Showing posts with label Jeff Laurents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff Laurents. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 August 2024

Saturday Sample: Mysterious Ways by Jeff Laurents, oak aged wine

 



Mysterious Ways

Mimsie Fotheringey was a nasty piece of work.

She had few friends, mostly male hangers-on, interested in her because of her money and glamorous looks, and prepared to indulge her errant personality, and unpredictable behaviour. Mimsie was in her early forties, and lived alone, except for her serving staff, in a small, but lavish country estate near Canterbury in Kent. The estate had been left to Mimsie by her late father, Sir Mark Fotheringey.

Sir Mark made his money in the property boom of the 1980s, and allegedly received his knighthood for services to the construction industry. But there were rumours that he’d donated large sums of money to his favourite political party, and that the knighthood was a favour in return.

Mimsie’s mother had divorced Sir Mark, and the girl was spoiled by a father with little idea how to raise a daughter, or the time to spend with her. He took the easy way out, and indulged her fondness for expensive playthings, which she discarded when they ceased to amuse her. Mimsie grew up to expect her own way, her face creasing into an ugly pout if she were crossed. Her treatment of men was partly derived from the coldness of her father’s behaviour to her, but also from a strong libido. Mimsie loved sex, and especially relished the chase. In this respect, she behaved more like a man than was customary.

She’d started internet dating, because it offered adventures, besides it was fashionable among her girly set. Bored with the usual club and party scene, they preferred the immediacy offered by the recent influx of dating sites on the web. As long as one had a good sense of judgement, there were some dishy men out there, though there were plenty of duds too.

“You know, internet dating, it’s really easy to do it from home,” she informed Vanessa, one of the friends to whom she would boast of her conquests.

“Why hang around the clubs, and end up alone at the end of the evening, or with some feeble, pain-in-the-arse wimp? This way is relatively painless.”

Mimsie was so attractive, that even the most eligible men might hesitate to approach her, for fear of rejection. But she also had a reputation for having a scathing mouth on her and a castrating stare. If she took an instant dislike to you, forget it.

“You can’t afford me, after all, Peter,” said Mimsie, as she delicately swung her expensive-looking legs-to-die for from her seat, and rose from the table at Posillipo’s, a fashionable Italian restaurant in Canterbury. They had dined there, one Friday evening in early May. It happened to be soon after parts of Kent were rocked by an earthquake, which had originated in the English Channel.

Some called it an act of God, claiming that the moral fibre of the nation had gone to the dogs, and that the quake was a warning from on high.

Mimsie rubbished this view. She declared herself an atheist, though she’d never really thought through her attitudes to God and religion. Atheism was more a fad with her, and something she used as a means of attracting controversy, which she loved to do. But she’d met a well-known atheist professor at a party, had a brief but passionate fling, and from that time, under his influence, poured scorn on religion. One thing in particular stuck in her throat. She could not understand how any god worth her time, would allow the deaths of the young and innocent. Some David Attenborough story about the diseased kids he’d seen in India, with worms coming from their eyes. That finally put paid to the god thing for Mimsie.

“So Peterkins, I don’t plan to meet you again. I really see no point. You look the part alright, and your car just about passes muster, but the reality is that after a couple of months dating you, our suppers together, and regular trysts in bed, I can see more clearly now that you’ve been stretching yourself just to be in my company. I saw your reaction when the bill for dinner arrived. You looked a most unhappy bunny. And scrutinising the bill like that, as if you half expected me to chip in, I’ve no doubt that you find it difficult coping with my high maintenance needs. And to tell the truth, your performance in the sack leaves a lot to be desired.”

She saw Peter turn pale at her hostility, and her utter disregard for propriety, for her words were spoken contemptuously, and in front of the waiter who’d arrived and stood at their table, making ready to process Peter’s visa card. He obviously heard what she was saying, for he could be seen to suppress a supercilious look. Mimsie, typical of her, had humiliated Peter, who regularly ate his supper at Posillipo’s.  Mimsie was sure he wouldn’t feel like dining there again. She also knew that he hated her calling him Peterkins, precisely why she called him so.

I don’t think Peterkins likes me much. Poor Peterkins.

Nevertheless, he kept his cool, collected his raincoat, and escorted Mimsie to her silver Mercedes. He was on the point of turning away, when she grabbed him and subjected him to a most appalling assault. At first it was a smoochy farewell kiss, for Mimsie needed to know that Peter still fancied her.

“So, Peterkins,” she cooed, “one final goodbye kiss.”

She was like that, unpredictable. One moment humiliating him in the restaurant, the next, erotically charged, as she leaned into him and flicked out her tongue to open his lips.

Suddenly she bit hard into his tongue, drawing blood. He screamed in pain and prised himself away.

“My god!” he shouted, blood dripping down his chin. “What is it with you?” What a piece of work you are!”

“God doesn’t come into it,” she replied. “You know I don’t believe in God. You annoyed me back there. You take me for a meal, then look as if you resent paying the bill. Even if you can’t really afford it, you should just be dignified about it and pay up without question. That’s what a gentleman would do.”

  She watched him as he turned away, striding off towards his dark blue Fiat Coupe. She wouldn’t see him again. She could barely contain a smirk as she watched him, his white mackintosh flapping in the wind.

How flashy he could look.

 

The day before the Italian restaurant, they’d both received cards notifying them of the tragic demise of a mutual friend, the MP for Hampstead, Algernon Cliff, who’d perished in a pile-up on the M4.

“I shan’t attend, I wouldn’t be seen dead inside a church!” Mimsie told Peter at Posillipo’s, as she drank from her second glass of Chateauneuf du Pape ’67.

“You know I think all this religious guff is just fairy stories. I am an atheist and that’s all there is to it. Anyway, I have an appointment with the architect, David Watt, in Canterbury,” she continued. “Our meeting happens to be on the same day as poor Algie’s funeral, so you won’t see me there. I recently bought a plot of land near Wickhambreaux and have arranged to meet David, to discuss his proposals for the house I’m planning to build. Even more exciting, I’ve fixed up to meet a scrummy-looking man I chat to on the internet. We’ve met already, and this will be the third time. He’s booked a room for us at the Marquis Hotel in Alkham!”

 

Mimsie had met Peter through an internet dating site, and recounting this new assignation, was a further attempt to humiliate him, culminating in the tongue-biting incident. Mimsie never dumped one lover, before she’d lined up another. The sadistic behaviour towards Peter, was typical of her treatment of men. Like the toys of her girlhood, men were disposable. “Use them, then lose them” was her motto.

 

Her meeting with the architect put her in a good mood. The plans for Mimsie’s new house were exciting. It would be a modern space, open-planned and full of light, with interesting contrasts between curved and straight lines, in the design of the interior. There would be imaginative use of local stone, metal, glass, and expensive timber in the construction. She’d have fun selecting the fittings and furniture and would pick the brains of some of her fashionable acquaintances.

She left David Watt’s office, full of anticipation. The day was going well, and she felt a tingle as she imagined the promise of the night at the Marquis.

Mimsie slipped into the Mercedes and started the engine. She’d only recently bought the vehicle, and still wasn’t sure how some things worked. The satnav instruction book was in the glove compartment, but she’d never bothered to read it. She simply followed the procedure shown her when she test drove the car, and pressed a few buttons to programme the directions to Alkham Valley Road, the location of Marquis Hotel.

 

A gentle rain had started as she swung round from outside the architect’s office, and set off towards the A2, going south in the direction of Dover and Folkestone. It was already dusk, and she was conscious of needing to drive quickly, to ensure arriving early at the hotel, so she could have a hot bath and pamper herself for the erotic evening in her fantasy.

The rain soon became a downpour and Mimsie increased the speed of her windscreen wipers. A warm blast from the car heater blew into her face, disturbing her elegantly-quoiffured hairstyle. The heater system hadn’t worked since soon after the car had been delivered. Something was sticking, and she couldn’t switch it off, nor move the dial round to blow air onto the windscreen.

How did the damned thing work? Why didn’t she report the fault and make sure the car dealer booked it in for repair?

She poked around a bit, but as hard as she tried, she couldn’t get the heater to blow towards the windscreen. The windscreen misted over. Mimsie had to put up with it and occasionally leaned forward and used her gloved hand to clear her vision. It would have to do. She tried to concentrate on following the satnav directions as the rain intensified.

Something familiar caught her attention. She couldn’t be sure, but it looked as if a navy-blue car was some distance behind her. Her rear window was clouded over worse than at the front.

Was it Peter’s Fiat Coupe?

 She didn’t think so. She drove on at speed, towards the turn off from the A2 to the A260.

Mimsie was not good with technology. She liked to own the latest gadgets; satnav, a top-of-the-range mobile phone, her laptop computer, and a recently acquired iPad, but with the exception of the latter, which she constantly used for email and browsing the net, she’d barely familiarised herself with the most basic of their functions. She hoped that the satnav wouldn’t steer her in the wrong direction.

“Take the next turning on your right.”

Sure enough Suzy was directing her onto the A260. Mimsie liked to humanise her gadgets, giving them girl’s names. Her mobile was Marcia, her laptop affectionately dubbed Lucy, and her new iPad, had recently been christened Ivy. Mimsie could be such a child.

 

There was a sudden sharp wind and Mimsie was aware that conditions outside the Mercedes were becoming more hazardous. She slowed down, concerned she might skid on the wet road. She struggled to see in the darkness and had to wipe over the windscreen more frequently. She was perspiring, but couldn’t switch off the heater. Her headlights revealed dense woods and slopes to the right of the road. She felt the dampness on her delicate skin. This was not fun. She wished she were safe inside the hotel and hoped Michael would make it all worthwhile. Despite her concern to concentrate on the road, a fantasy about a passionate night with Michael played through her mind like a movie.

The road seemed empty, though she couldn’t be sure, as her vision was severely limited. The wind had increased and trees were swaying on either side. Heavy rain splattered into the windscreen. Small branches, twigs and other debris blew across the road and occasionally smashed onto the car. A storm now raged around her and Mimsie knew she was in the wrong place.

It shouldn’t be like this.

 She hit out at the damned heater. Its blast was unbearable and the sweat poured down her, rivulets of perspiration destroying her make-up, her gloved hands soaking. The steering wheel, like jelly in her hands.

Had she missed the correct turn? Perhaps Suzy’s misdirecting her. She really should have read the instructions. Maybe she’d set up the satnav incorrectly.

More dense woods reared up before her as she took a bend. Something darted across the road, and in a moment of fright she slammed on the brakes. Skidding, the car shot across the road, and crashed into a large tree which reared up towards her from the side of a ditch. The vehicle hit the tree trunk, shuddering to rest partly in the ditch. The airbags exploded, inflating instantaneously, and squashing Mimsie’s features. She lay there, gasping for air, almost suffocating. She struggled to push away her air bag, and managed to prise herself away from its grasp. Fortunately she was able to raise herself and check her appearance in the vanity mirror. At least her face had been cushioned from serious injury.

Thank God for technology, No, she mustn’t invoke God. It’s good luck, and modern science that had saved her.

 She lay in the car, sprawled across both front seats, feeling sharp pain in her legs and lower back.

 

A while later she attempted to move, and was able to hoist her body into a position where she extracted herself from the seatbelt, and finally cut herself from the air bags. She prised open the door handle.

Making sure she’d taken her shoulder bag, Mimsie struggled from the car and clambered out of the ditch. She felt exhausted and must have looked a wreck. At least she had survived relatively undamaged. She would use her mobile to phone Michael. He would drive out and rescue her. She limped over in the dark to try to find some stable ground where she could compose herself and make the phone call.

This was not to be. Mimsie’s luck had run out. Without warning she experienced a falling sensation in the darkness of the wood. She plunged down into some kind of deep hole in the ground. It wasn’t a smooth fall. Mimsie was bounced against the sides of a cavern that lay opened up before her, scraping her shoulder and legs against rocky protrusions as she descended.

She crashed onto the cavern floor, screaming in agony. Mimsie Fotheringey, the once smooth, svelte, fashion plate lady, lay there, a broken doll.

 

Time passed. Mimsie recovered. She felt around for her bag. She could still phone Michael, anyone, to rescue her. There was no way she could climb out of this pit. She managed to open the bag and feel inside for her mobile. There it was. She touched the button to bring up her contacts and pressed in Michael’s name and then his number.

 Nothing’s happening. It isn’t dialling.

 She looked at the illuminated face of the mobile.

No signal!

She groaned in frustration and fear. She screamed out in rage. No use. No one to hear her. What was this hell into which she had fallen?

Then it struck her. The recent earthquake. She had read that it had caused serious destruction to property in the Folkestone area. She calculated that she must be a few miles from Folkestone. The Marquis Hotel in Alkham was near the resort, and she’d nearly made it there. Nearly, just wasn’t good enough. The earthquake had opened up the land. She’d fallen into a fissure. She recalled hearing that it had been just over four on the Richter scale.

Mimsie lost herself a second time and fell into despair. No signal on her phone. She would die, out there in this hell pit. Again she collapsed into inertia, laying there, cold, soaked and in pain from her injuries, her once beautiful porcelain face bloody, scratched appallingly, cut in places almost to the bone.

She thought she heard a noise. Yes, she was able to make out something, a faint sound. Electronic, a signal? From inside her bag.

Furiously Mimsie gripped her bag and opened the clip for a second time. She’d returned her mobile to a pocket in her bag, and there it was emitting a glow and a signal. She held it up to her sight. She read out the text message.

 

Hello, Mimsie. Please be so good as to read your last email message. I can assure you, it will be your last!

She scrabbled around in the bag for her iPad, and trembling, she switched it on. The illuminated screen cast an eerie glow, which lit her face from below, distorting her normally-refined features into an ugly parody. Frantically she tapped the mail icon on the display, held the device in landscape position, feverishly scanned her messages, touched the most recent, and there to her horror and disbelief, she read a sentence which chilled her to the core. The words, in deepest black capital letters, shrieked out to her from Ivy’s illuminated screen.

     

“I AM THE LORD YOUR GOD AND I WORK IN MYSTERIOUS WAYS!”

 

A short distance along the road from her pit grave, a man in a white trench coat, switched off his torch, opened the door of his dark blue Coupe, positioned himself calmly in the driver’s seat, started the ignition, and drove slowly into the dark.


 

Saturday, 6 May 2023

Saturday Sample: Otherwhere and Elsewhen, Tongue Twister, space water

Charles Fortescue was in a most excellent frame of mind. His wife Amy had recently given birth to a delightful baby boy. He strode into her bedroom, sat his wiry frame next to her, and gave her his most penetrating look.   

    “We must call him Douglas Shakespeare Fortescue,”  the husband informed his thin, somewhat pale spouse, his jaw set firm.  “I believe I have briefed you of my grand scheme for the boy.”

    Amy, as she always did, had succumbed to her husband’s wishes, accepting the name, in honour of the legendary playwright. But there was a particular reason why the father had wanted to use the name Shakespeare. Charles had devised a most radical and ambitious project for his newly born child.

The  Bard was alleged to have command of more words in the English language than any one else. Some have maintained that he used thirty thousand words; twice, or even triple the vocabulary of Milton. Charles Fortescue, however, was not a literary man. His vocation was computer science, and his processors were to be found in some of the world’s most sophisticated computer systems. For he had perfected methods of producing a number of the tiniest devices on the planet, chips the size of a micron,  which is one thousand times smaller than a millimetre, but which enabled the storage, organisation, retrieval and transmission of previously unheard of amounts of data.

The scientist’s project, inspired by the huge vocabulary of the legendary Shakespeare,  had initially been to ensure that his child developed the largest vocabulary, and the most extensive command of the languages of the world, ever known. But as his ideas developed, he became convinced that he could use his latest chip design to ensure that his son became the most knowledgeable individual on the planet.  To that end, he had engaged the services of a surgeon whose specialism was implanting devices into the organs of his subjects.

The surgeon he recruited for his project, was Sir Peter Wilson, who worked regularly for international counter espionage authorities, and had been commissioned to implant various tiny devices into different body parts of selected operatives in the service of MI5, MI6, and other important  agencies with a pressing need for sensitive information. This business had expanded substantially  since 9/11.

One morning, the two were gathered in Charles’s laboratory. The surgeon peering through a solid looking magnifying glass, at a tiny sliver, perched on a glass slide.

“It’s a remarkable piece of technology”, the scientist was brimming with pride. “I call it ‘Supermind’, and I want you to implant this device inside my son’s mouth.”

Supermind consisted of a number of tiny chips arranged in rows. These were far larger than Fortescue’s micron sized chips, but tiny enough for a number of them to be arranged onto a board smaller than a thumbnail. The total amount of information that could be stored on Supermind  amounted to one petabyte, or a thousand terabytes. To give you an idea of the extent of this information storage, I can tell you that all the books in  The United States Library of Congress,   which has over twenty million catalogued books,  can be digitised and stored as plain text on twenty terabytes.  So Supermind would enable the contents of fifty entire Libraries of Congress to be stored on a chip the size of a  fingernail!

“My idea is this”, Charles continued,

“As the boy grows up and develops the skills of speech and writing, the processor will perform a number of inter-related functions. It will record the child’s developing vocabulary, and speech. Every word, every sentence he  utters will be stored. Supermind will classify all aspects of Douglas Shakespeare Fortescue’s language, and analyse his use of his mother tongue.”

The surgeon expressed his fascination with what he was hearing. But there was more.

“My invention will go further’, the scientist declaimed.

“I have programmed my chip with the vocabularies of the world’s major tongues, so that over time the boy will be taught all the words in all the main languages on the planet. But my piece de resistance is that Supermind  has also been designed to function as an interactive university”.

The two experts discussed Fortescue’s ideas further, with intense concentration. The surgeon was clearly impressed with the sheer bravado of the central idea. He explained how he would create a link between Supermind  and young Douglas’s brain.

“Perfect”, the scientist responded.  “I want the system to enable interaction between the boy’s brain and his developing proficiency with languages, for it to  automatically filter information into the boy’s mind, which will be stored. When Douglas thinks a question the device must answer. I will ensure he spends hour upon hour, day after day, having lessons, asking and answering questions, being taught by Supermind. He will rapidly acquire new languages and knowledge, learning how to speak and write the languages,  for different purposes.   The boy will be able to converse with anyone of any importance, and if necessary, those of little or no importance. He will also be able to write fluently in any of the languages he learns.”

Charles Fortescue had been obsessed with his idea for many years  and would tolerate no objections to his plans. After their initial discussions, there had been disagreement between Charles and Sir Peter. The latter had proposed that the scientist develop a chip that could be inserted directly into the brain, without the need to implant into the tongue and connect it up.  But Charles Fortescue convinced him that the size of Supermind, even though it was tiny, would create problems,  were it to be implanted directly into the brain. In truth, he wasn’t sure, but he resolved  that young Douglas would be given a technology with the most enormous amount of memory. He was determined that Douglas would be given at least a petabyte of data storage. He was even working on a chip to store a zettabyte of data, which is 1,180,591,620,717,411,303,414 bytes! He hoped that this more powerful chip could be implanted into his son at a later date. For the present, the petabyte chip  would have to suffice.

  His wife had expressed her own doubts. “I am concerned that your scheme, stuffing language and knowledge into the child like that, might damage the boy, mentally, and besides it will probably turn him into a freak. I am against it Charles.”

“Don’t be so anxious, my dear. I know what I am doing”. But Amy wasn’t reassured, yet didn’t know what she could do to prevent her husband’s plans. She had long since learned that Charles was ruthless in pursuit of his goals. She was afraid of triggering his violent temper, if he were to feel he was being crossed. Not once did the father consider the welfare of his boy. It was as if his son was an instrument to be exploited in the pursuit of the father’s obsession with his own reputation.

The operation on his son completed, Charles Fortescue set about the task of monitoring the boy’s development. Once a week he would attach probes to the boy which enabled him  to download from Supermind,  the information about Douglas’s language development and ever expanding knowledge. He engaged the services of specialists to help analyse this material, and to publish reports. Charles Fortescue was aware that he was making history, and he wanted it to be accurately written up.

By the age of three Douglas had an English vocabulary of over five thousand words, which was more than the vocabulary of an average educated conversationalist in the language. By eight he had overtaken his famous namesake and had an English vocabulary of over sixty thousand words. By eleven he had mastered the entire Oxford English dictionary, about half a million words! He could also speak and write in seventeen languages. He knew many of the Indo European languages, English, Spanish, Russian, Hindi, French, German, and Italian.  He could speak and write some of the Afro-Asiatic tongues including Arabic and Somali. He was skilled

in Mandarin, Wu, Thai, and Burmese from the Sino-Tibetan family of languages. He even spoke in Celtic tongues;  Scots, Welsh, Irish and  Breton.

But Charles carried his son’s education much further, wanting to ensure that the boy acquired experience and knowledge far beyond his years. Douglas used Supermind to study  the arts, humanities  and sciences. In addition he read prodigiously, watched a multitude of 

documentary and fiction programmes,  and was an avid researcher on the internet. He soaked up information like the proverbial sponge.

The strange thing is, he was a lively young man,  a  lover of books,   but not a bookworm, as one might have expected him to be. There was only one drawback. Douglas had grown up to be a regular chatterbox. He often gabbled away non-stop. When the boy was in full flight, hardly anyone could get a word in. He could talk the kind leg off an elephant, never mind a donkey! But people put up with it, because he had become so successful in his writing. Aged twelve, Douglas had written six novels, thirty three short stories, over two hundred poems, and a number of items of non fiction, including articles on film, photography, football, fishing, and darts! Young Douglas’s interests were nothing, if not  eclectic.

 He had become an international phenomenon. Many of his writings had been published. Two of his novels had been made into films and he had been interviewed for radio and appeared on television. Douglas was earning a fortune, but because of the boy’s tender years, Charles Fortescue looked after the money for him.  Given the fact that all this wealth was made possible because of the scientist’s invention, he felt entitled to cream off vast sums for himself and the boy’s mother.

His father was most proud, as well as a lot wealthier, and even Amy Fortescue was reconciled to her son’s achievements and celebrity, and had stopped worrying. After all they now mixed in more exalted circles, and all because of her husband’s achievements and the boy’s extraordinary  abilities with language.  It was rumoured in one of the more ridiculous tabloids, that William Shakespeare was turning over in his grave in envy of the young genius!

 

 

And then it started. At first it was gobbledegook words and phrases. Douglas had recently turned thirteen and his parents had thrown a party for him.  They had moved into a large mansion in Surrey on the proceeds of the two movies from their son’s novels. A number of VIP’s had been invited including, the recently elected Prime Minister, Avery Milton, Johnny Wilson the Arsenal goalkeeper and Fenella Martin, the famous BBC news presenter. Douglas was that important. They were invited, they turned up. Of course there had to be a lot of security about the place. Sir Peter Wilson, the famous surgeon was also present.

Douglas was to say some words, thanking people for attending. He normally had no trouble speaking in public. In addition to his extraordinary facility with languages, he was physically mature for his years, and self-assured. But Charles and Amy and their guests, were totally unprepared for what happened.

The guests had eaten and drunk liberally,  and it was time for Douglas to give his prepared speech. Without a hint of nervousness, the prodigy came forward, and his father called for those assembled to quieten down.

“Thank you all for dimange. It’s really groward for you all to be fome.  I know that Grood and  Fromanger,  as well as myself,  are triggered to have you all  here.” He coughed, loudly, then lurched forward in pain.

“Heavens, Douglas, what’s the matter?” A concerned Amy rushed forward to her son.

“It’s ok mum.  I am alright.  Please let me finish my welcome speech.”

Douglas seemed to have recovered, the coughing had subsided. He wanted to carry on.

“Sorry about that, Must be something I ate or drank. Maybe too much red wine!”

The guests laughed, The PM could be heard to remark that the young lad seemed to be quite a card. He for one thought the odd use of language, and what he took to be the fake coughing and spluttering, was all part of a comic act to keep the guests amused.

“Anyway, Douglas continued,  “thanks again for triffing it . I am most greetol to Grood and Fromanger, for arranging this driteming. La plume de ma tante est sur le bureau de mon oncle,  et vipera est in longa herba. Waldhing fort ynotering stumpinger.”

The boy seemed to go into a dizzy spell. Then he made weird body movements, shaking and convulsing as he pronounced the last of these strange words. Finally he collapsed on the floor. The guests  had no idea what was going on, and Douglas’s parents rushed forward,  and lifting him up, took him from the room, leaving the party to stand there in amazement.  The conversation buzzed around, but they had no explanation for what they had just witnessed.

“I think it might be kindest to leave”, the PM said, as Charles Fortescue re-entered the room. “I am sure we all hope that the boy recovers from whatever illness came over him just now”.

“Yes, yes, Prime Minister. I am sure it’s just nerves. Perhaps as Douglas himself indicated before, it’s something he has eaten. I really don’t know what to say. His mother is with him.  I do apologise for the party ending so abruptly.”

Soon all the guests had departed, chattering as they left, about the strange behaviour of the young man.  In the house Douglas had gone to bed, though his father was determined to get to talk to him as soon as he had recovered. The boy had been behaving strangely, even before the incident at the party.  The father had noticed that occasionally he did seem to mix up a few words and phrases.  He was most determined to find out what had gone wrong.  Surely Douglas wasn’t developing an uncooperative  streak, deliberately trying to embarrass his father,  to sabotage all he had worked for ?

“Maybe he is going through an adolescent rebellious phase”, he commented to Amy.

The wife simply nodded. She had been against the idea from the start, but had been walked over, as her husband walked over many others to achieve his position at the top of his

profession. Charles felt it was very worrying. The boy had an obligation to continue the good work they had started together. It just wouldn’t do for his son to try to back out of this project.

The following day and both parents were concerned when Douglas didn’t emerge for breakfast. They called him down. He didn’t come.

“I will go up to his room and see what’s the matter. ” Amy was soon knocking at her son’s door.

“Douglas, are you alright?”  

No answer..

“Doug?  Douglas?” 

Still no answer. For a young man with such a huge vocabulary, and so used to talking incessantly, her son was uncharacteristically subdued.

She knocked on the bedroom door.

“Can I come in?”

No response.

“Douglas, I am going to open the door. I am coming in.  I am worried about you.”

The mother waited a while longer, but  the boy uttered not one word, not one sound.  She pushed open the door and entered his room.

The room was in shadow. She switched on the light. She looked over to the bed. It was empty. The duvet was on the floor.  But she noticed a strange, small, lump shape in the bed, sticking up from under the sheet. There was red staining on the sheet.  Amy moved quietly forward, towards the bed. She called out.

“Douglas, my son are you ok? Where are you?”  She had realised that Douglas was not in his bed. She looked in the en-suite. He wasn’t there.

“Where are you? Hiding from me?  What’s wrong?”

She darted back towards the bed in a panic. And then she noticed the window to the side of the bed. It was open.  Douglas was not in his room or the en- suite bathroom, that was certain. Had he gone through the open window?

Amy Fortescue looked out of the window and saw her boy. He was crouching in the garden below, his body bent over, his arms wrapped around his legs. His head bent forward onto his knees, which were drawn up. He was shaking in an exaggerated motion. Making strange noises, gurgling noises, loudly as if in extreme pain. She could see it. She could hear him. She was terrified. What was going on? And what was that lump in the bed?

She came away from the window and bent over the bed and gingerly drew back the thin sheet. And then she shrieked in horror at what she saw lying there, in a small pool of dried blood.

A large fleshy object lay there, purple pink flesh, twisted into a grotesque shape but somehow tongue-like.   Was it a tongue?

She fainted.  Moments later Charles Fortescue found her on the bedroom floor. He picked her up and tried to revive her. She opened her eyes, gasped out the words.

”The tongue, on the bed”. Charles had seen it. He knew what it was, though he couldn’t believe what he was seeing.

“Douglas.  I saw him. In the garden. Go bring him in. Please Charles.”

     

* * *

A week later.  In the drawing room of the Fortescue residence. Charles Fortescue has met with Sir Peter Wilson. The surgeon was speaking.

“I can only give you my guess as to what may have happened to your son. I have examined the lump that your wife discovered under the bed sheet. It was immediately recognisable as a human tongue. And when you brought in your boy from the garden, he had suffered the most appalling, and agonising trauma. His tongue had come away from the floor of his mouth. It seems to have twisted itself, viciously to become detached from its anchorage, the hyoid bone, which lies under the lower jawbone. It had also twisted  away from the muscles at the rear of the mouth, which are themselves attached to an outgrowth at the base of the skull.” 

Charles didn’t say a word. 

“When I examined the tongue, I saw that it had become swollen to over twice its normal size, and was ridden with strange indentations. Supermind was still embedded inside the muscle, but it was seriously damaged and had expanded to the point where it was sticking through the surface.

I also investigated the minute connections I had made from Supermind and up into the unfortunate boy’s brain. They had fallen away from their locations, and were lying there loose inside the oral cavity.”  

The father had still not spoken, and remained silent.

    “Now Charles. I have a partial explanation for this terrifying ordeal your boy has suffered. Our plan has gone horribly wrong. I think that as he developed languages and knowledge at the most rapid rate one could imagine, the memory banks of Supermind malfunctioned, They should have been able to contain the trillions of  bytes of information, but  there seems to have been a flaw in the memory systems,  and the chips have overloaded.  Also I think the saliva in the boy’s mouth may have caused additional problems. Perhaps there was a chemical reaction which caused a burn out, an electrical shock.  Perhaps a number of such catastrophes, which also caused the connections between Supermind,  and Douglas’s brain to  become dislodged.  From what I witnessed at the boy’s thirteenth birthday celebration, your son’s behaviour was a warning  that something was seriously amiss.”

“But how? Why?” muttered the scientist.  “It was all going so well. Douglas was famous, his books were selling, internationally. I am convinced he would have developed language beyond our wildest dreams. Supermind was a mind-boggling achievement.  I worked on it for years. It can’t just fail!”

The surgeon was losing patience, and he had lost any feeling of respect and admiration for the achievements of his colleague.

“Charles! Listen to you. Not a word of sympathy for your son. He is disfigured.  He has no tongue. He cannot talk. He is brain damaged.”

“Well”, the father said.  “You are the best there is. I am confident that you can put him back together. We will overcome this setback. He will talk again, and write again.  More, and even better than before. You can do this for me. I will pay you well.”

The surgeon got up from his chair.  He walked over to the door, took his coat from the coat rack. Before leaving he turned, and addressed the scientist.

“I am afraid not. There is little I can do. I could try an operation to attach Douglas’s tongue, but I haven’t the faintest idea how to untwist it.  And the boy’s brain is severely damaged. His mind is shot. He will never speak or write again.”

The surgeon departed. He didn’t return to reattach the tongue. He never saw the scientist or Douglas again.                                                                               

 

About the author

After a career teaching a variety of subjects including English, History, Film and Photography, Jeff is concentrating on his  favourite creative interests of writing and photography. His  short stories combine elements of dark fantasy and humour. He has also run a music business, and  sung semi-professionally