Do you see him? The bloke in the cap and overalls. No, not him. Actually, that's a woman. But don't worry. Easy mistake to make. We all look the same down 'ere. No, the one with the empty wheelbarrow, lining up to go down the tunnel. Yeah, him. Bearded, red eyed. Yep. That's how it is. He's waiting for all this lot to come out. String of, what, eight, nine folks coming out with their barrows full of that grey-brown awful-smelling sludge. That one whose sludge is a quivering heap all the way up to his neck. That, ladies and gents, is today's gold star winner. He's gonna get one of the high-up boxes. He'll have to climb up there, mind, at the end of this bloody long shift that lasts every day from infancy till death.
Anyway, there I go. Tunnel's clear now. It's even
darker in there than the rest of this place, but at least there's no buttons.
You see, all those grey slabs that make up the walls. Sorta four metre square,
regular as regiments, all the way up. You look up and your eye can follow the
dark in-between lines all the way to heaven. In fact, they actually seem to
converge at some point somewhere south of heaven, but you see how high up it
goes. Or - more accurately - that's how far down we are. It could even have
been a huge pyramid that we're in except that then no light would get down here
and some does bounce all the way down here. Get stuck it does. The light goes
into your brain and sticks there, becomes part of you, never gets out. Nothin'
ever gets out of here, mass or wave form.
I'm out the tunnel now, see how I'm looking at the
slabs. Each one's a button. Look carefully and you'll see that pale pattern on
it is not just weatherin', it's a symbol. Press the right symbols in the right
order, bingo, sludge time. Fill your barrow. Earn a few more points. Me, I always
go with wavy lines, hash symbol, triangle, circle, inequality sign, plus, plus,
upside-down exclamation mark. Found a few variations that worked, and a few
that occasionally pumped out more sludge than I usually get, but this is the
one that worked for me most consistently. There I am pushing in the huge square
faces of the blocks, more 'n double my height. Some of them are really tight,
hard to press in. You feel like you're actually liftin' the whole thing and
forcin' it back. Don't tell me we're not strong, despite the revolting stuff
they call food here.
Right, but once you've got it pushed in, as I have
there, I don't know if they meant it like this, but then you can just about get
your fingers and toes in the gap and climb up. How? You learn by falling. You
learn by failing. That's the only way. Fall from a low height's my advice.
Break a leg on your first day. You won't make it. Dunno what happens to them.
They just lie on the dirty sludgy concrete floor screaming and then whimpering
for the rest of the day. In the morning - gone. Must come in the night and drag
'em off, I suppose. F'r all I know, they use these same barrows to do it.
Imagine. The same broken-wheeled thing I drag around, day after day, could be
the same damn thing that drags me off when I'm all finished and done. Who knows
what creatures does it either? Dunno if it's creepier to think there's some
white-faced night creature to sweep up the human debris, or if it's folk like
us what does it.
I'm the first in this section. Others are going past
me down other tunnels to other spaces. I'm always glad when I don't have to go
down there though. The piles of skulls and bones really get to you. Especially
if you know who some of them were. Memento mori's one thing, but seeing
yourself in that heap of bones offers no insight nor hope. So I have the space
to myself except for those who's climbing up over my head to get at buttons
they want on the third or fourth level. Climb like monkeys, they do. Having
said so, the shoes they give us is just like a leather bag. Like ballet
slippers. Wearin' boots'd be no good. How you supposed to climb in steel toe
caps? Anyways, eventually I get all my buttons pressed in, and I feel the
tremor before I hear it. "Pipe!" I shout to claim it and pretty much
expertly get my barrow turned around probably less than a second before the
flap opens on one of the terracotta pipes that stick out the wall, and glorious
filthy muck fills my wheelbarrow up, piles right up, wobbling in that obscene
way that it does. Nice! You can see that's a nice barrow! You can even see a
grim look of satisfaction on my face if you look through all the shadow and
hair.
Then I wheelie the thing around careful of folks in a
rush coming the other way. We’ve all done it. You ready your barrow full of stinking
muck thinking this could be the very one that opens a nice high hatch for you,
and some wild barrower comes the other way not seeing anything and clang, there’s
two barrows all over the floor and your muck is glugging and bubbling away down
one of the little barred drains. Scoop it up with your hands. The one that knocked
into you might even help if they don’t pull up their barrow and run off in
shame and fear, but by the time you’ve scraped up as much as will stay in your
hands, all the pleasure, all the satisfaction has gone, and you’re empty, and your
barrow might as well be. However, this is not what the next moments have for me
to live, and I’m able to get my barrow back through the tunnel to the tipping place,
that great dark mouth in the corner guzzling up yards and yards of slime, just
as we guzzle up whatever pathetic trickle it is that life has for us. And then
I turn around, and I go back.
Course, I’m looking up to see if one of the huge
buttons has come unlatched from the wall. Look at him. I mean me, of course. It’s
just that, while I’m outside of myself, looking back, I see another man, so it’s
him, even though it’s me. Anyway, you can see from my posture that I’ve been at
this a long screed of time, more than eight hours, maybe nine. And I do this
every day. I’ve been doing it every day for, well, I’ve counted eight full
moons, put it that way. When the door comes unlatched, you scramble up the
wall, like I said, toes and fingertips clamped into the tiny grooves between the
buttons. None of these cracks would ever hold your full weight, so you have to
keep moving. Each one is a pivot, and you can only use the toeholds and fingerholds
by moving your weight around them and past them. It’s a real upward scuttle,
and after nine, sometimes ten hours of barrowing, it’s a true wonder that any
human body can do such a thing, but the final reward, a bed and a meal in a
dark, quiet room and time enough to sleep; these are everything after a long
shift.
Nothing yet, though, so I’ve to go on barrowing. I’d
joke that it could drive you mad, but let me tell you a story about a fellow
barrower, no name of course, but he bore the code of X-967-T on his overall,
and I suppose that he had the same characters in tattoo because I do, and god
knows there’s nothing to separate me from anyone else in this pit other than
how much suffering I can take before I go the same way as that poor bastard.
Well, X-967-T came to me, one day, early enough in my shift, and I think the
beginning of his. His eyes were gold with excitement, and he was saying “This
is it. I’m going to get rich. I had a dream. I had a dream. I know the code. Come
and watch.” I said to him, “967, don’t do it. I know what you’ve dreamed, and I
know what’s up there. Don’t go up there. Don’t go.” But he was already too far
gone. Riches and success had filled the vacuum where his ruined soul used to be,
so I put down my barrow and watched him scale the wall, hugging himself tight
to it, and forcing in this button and that on his way up the wall, zig-zagging
upwards between them. I saw his code started square, padlock, wheel, duck’s foot,
at symbol, but I lost track after that due to the foreshortening of the higher
buttons and weakness of memory. He was just going up and up, yelling, “I’m
going to be rich. You can be rich too, 512. Just do what I do! Watch this! I’m
going to have a big car and a mansion.” When he was high enough up to look small
up there, one of the buttons came unlatched, way up high where I’ve never seen
anyone get a bed, so he yanked on it and pulled, and the door came swinging out
with him on it. He clambers over the top of it, and looks in. “Oh, my god,” he
says, “This is it. I’m rich!” Well, just as has happened before, it wasn’t a
pile of money that tipped out, but a lot of white skinny legs with a great big
mask of a face amidst it all, a huge skull-like face, and it grabs him and
stuffs him into its mouth, and he screams, “I’m doing it! I’m doing it! I’m
getting rich! Aaaarrghgh! I’m going to get a trophy wife! Aaaeeeeeeeee! And a
private jet! Aaaaagghghh!” And that’s it. He can’t say anymore. The thing has
eaten his head. Bits of 967 fall down and land on top of some of the other barrowers,
hair and skin and blood, and they just brush it off and keep barrowing, and
then someone says, “Happens at least once a moon, that does, stupid bastard,”
and I’m not even sure if it’s me who spoke or someone else.
I've never got into playing candy crush, because I think it works something like this.
ReplyDeleteLOL! It *starts* with screensful of pretty, shiny gems, but the face-eating skull is definitely in there. 🤝
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