and that glorious sun warming my face and
soul.
I remembered the single malt I had so carefully secreted
away. I realised from the angle of the sun, it was no more
than 11 o`clock, and I didn`t give a damn. After such a
nightmare, I was so glad to be awake and alive, all of my
carefully constructed rules could go fuck themselves.
I snook back to my cabin.The word cabin glorifies the true
nature of my allotted hole in the big metal beast that the
boat was. But at least it was my private haven.
Short of breath from the anticipation of the self indulgence
that awaited me, I withdrew from under my bunk the hardwood
box. I opened the lid after using the clever key mechanism,
and on my knees, the glowing beauty of the bottle stared
back at me , I could swear it was singing to me and smiling,
like a long-lost drunken buddy once left behind in Madagascar.
The anticipation perhaps is always greater than the
realization.
It was at that moment my eye caught sight of the writing on
the underside of the lid.
My heart sank, it was not painful, it was more like falling
into a well, a well that is in the middle of a field, a well
that is so innocuous nobody will find you , nobody will
pull you out. A sad crying well.
I was so drained I couldn`t move. I knew what would happen
next, and unfortunately it did.
The problem for me wasn`t the situation, it was more my lack
of inner strength. I had been drained.thoroughly drained.
Unless one has experienced the evacuation of
all of one's energy ,will, and even, dare I say it, soul, one would
find it hard to believe how vacuous it is possible to feel,
and yet be alive.
I knew from experience the shit had hit the fan, and I
better react or die, here and now .
I reacted. like countless times before. I gripped the bottle
and twisted the unbroken seal and gulped like there was no
tomorrow, because sure as the sun shines, `if I don`t kick
into overdrive I am finished.'
It`s perhaps easy for an overseer, to have realized sooner
the quandary I was in, but when it is in the here and now,
it`s not so simple.
For the experienced at this type of situation, it would be
obvious what I tried to do next.
But I will explain the drill.
First I tried to add two and two, then four and four.
That worked. I picked up my lucky butterfly knife from the
box and cut my arm. It bled. I tried to read the godforsaken
HB pencil writing on the inner box lid, but realized that
would not suffice as an adequate test, as the words were so
unworldly they could never be a judgment of physical
reality. What could I use as a true test? my head screamed.
Then it struck me, It was an irrelevant quest.To judge which
reality I was in was not important. The simple fact
remained, I was here, and it was now. More than this, I knew
what was happening ,and it was going to happen whether I
liked it or not.
The sun from the porthole faded, the pipes in the cabin were
starting to vibrate, the boat was swaying. Wake up buddy! I
said to myself. Time is of the essence. I have been pre-warned,
so I had better shut that hybrid down fast. I knew I
could perhaps rely on there being one more loop, but I
better get it this time. There were no guarantees.
Thanks for the card, I thought it very appropriate.Elephants
never forget. I hope you will forgive my audacity in
tracking you down.But you did the same. They were good days.
I`ve been reminiscing, and writing a few things down.
Obviously not giving anything away. I am playing a bit of
music again, what are you up to? do you still see Speilberg?
and the others?
Anyhoo, I`m going to cut you into one of the weird sessions
on the boat.
I woke cold and drenched, It took me a few moments to
realise it was just a dream. Once back in the now , the
feeling of relief was completely overwhelming.
I could see the sun through my porthole, and needed to get
straight up on deck and breathe the fresh sea air.
I couldn`t wait. As fast as possible, I got there and inhaled
with all my might the fresh clean salty air.
My head was clearing from that terrible nightmare, the
relief was tangible.
The beauty of the sunshine struck me, a fresh breeze stroked
my still wet face, at last I could breathe again.
There were a few crew busying themselves with their duties
but all was calm and correct.
Then the thought came to me . I could do with a drink. If
for nothing more than to celebrate my continued existence
against all odds, and that glorious sun warming my face and
soul.
I remembered the single malt I had so carefully secreted
away. I realised from the angle of the sun, it was no more
than 11 o`clock, and I didn`t give a damn. After such a
nightmare, I was so glad to be awake and alive, all of my
carefully constructed rules could go fuck themselves.
I snook back to my cabin.The word cabin glorifies the true
nature of my allotted hole in the big metal beast that the
boat was. But at least it was my private haven.
Short of breath from the anticipation of the self indulgence
that awaited me, I withdrew from under my bunk the hardwood
box. I opened the lid after using the clever key mechanism,
and on my knees, the glowing beauty of the bottle stared
back at me , I could swear it was singing to me and smiling,
like a long-lost drunken buddy once left behind in Madagascar.
The anticipation perhaps is always greater than the
realization.
It was at that moment my eye caught sight of the writing on
the underside of the lid.
My heart sank, it was not painful, it was more like falling
into a well, a well that is in the middle of a field, a well
that is so innocuous nobody will find you , nobody will
pull you out. A sad crying well.
I was so drained I couldn`t move. I knew what would happen
next, and unfortunately it did.
The problem for me wasn`t the situation, it was more my lack
of inner strength. I had been drained.thoroughly drained.
Unless one has experienced the evacuation of
all of one's energy ,will, and even, dare I say it, soul, one would
find it hard to believe how vacuous it is possible to feel,
and yet be alive.
I knew from experience the shit had hit the fan, and I
better react or die, here and now .
I reacted. like countless times before. I gripped the bottle
and twisted the unbroken seal and gulped like there was no
tomorrow, because sure as the sun shines, `if I don`t kick
into overdrive I am finished.'
It`s perhaps easy for an overseer, to have realized sooner
the quandary I was in, but when it is in the here and now,
it`s not so simple.
For the experienced at this type of situation, it would be
obvious what I tried to do next.
But I will explain the drill.
First I tried to add two and two, then four and four.
That worked. I picked up my lucky butterfly knife from the
box and cut my arm. It bled. I tried to read the godforsaken
HB pencil writing on the inner box lid, but realized that
would not suffice as an adequate test, as the words were so
unworldly they could never be a judgment of physical
reality. What could I use as a true test? my head screamed.
Then it struck me, It was an irrelevant quest.To judge which
reality I was in was not important. The simple fact
remained, I was here, and it was now. More than this, I knew
what was happening ,and it was going to happen whether I
liked it or not.
The sun from the porthole faded, the pipes in the cabin were
starting to vibrate, the boat was swaying. Wake up buddy! I
said to myself. Time is of the essence. I have been pre-warned,
so I had better shut that hybrid down fast. I knew I
could perhaps rely on there being one more loop, but I
better get it this time. There were no guarantees.
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