Yes,
yes, the killing of my brother. I’m getting to that. Now, it might
not shock you to hear that I don’t have a full recollection of the
details of the crime. I don’t know if this is because I’d
consumed an ox’s bodyweight of the stoopy or if it is because my
internal mirror smashed itself rather than reflect the enormity of
the deed. It is true that I am a man with a propensity for
disagreement. In those days especially, I liked nothing better than
to wilfully misinterpret someone’s intentions, searching for any
excuse to tighten my fists and start the rotors. I’d often wake up
from a stoopy coma to find black and blue petals about my brow and
I’d struggle to meet my harvesting quota with my knuckles chapped
and sore.
But
this wasn’t the case the morning after Buchan’s death. It hadn’t
been a particularly boisterous session on the stuff. I had only been
out for one night. On a good session, I might be away for two or
three. I had no fear of losing my job, since all work was casual. We
needed only to show up in the morning at the place where the road had
wound itself to a lane and the cobbles became dust and clabber, and
someone would be there with a handful of tokens, asking to look at
your hands and sizing up the breadth of your back.
I
was with Kargan that night. We gravitated towards each other, like
ignoble, uncelebrated planets, dragging each other into treacherous
orbits. How low would I sink on any given night? Kargan would decide.
On
this night, one of us had suggested stealing a multicycle, one of the
vehicles that overseers used to transport field workers. There was a
little cab with handlebars up front, then six or eight seats in the
back, each with its own set of pedals. Behind these seats was a low
bed with a wire cage for transporting tools. If the overseer pointed
at you, you'd climb into one of the empty seats and start pedalling.
You might also sit in the cage in the back, if all the seats were
occupied, but workers avoided this, since passers-by would hurl
merciless verbals at anyone sitting in the cage. If you really needed
the work, you might cling to the side of the cage instead and hold on
while the cycle took you to the site, your fingers glowing like logs
in a fire. It was more dignified than willingly stepping into a cage.
The
stealing of a multicycle was acceptable stoopy-induced horsing, as
long as you brought it back, and as long as no-one important heard
about it. The overseer would be in more trouble than us if something
were to happen to the thing. He was often just a casual, like us, the
one who had been assigned the task of rounding up workers to assist
his work.
Someone
higher up the chain had given the shed keys to Amar for the week.
This had been an oversight. Amar was not quite as accomplished a
stoopy as myself and Kargan, but it was a close-run thing some
evenings. The undertaker, a step higher than the overseer, and
someone endowed with a quantity of true responsibility, surely had
not meant to press the keys into Amar's quivering palm. He was beset
with nervous troubles, Amar. Whether the juice caused the issues or
provided comfort from them was unclear to us. When we had seen him
behind its oversized handlebars one morning, gasping with each push
of the pedals, myself and Kargan had exchanged a look of stoopy
conspiracy.
We
hadn't sought him out that night. It was a stoopy tour much the same
as any other. Stoopies left their front door open, and other stoopies
would be welcomed in. Fierce companionable stuff, the juice. We had
found Amar slumped low on a settee cushion in Kane's backyard, his
hands tucked under his backside, a parody of dignity on his features.
Kargan and I had been to the Forge and to Mariano's house already and
it was closer to morning than evening. Amar’s appearance was an
opening flower beneath the receptors of a summer bumblebee. We shared
the customary regard once again, then tumbled his pockets for the key
to the shed.
The
next bit had to be told to me. It was very hilly in Jurckas then,
maybe it still is. It used to be the garbage dump for the entire city
many years ago, but its smell had begun to waft too enthusiastic into
the city and it was decided that it should be moved further away.
Great earth-shifting machines had come and pushed the precarious
refuse mountains further out. My ancestors, along with other
peripherals like them, finally relinquished their loosening grip on
the city and moved into the space vacated by the garbage. Then people
began to build tunnels through the mounds and bridges over them, and
a fragile infrastructure took shape. People made lives for
themselves. The limb from an ancient garment that reached out from
the loose earth, or the package for a no longer useful product from
some forgotten civilisation, were no hardship. The savoury historical
smell that cajoled you as you went about your business was no worse
than the industrial reek of the city.
So,
we were on the top of one of these garbage hills. I learned about
this afterwards. Barty, the biggest hill in Jurckas, named for
Bartlett Craney, the First Citizen whose idea it was to create them.
I was in control, behind the handlebars, but the progress was slow.
The vehicle required more pedal power than we two could muster, so we
decided to take it up to the top of Barty to see if we could find a
bit more tempo. As I say, this bit was told to me afterwards.
Ensure your favorite authors get the support they deserve. Read this novel on Royal Road.
So
off we went, down Barty, with me struggling to keep a hold of the
bars, the juice a few feet ahead of us, the wind yelling ‘more,
faster, now,’ the stoopy mantra, into our flapping ears.
This
is how I see it happening. This is all plausible. But the story
begins to lose plausibility. The story is that Buchan is out for a
stroll. At the bottom of Barty.
Right.
Now,
people don’t tend to stroll in Jurckas, as they might in Chiram
Park. There are no trimmed lawns, there are no elegant ponds, there
are no ducks following you, yapping for a mouthful of crumbs. In
Jurckas, there are only garbage mountains. The garbage is hidden
under a layer of earth, but it’s still there, you can feel it
twanging on your receivers. And this is all supposed to have taken
place in the middle of the night. Are we to believe that Buchan had
declared to himself that he had to go for a stroll and that he
positively needed to embark immediately, before the sun illuminated
the desolation? Before humanity began to throng about it and among
it, like columns of fat selfish ants? Had he overdone it on the dark
air and sought out a horizon more distant than the four walls of our
shack?
When
I think of the story, it is the stroll that jangles me most profound.
A man out in the middle of the night, shoulder-to-shoulder with
Barty, is a man with burdens. It is the burdens that keep me awake.
Even now, forty-odd years later.
We
hit him. I hit him. Of course I did. Smashed into Buchan’s biddable
trunk at an unnatural, gravity-enhanced rate. Bones broke. Jagged
shards punctured vital organs. Blood flowed. A last breath evaded its
captor, taking with it the necessary minerals and essences.
I
woke up behind the steering of the cycle, my hands loose on the
reliefs of the handle grips. My injuries woke seconds later. Arms,
legs, ribs, head – all shouted in competitive voices. Moistness on
my vest. I asked my hand to investigate but it wouldn’t move. The
black of night had become blue, but the sun had not yet raised
itself.
Before
me, on the dust, was my brother. His eyes open. His mouth smiling,
and his bearing open, as if he had just understood a punchline. He
lay in a too dark, almost evaporated puddle. It is the kind of
horrific coincidence that makes you believe that an unseen someone
takes an interest in the things you do and the things you don’t do.
I
was neatly arranged in the cycle. My hands on the handlebars and my
feet within easy reach of the pedals. Have I considered that perhaps
Kargan was the person sitting on this saddle while the vehicle
plummeted down the pyramid, and that it was he who lost control of
its trajectory and sent it crashing into my brother’s body?
Certainly, I have considered this. Kargan was a tall man, a strong
man, who could easily have manipulated my unconscious body into the
position it woke up in. The bruising and injuries I sustained
indicated that I fell further than my positioning behind the controls
would suggest. Perhaps I was in the back, sitting or standing in the
cage, gripping tightly to its spider-leg frame, and thrown clear upon
impact. Kargan had departed by the time I had woken up. If the
orderlies were coming and you had a reasonable chance of escape, then
it was wise to scarper. Sometimes I wonder if I would have done the
same, even with my brother’s life abandoning him as he lay on the
dusty floor. I’m ashamed to say that I probably would have.
***
I
never saw Kargan again. The discussion about whether he had a hand in
my brother’s death dominated much of my thinking in my early years
in Pokey. I swore I would exact my revenge somehow. The anger
sustained me for a long time, gave me a reason to survive my
circumstances, a reason to dream of freedom. It was only after the
discovery of the earth’s power to aid deeper self-examination that
I came to accept responsibility. The earth is a stern but
straightforward progenitor – if you're out of your head on the
stoopy, then you will do stoopy things. You can't blame the stoopy,
only yourself.
At
court, when the top orderly declared where I would be going and for
how long, he emphasised the fact that I was riding in a stolen
vehicle when the incident had occurred. The cycle had belonged to
Chem-Fresh Holdings, a sister entity of Animaspore Chemical, which
was founded by the well-known industrial mister, Peter Graff, whose
daughter Aneem had just paired with Tern Doville, who was a
fist-thumping law-and-order advocate within the Demos of the city.
Under these illustrious eyeballs, the orderly had no choice but to
tower up the charges against me, one on top of the other. I was able
to yawn twice in the space of time it took him to announce them. It
was only after hearing charges such as conspiracy to steal, stealing,
handling of stolen property, loitering, public stupefaction, bringing
one's employer into disrepute, and so further, that the charge of
murder was introduced. I had no defence. Whether I meant it or not,
someone had died because of my actions. The eyes of the law could see
it no other way.
I
was indentured to a life in the labour camp. I had expected nothing
less. My mother, someone protect her, was too beset with nervous
trouble to attend the process. I would have been happier if they had
wrapped me up in a length of carpet and thrown me into the Fluck. The
outcome would be the same, only quicker.
I
thought I had died that day, but that day would come a year later,
when I learned that my mother had succumbed to her nerves a week
after my transportation to Pokey.
Most
people die only once. At the time of this writing, I have died three
times.

