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by Gordon Chapman
The hissing comes in small bursts, long spiny waves, and is punctuated
with crackles. There are traces of voices beneath the electronic tide,
brief attempts of a picture to form, but then the magnetic undertow
eliminates them, and the mercuric wash of static prevails again.
5 am. Most people sleep at this time. He thinks of lunch, this is the
only time that you can have lunch entirely alone. Sardines. It is food
that is repellent by nature, it must be eaten alone at 5 am. He eats them
without utensils, making loud smacking noises.
The phone doesn't ring during lunch. Not this lunch. He's made sure of
this in a way that leaves no margin for error - taking the phone outside
and throwing it over the back fence.
It was the only thing to do, after all, the machine long ago faltered
at imparting useful information, and it degenerated to the point of being
a mere bearer of bad tidings and a spearhead for carpet cleaners. The
sound of the phone striking the ground, a plastic splintering and single
imploring of the bell, made him grin.
He licks the inside of the tin, not missing any of the foul oil the
fish are packed in.
Denmark. Somewhere in Denmark, a middle aged woman cut the head from
this fish and packed it into this can. She lives in a gingerbread house
in the countryside. It's probably raining in Denmark, and the woman's
daughters will come by this rainy day, and warm themselves on a hearth
where Danish wood crackles in a fire. The girls will be wearing aprons
and when her husband arrives, giving cheery greetings to all, pleasant
cooking smells will fill the house.
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