The drone from the craft overhead
subsides; I endeavour to keep my withering self from toppling onto the blue
grass. My mutilated skull fights inescapable transformations. My dry throat has
developed an unbearable craving for the contents of my favourite mug. The
spectators are silenced and I receive the signal to begin. Nodding my
appreciation for being allowed, while I am still able, to share my version of
events, I face my bemused audience. They have heard too many stories such as mine.
For them reminiscences fall like dead leaves that rot on the forest floor.
However, it is commanded that, for the record, our memories must be shared. Wasting
no time, I begin to speak:
“As I recall, it began soon
after daybreak. Trying to shake off the residue of a hangover, I forced my
short, plump torso, through my café door and onto the city pavement. Ignoring
the chill, I placed coffee, newspaper and book onto the solitary table and ran
my fingers through my receding hairline. The sun was casting streaks of redness
through wispy grey clouds. I stood for a
few seconds and welcomed the uncommon silence. Gone were the frantic rushing
crowds of workers, doing their headless chicken impressions. Gone too, were the
noisy, polluting queues of traffic. Only
occasional, distant vehicle noise disturbed the unusual tranquillity. I dropped into one of my plastic chairs and unfolded
the previous day’s broadsheet. This ritual was the highlight of my year. There
were no customers, no distractions. Just me, my favourite beverage, plenty to
read and blissful peace and quiet. I raised my mug and wished myself a happy Christmas.”
The word triggers an emotive response
among the listeners. I pause, allowing them to settle. Prods in my back compel
me to continue:
"As I perused the Yuletide
headlines, a sudden rumble attacked my ears. I peered, over the newsprint, at a
loaded sack barrow moving up the narrow road towards me. The man doing the
pushing struggled, as the trolley’s metal wheels
fought through the cobbles. His stocky boiler-suited frame moved past me. Long
white curls draped his sallow face. He appeared focussed, resolute, totally oblivious
to my presence. His load consisted of four enormous fruit boxes.
“Season’s greetings,” I called.
“The words struck the surrounding
walls, but drew no visible reaction from the interloper. I watched as he
continued along the empty street and disappeared into a side turning. I
shrugged and stepped back into the café to replenish my empty mug. As I
returned to the door, the telephone rang. I waited, for the briefest of moments,
as the answerphone clicked in. One word was uttered; the unfamiliar voice had a
strange, guttural, foreign tone.
“Help.”
“I stared at the device and,
determined not to let anything else spoil the moment, shook my head as I stepped
back into the stillness of the morning.
“After around fifteen minutes. I refolded the
paper, emptied the mug and skimmed through the blurb on the book’s back cover.
“The sound began as a mere
whisper, before becoming so loud that it echoed around the surrounding office buildings.
“Help.”
“Then I saw it rolling and
spinning down the road. One lone fruit, its green, spikey crown, fought to slow
its momentum. The cry resounded once more. I rushed towards the side turning.
“The ground was littered with
yellow fruit. The man was on his knees, frantically trying to retrieve his
load. As I approached, I saw his tears. Like two parallel waterfalls, they
dripped from his cheeks onto the cold, dusty cobbles. Cradled in his arms was one
large pineapple.
“I’m sorry,” he pleaded.
“I’m sorry. Please, please stop staring at me.”
“I offered him my hand, but be
looked right through it. I told myself to walk away and leave him to struggle
unaided, but that would have been both uncharitable and unchristian. After all
it was, ‘That time of year.’
“Bending forward I recovered the
two pineapples closest to me and placed them into one of the empty containers.
The man gave no reaction to my act of kindness and continued to wail his pleas.
It was apparent that his entreaties were directed, not to me but to the yellow
fruit he was holding close to his chest. I continued with the task of running
back and forth collecting the spilled produce. It was not until I had returned
the final box onto the barrow that I returned my attention to the penitent man.
He sniffed back the remorse and, with his head low, offered his precious pineapple
up to me.
“I took it but as I stared into
the fruit’s many eyes, it began to pulsate. Panicking, as its vibrations
travelled through my outstretched limbs, I stepped back to the trolley and
dropped it, in the top box, alongside its companions. The man, again ignoring my
offer of help, struggled to his feet. Without thanks or acknowledgement, he
grasped the barrow and continued on his way.
“And a very merry Christmas to
you too,” I shouted after him, as he staggered off into another side street.
“Pushing aside my aggravation, I ventured back
down to my café. I went back inside and shook my still tingling fingers, I
stepped behind the counter and pondered. Decision made, I pushed aside my hankering
for solid nourishment, lifted a bottle and glass from a cupboard and returned
to my table.
“As I sat and perused the amber
liquid, I tried to comprehend what had just occurred.
“Perhaps he was deaf, he was
certainly neither dumb nor blind. I
allowed the warming flavours to work their magic and contemplated further. Then
I asked myself the obvious question: Where on God’s earth had he come from?
There was neither van or lorry in sight, also where the hell was he going? Nowhere
was open for business. Nowhere. Save from myself and the office buildings’
entrenched skeleton crews, the city was empty. It was Christmas Day, for Christ’s
sake.
“What if he was Santa? I chuckled. Or maybe a tall elf? With hindsight,
maybe I should have kept hold of that pineapple, I’d have been able to make the
world’s first self-shaking cocktail. Just imagine the office types queuing for
it and bopping along to work like the cast of a West End musical.’ I’d have to
name it after myself, of course, ‘The Bopping Bob’ or something similar.
“I emptied the glass, smiled
myself back to reality and, submitting to my passion for science fiction,
returned to the dog-eared paperback.
“It had been a while since I’d first been
introduced to its pages. I thought I remembered its opening, something about a
day not feeling quite right.
“I read the first two chapters and laughed at the
thought of the city being overrun, by hordes of meandering pineapples. I
dropped the book onto the table: I really must stop reading that kind of
stuff.
“The rumbling sound returned;
he was coming back. The man emerged from the side road and hobbled towards me.
With his load delivered, to who knows where, he was progressing much faster
than before. The barrow carried just one large fruit. As he drew level he slowed
and turned towards my door. I closed my eyes in despair: Jesus, would I ever be rid of this intruder?
“Merry Christmas, Sir. I don’t suppose you’re open.” Startled, I looked up
at a young constable. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to make you jump.”
“No problem, Officer. A very
Merry Christmas to you too. I must have been dozing. Had a bit of a heavy
night. No, I’m not open, but take a seat anyway. What can I get you?”
“That’s very kind of you, Sir. An
Americano would be good and, if can you do me a freshly squeezed juice…? Pineapple would be great.”
“Orange or grapefruit, is all I have.”
“He pointed to the gift which guarded the
doorway.
“I rubbed my eyes, “So I
wasn’t dreaming.”
“I’m sorry, Sir?”
“Not for sale I’m afraid.
Not until I can verify its source.”
“With trepidation, I grasped its spikey leaves,
strode into the café and deposited it on the counter.
“Suddenly a crescendo of
breaking glass and shouting resounded along the street.
"I watched through the window as the
policeman shouted into his radio and, truncheon in hand, charged away.
“A loud banging drew my
attention back to the bar. The fruit juddered violently on the wooden surface,
lasers from its many eyes cast a multitude of coloured spots onto walls and
ceiling. It was like a seventies disco without the music, just a horrible
ear-piercing whine. I watched in amazement as its spikey head broke loose from its
base and hovered above me. The last thing I remember was the smiling delivery
man standing beside me.”
I look at my entranced
audience. They have been hanging on to my every word. Perhaps, my account has rekindled
distant memories, of their own fateful day.
Even the few outwardly skeptical amongst them, now appear to believe.
Their leaves twitch as they whisper their thoughts.
The
multi-eyed being behind me detects the changing atmosphere and chuckles, “And
if you believe that, my young friends, you’ll believe almost anything.” Tears of
laughter, flood from its yellow head onto the fertilized soil.
Rows of plantlets basking under
the orange sky, join in the creature’s merriment. My disfigured head shakes with despair, as the
delivery man steps forward and manhandles my sprouting body onto his barrow. My
craving for hot, bitter coffee passes into oblivion. The man’s white locks
shroud his deadpan expression, as he wheels me to the edge of a cultivated field.
With calloused hands, my helpless head is dropped into a freshly dug hole. A
solitary police truncheon identifies the plant beside me. My leaves detect
another transporter of victims approaching through gaseous clouds. More catalytic
pods to help populate this dying world.
The delivery man wipes damp pink earth
from my spikey crown. In a soft reassuring voice, he whispers. “If you can
still hear me, a word of advice. No, you’re not dreaming, but if you hold on to
that belief, your sanity will be preserved for a little longer and your
offspring will be far healthier.”
Laughing, he
trudges away.
I choke, as wet, sweet soil fills my screaming
throat.
About the author
Dave has spent many years writing short stories. He had decided that 2025 would be the year to dip his toe in the water and start to put some out there.
This is the second time that he has submitted one to Cafe Lit
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