As I did the sun came out. It’s been so long I first thought someone was shining a searchlight in my room. I look around. The sunbeams show up my winter neglect: a coat of dust on the desk and shelves, innumerable rolls of fuzz and cat hairs on the carpet. I looked away, got up, walked to the kitchen cupboard, pulled out the hoover and set about hoovering the kitchen and bathroom. In my room, after I hoover the whole carpet in the normal fashion, I have to take the floor tool off and run the black tube across the fuzziest, darkest places. I shuffle all along my pacing circle. Even then there’s always more fluff, much more, the more I hoover up the more I see, but there must needs be a cut-off point, otherwise where would it end? I carried the hoover back in the kitchen and stuck it in the cupboard. I slid the dust container out of the hoover, gently emptied it into the rubbish bin, pulled the bin bag out and tied it up. I put on my shoes, carried the bin bag down the stairs and dropped it in the wheelie bin. On my way up my neighbour stuck his head out of his door and said, What the hell are you doing up there? I put the hoover back in the cupboard, went to the bathroom and turned on the hot water tap in the bathtub. I went back to the kitchen cupboard, took out the bucket, mop and bleach and brought them to the bathroom. The boiler kicked into action like an old truck. I turned the head of the mop around under the tap. Then I put the bucket in the tub, turned and squeezed the mop in the wringer, emptied the bucket in the tub, squirted some bleach into it, stood it under the tap and waited for it to fill. I felt too heavy for myself, as if I were sinking into the floor. I mopped the kitchen floor, brought the bucket back to the bathroom, poured its murky content in the toilet, turned the bathtub tap back on, rinsed the bucket, shook the head of the mop under the tap, squeezed it in the wringer, emptied the bucket, put bleach in it and put it under the tap. When it had filled I mopped the bathroom floor, poured the bucket’s murky content in the toilet, turned the bathtub tap back on, rinsed the bucket, shook the mop under the tap, squeezed it in the wringer and disposed of them. I sat on my bed and waited for the floors to dry. I cleaned the bathroom tub and sink with a sponge and soap, and the toilet with the toilet duck bottle and the brush. The advantage of the toilet duck design, of course, is that you can spray under the rim, where there may well be remnants of urine, faeces, iron, lime, rust or mould. I wiped under the rim with a wad of toilet paper and flushed the brown mess. I went to the kitchen and cleaned each horizontal and vertical surface with a cloth, cleaning the cloth between each surface. I used the same cloth to wipe the desk, bookshelves, windowsills, doorhandles, lists, I won’t bore you with an exhaustive list. I took a roll of paper towels and the window cleaning liquid and sprayed and wiped the bathroom mirror. Halfway through I stood still for a while, dropped the paper and bottle on the floor, looked up at my face, partly obscured by the dripping spray, put on my coat and shoes and went to the pub. Walking felt like standing. Snow melted everywhere in the sun and eaves and trees spilled incontinently, much like me. You’ve ruined my day, says my neighbour as he sits down at my table – just as the alcohol kicks in and I’m taking my notebook out of my pocket. I was trying to focus and then I had to go get drunk, he says. I worry about my wet shoes, consider taking them off and leaving them against the radiator, but don’t for fear of the potential stink. The gleaming dripping branches outside the window make me feel the need to dribble, but I hold it in, I don’t want to draw attention to myself by walking across the pub too many times. My neighbour spills his drink, swears and goes to buy another, without asking me if I want one, but now I sound like a woman. A pool of cider spreads towards my feet. I feel like an unravelling spool of thread, running ahead of itself. They’ve heard me talking to you, he says as he sits down, if they’re there they’ve definitely heard me. They’re following me, one way or another, and they’re probably following you too, unless you’re following me for them, in which case they’re probably following you to see if you’re following me, but what can I do? he says. I get up and get a drink. Even if I saw them I’d rather die than confront them, he says when I sit back down, in fact I’d probably die if I tried. And you sure as hell won’t do it, for your own sake or mine, I can see that much in your face, you don’t give a shit, he says. It’s all up to me. But they’d suck the life out of me before I got to them, they’re already sucking the life out of me, there’d be no one left. I’m afraid of everyone I see, I’m afraid to order a drink, I’m afraid the barman will think I’m a drunk. I didn’t know if I was relieved or scared when you came in, he says. I thought, This is it, he’s following me for sure. And to think in another time in a happier country I’d be walking through some white seaside village under a blue sky, I’d be dreaming under a lone oak tree, calm and content. You should leave, he says, this isn’t right, you must know that in your heart of hearts. You’re a menace to the building’s residents. I intend to write a letter to the owners, they’ll know what to do. You make a lot of noise, for one thing, he says, setting down his pint. I have very sensitive hearing, you know. Every noise you make makes me wonder what you’re doing and when it’s going to stop, and when it stops the silence makes me worried that it’ll start again. Then I stop and think, and I don’t like thinking! he says.
I get up and go to the loo for a piss. My knees lock and unlock. I sink into myself and ask myself whether I need to shit. Not yet, but soon, I tell myself, and it won’t be pretty. I get another drink, as does he when he sees me walk back to the table, as if I’ve reminded him of the opportunity.
When I think I can’t help looking back over my life and all the stupid things I’ve done, he says, sitting down. It’s all stupid! No, don’t say anything, that’ll only make it worse. All this time I’ve been secretly thinking how clever I was without realising how stupid I really am. It’s amazing how little I know about myself, he says. Maybe that’s why I talk so much. Even now I might be thinking how clever I am for realising how stupid I am, when tomorrow I might look back on this moment with horror, in fact I already do. Sometimes I even think I’m being humble for realising how stupid I am, when all I do is lay the ground for more humiliation. No one should think, he says, we should just take on the colours of the world and disappear against the backdrop like chameleons. Thinking is a curse. But maybe he just needs to get laid, he says. Do I know any girls? Of course I don’t. Basically it’s all been compromised, he says, shifting uncomfortably in his seat and looking around. I’ve been compromised. There’ll be pictures of me compromising myself in various positions when they hand me the folder. There I’ll be, looking up at myself, straining and leering. Eyebrows will be raised, tongues will wag and my face will be lost. That it’s come to this! he shouts, leaning forward. How could you let it, why didn’t you step in? They’re laughing, I can almost hear them, he says. They listen to me when they have nothing better to do, then they take a cigarette break and laugh about me. You may too, but think about me for a second, why don’t you, think about how I must feel. This is my life I’m talking about, he says. It’s all over, my life, they’re just stringing me along now, giving me enough rope. When I sense them coming I won’t even bother to prepare, I won’t pack anything. I won’t call my mother, she’s dead anyway. I’ll walk straight into the icy water or whatever it is they have in store for me. Do your worst, I’ll say, I’ll laugh at them, go ahead and tell them that, what do I have to lose? I’ll forget to think of pithy last words but it won’t matter, it’ll be too late for last words, it’s always too late, he says. I’ll walk across the ice like an old Eskimo, I’ll shuffle into my ultima thule, I won’t care, don’t try to stop me. But more likely they won’t come, he says, more likely they’ll just watch me waiting with their uncaring fisheyes and let me live out my living death. If they’re even there, or if you don’t get me first, I wouldn’t put it past you. I wouldn’t trust you as far as I could throw you, he says. Are they even there? Do you know anything? If only he had some philosophical talent, he tells me, then he might not need to ask questions, or even talk to me. Then he’d just give an explanation when asked or lean back with a smirk and say it was ever thus, or that it’s old hat and tell me I should really do some reading. That’s what he should cultivate, he says, the cynicism of a world-weary intellectual! At the very least he should read more, he says, how can he get any philosophical talent if he doesn’t read? But he doesn’t even know what to read, he says, and I’m no help, in fact I’m probably thick as a plank. But you’re right, he says, you’re doing the right thing, best not to say much if you’re dim. And that makes you smarter than me. If you’re not a thinker you shouldn’t talk, he says, that much is clear, just look at me! What do they call it, a cautionary story? You’ve learned that much, he says. But then you are a thinker, he says, aren’t you, if you’ve learned that much? So what do you think about me? Am I full of shit? Am I? He grabs me and we end up in a scuffle. I push him back on his chair. It tips back but he ends up with his forehead on the table, exhausted and breathing heavily. I leave before the publican comes round from behind the bar.
Mornings like dusk. Sun rising to set. Nothing happens, every day. I get up, go to the bathroom and vomit, brush my teeth and put some clothes on. Sky like pulp, sleet like wet clumps of it. Are these good phrases? No idea. Someone will think they’re repulsive. How the things I make desert me straight away! But let’s move on to more important matters. Such as? Ask some more questions, it’s got you this far… But there are no more questions, are there? Everything’s been asked, nothing answered. Unless you come out of hiding and – no, stay where you are, murmuring beyond me, don’t come too close, don’t go too far. Keep me in my hole, in the welcoming trap you pushed me into, wasn’t it around the time of the first word? Write me from inside my writing, remember for me… You lifted me out of my hole and I fell into another hole. I got tired and I fell out of time. I managed to raise my eyes and say something to someone. I told myself to stop talking and listen for the voice inside my voice, the voice that gets louder as I weaken. The voice within, above, beyond or beside me, between teller and told.
I had something to say, now what was it? I remember, begin my tale and ruin your beginning. You remind me to forget and I try to lose myself in listening. I rear up again, silence you, continue my story. Sometimes I flatter myself that this movement sustains you, we all have our little conceits. The voice I listen for, this voice that speaks inside my words… I name it yours and am instantly led astray. I backtrack from my naming and my backtracking itself leads me astray. I ignore you, but it’s too late. I speak, and what speaks in me is your solitude, which I enter as one enters a foreign language. I scribble and return to myself in your form. What form is that? The question opens up a cold space inside me. Then someone whispers in my ear and returns me to my missing self. Then what? More stagnant time, more endless dusk. And if I address you right, the dispersal that affirms, something that affirms itself through me. As if I have to drop into dead water for time to come alive in me, to stream through me, breaking up against itself. Is it worth it, does it help? Moot questions, since there’s no turning back, no possession to turn back into. You turn away as I turn into you. Then let the words show the way as they fall apart in my mouth. Show me the way as your words undo themselves between the tip of my pen and the page. Let that be my survival, your survival in me.