THE SHITS

THE SHITS

I live on a busy street. Opportunity knocked but I didn’t hear it. I was out on the balcony having a fag. I was watching a couple walk past fighting. The woman stopped walking and started shouting and gesticulating. I couldn’t hear what she was shouting but I saw the way she looked at him. She looked like she hated him. His head was down resigned to his fate. I knew the dynamic. Every relationship is a mixture of love and hate. A man must continuously prove his worth. She looked up at me and the look of hate vanished into inquisitiveness. She was looking for a new man. I didn’t want to be her new man. I looked away and drew on the smoke

The phone rang so I went inside and saw it was my mate. He told me he would drop by to pick me up in a little bit. He was coming to take me out drinking. I told him I’m sorry, I can’t come tonight. He started shouting down the phone at me. I had to take it away from my ear. When he’d finished shouting I asked him if he would like to hear why? He started shouting at me again. He wasn’t interested in why I couldn’t come out drinking. He was just angry ‘cause I couldn’t. I shouted at him that I had diarrhoea. I told him that I’d had the shits for almost a whole week. He spat down the phone that he didn’t believe me. He kept shouting so I hung up

I was angry so swung a big punch through the air. The swing made me fart. It smelled terrible. I put my hand down the back of my pants. My hand came back out covered in runny apricot coloured pooh. I went into the bathroom and transferred on to my shower chair. I‘ve been having watery shits. I’ve gone through two packets of Imodium and countless pairs of undies. I have no control over my bowels so I’ve trained my body to go for a shit once a day in the morning with three enemas. My friend was angry because I have no control. Imagine how I feel? During the past week I’ve shit my pants twice. I would have loved to have gone out for a drink. It’s a good thing I didn’t. It’s a good thing I didn’t get drunk. They’d made me so mad I probably would have glassed them

The situation had me fuming. I rang my friend back and told them, you know when I say that I’m too sick to go out it’s because I’m too sick to go out. I’m too sick to go out drinking. It’s not because I’m going out somewhere else with someone else. You should know better than anyone how sick I’ve been over the last few years. If I didn’t want to go out I’d tell you. I’m comfortable enough to tell you the truth. The phone clicked. He had hung up on me

I looked out the window and saw the postie walk past. She looked up at me smiling and waved. She called out that I had a parcel. I sprayed my bum with deodorant and went outside to meet her. A beautiful woman walked past us. She walked with the posture of a dancer. The postie dropped my parcel, ran up behind her and grabbed her breasts. The woman screamed and turned around with her fists clenched. Her face glowed like coal. The look on her face changed after she turned to see she’d been assaulted by another woman. She didn’t look as angry. I watched her fists unclench as she said, slut. The postie handed me my parcel and I signed for her

I turned and headed to go back inside. A strange woman walked up to me. She said, so this is where you live. I nodded. She asked me if I remembered her. I didn’t so I told her. She asked me if I had ever heard of Enzyme Re-Programming? Oh Christ, I thought to myself, not another one. I am constantly bombarded with people trying to fix me. It’s normally women. She started telling me that she could fix me if I was willing to spend the money. I told her that it would have to be a therapy recommended by my GP otherwise my insurance company wouldn’t approve it. It would only cost fifteen grand, she said. I told her I didn’t have fifteen grand to spare. She kept talking to me. Every couple of seconds she would have a brainwave. She kept licking the tip of her pen and scribbling something down on a piece of paper. With every thought she would rip it off and hand me a small tear. By the time she had finished figuring out how to fix me I had twelve little scraps. I wondered why she hadn’t given me the whole piece of paper? Fix me? She was too busy trying to fix the world

I got back inside and looked at the scraps in my hand. The Righteous Army think that saving trees will cure man of his fate. We’ve already played our hand and lost. I laughed aloud and scrunched them into a ball. I aimed for the garbage bin before I threw it. I missed. I bent down to pick it up when I farted again. Oh shit. My hand went down the back of my pants but came out clean. Thank fuck for that. I smelled my hand and gagged. I caught my reflection in the mirror. I was sunburnt. I had spent too long talking to her and the sun had burnt my flesh. I tore the package open and it was empty but for a small scrap of paper. I turned the piece of paper over. It said, suck it you egg. I heard the phone ringing. It was the son of the builder I used to work for. I told him I had just finished dealing with a nutter. He said, not much has changed then. I had to ask what he meant? He told me I was constantly attracting weirdos on building sites. I asked, really? Yeah, he said, don’t you remember Psycho Sarah? I didn’t. He told me that she would walk past a house we were building ten times a day wearing short skirts. He told me she would bend over right in front of me. He told me she did this until I spoke to her. He told me that I nicknamed her Psycho Sarah. Did I fuck her, I asked? I dunno, he said, probably

I went into the kitchen for another Imodium. I had just popped it in my mouth when I heard the phone ringing. I went into my bedroom and picked it up. It was my mate still shouting. I hung up again and went back into the kitchen. Now what could I eat that won’t give me the shits? I opened the fridge. It was empty. Maybe I should have another cigarette, maybe that would clog me up. I started towards my bedroom when I saw the girl I want to fuck walking past my apartment. I rushed to the glass door, flung it open and cried her name. She heard her name, looked up and saw me. She looked angry. She shot me a stare that told me she hated me. She kept walking. I had blown it with her. It’s a good thing I like to write. On paper I have control. On paper I can shout

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

CONCENTRATE

CONCENTRATE

 

 

 

-It’s getting hard
-I know I can see it
-I didn’t mean that
-Well it is, I can see it sticking out your pants. Look it’s pointing up to the right
-Please. I wasn’t talking about that. I was talking about love
-Ok, so you’re talking about love but you’re pointing the other way
-Stop being profound
-It wasn’t found, look at it, it’s sticking right out of your pants
-I didn’t say found, I said profound. And stop looking at it. I want you to concentrate
-What do you mean… like orange juice concentrate?
-I don’t even know why I’m talking to you, and what do you mean pointing the other way? When you love you love equally. Love and hate are not equal measurements
-I know, I can’t do maths either
-I confuse need with desire. I can add that much. I think that’s one minus one. I met a man today with three hairs on his chest
-That’s adding
-He told me I should stick my tongue out like this! Oi, look at me, like this!!!!!!!!!
-I was looking. Did you?
-Of course, I grew up in New Zealand
-And?
-Pardon?
-Then?
-Then he told me taught me a method to slowly hyperventilate
-Why would he do that?
-I don’t know; he shone like an idiot savant. He could’ve been the Patron Saint of Patronising
-Who, Peter Paint Fraternising?
-….
-I’m sorry, I can’t hear you properly; did you say he was the Patron Paint of Prophylactic?
-All I was saying is that it’s getting hard to meet her
-Hard how, without a Prophylactic? I can give you some. I’ve got a whole case at home. I’ve got one that’s covered in bumps. Patronising bumps
-I told you I wasn’t talking about that. I was saying that I don’t seem to be able to find love anymore. I used to be surrounded by it
-I’m not feeling sorry for you
-Neither am I. I’m just saying I live in Bondi and usually confuse love with lust. Lust bewitches me daily
-Yeah I liked that show. That was the one with the hot blonde witch and the impotent vice president
-Sorry I didn’t mean bewitches me, I meant beguiles me
-And why can’t you speed-dial?
-I didn’t say I speed-dial I said beguile. And before you ask again it’s because I’m stuck in a maze. I have a compass but it’s broken. I can’t see the way. I can’t see my way through it. It’s hard you know. With all the obstacles
-I already know it’s hard. I told you I see it. What obstacles are you talking about? Like the Krypton Factor?
-I try and smile through the obstacles and they see me smile. They see me smile so they smile but they can’t see behind my smile. I am gauging. I am measuring and I fall in love at least three times a day
-You told me you confused love with lust
-I know but how do you say lusts?
-Llllllllllllluuuuuuuusssssssstttttttttttsssssssssssssss
-Well I’m going to just try to not think about it
-And how will you do that?
-Why don’t I get a set of blinkers like a horse wears?
-That’s actually a good idea. Then you could ignore everyone like you want to
-I wish I could do that. I get them all. I live in Bondi. I get people wanting to heal me coming up all the time. One day a woman walked up wearing a black bikini. Her right boob was out. I couldn’t stop staring at it. It was exposed. She had a big boob and a big stiff nipple…. and yeah anyway she told me to put a finger on the tip of my nose. I did. She whistled loudly, lifted her right leg then did a long loud fanny-fart. Her arms started flailing about wildly. She closed her eyes and grit her teeth. I thought she was throwing a fit. Her arms jiggled and her legs shook like jelly as she rocked on the spot. Her head threw back. Her eyes opened rolled back like she was possessed. Her arms and hands reached towards me. She suddenly stiffened. She looked like a dummy before she started to moan. She rocked gently on the spot with a ****** look on her face. She opened her eyes, clapped her hands and spit on both of my knees. She reached a hand out before me. She asked me if I could feel it?
-Feel what? What, what did you feel?
-Nothing, there was nothing to feel. She told me that she was healing me and that I would walk in a few seconds time. I started thinking about what I was going to cook for dinner that night
-As she was healing you
-Yeah
-That’s a bit rude
-Only if you believe
-Don’t you believe?
-Well she told me to stand up and I could start walking
-And?
-I pulled myself up and fell. I fell face forward on the concrete. My knees don’t work so I sort of dropped out of the wheelchair and landed on the concrete in a patch of somebody else’s vomit
-No wonder you don’t believe, it’s because you don’t believe
-All I believe in are nuts, I’m surrounded by them. There is an old man who lives down the road. He sees me coming down the street and races out to talk to me. The first day I met him he opened himself up before me like I was Dr Phil. He didn’t even introduce himself he just launched into telling me that he had two malignant tumours in his prostate and that he had been accused of molesting his son.
-What did you say?
-I extended my hand and said, hi my names Andrew
-What did he say?
-He told me to be careful of all women. He told me a lot of them carry AIDS
-What it in their purse?
-No I meant the disease
-You can’t carry a disease in a purse, you’re just talking rubbish now arsehole
-You can call me a lot of things, arsehole, for example…
-I just did
-…but one thing you can’t call me is paranoid
-Is that what you told him?
-No, I told him that I had to find a woman first before worrying about STD’s
-Long distance?
-Yeah probably. Yesterday he told me that I am vulnerable and at risk by being in a wheelchair
-What did you say to that?
-I asked him, do you think so?
-Ooo yes, he said. He told me that people look at me like a target. He told me that I’m going to get beat-up and I should carry a fake gun with me
-What did you say to that?
-Nothing
-I guess it wouldn’t be that dumb
-What?
-To carry a fake gun
-It’s absurd. He pulled his fake gun out from the back of his pants. It was carved out of wood. There was no hole for the trigger. It looked like something a thirteen year old would have made in woodwork. It was coated with black boot polish. I looked closely at his hands and saw the faint taint of black
-So what are you saying, he is tainted by his fear?
-Now who’s being profound?
-Not me
-It was just another Patronising Saint
-And what’s so wrong with that?
-It’s just a waste of my time. It’s drains me. It’s hard enough as it is
-I know, I already told you I can see it

 

 

 

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

****

I didn’t know I was bleeding ‘til I saw the blood. That’s the way it’s always been. Some die from their sins. I live from mine. On a bad day I consider myself poor and unfortunate. On a good day I consider myself rich and fulfilled. I was lucky to peak at the right time

It was New Orleans in their summer. It was long past midnight. I was staying in a cheap backpacker’s near the ghetto. I’d been out all day and spent the night drinking three for one beer’s in the French Quarter. I was wasted. I sweated profusely staggering back through the swamp night. I got back to the backpacker’s saturated and saw everyone there was dry and sober. Nobody was sweating like me. They all looked like cardboard people. They were all busy telling tales of their travels. Nobody wanted to listen. All they wanted to do was talk. They were cardboard people talking about cardboard. I was drunk and bored so I headed back out and started walking the streets. I kept walking looking for a sign of life.

I found it. I found a sign of life. I found a sign of life three blocks from the backpacker’s. He stood in front of me to block my way. He opened his left hand and told me it was twenty dollars. I laughed. He asked what I was laughing at? I said, you. He told me he was going to kill me if I didn’t buy it from him. I told him to fuck off and brushed past him. It took him a second to catch up and stand in front of me again. I was so drunk all I could do was laugh as he pulled his gun out. You’re going to buy this, he said. I laughed again. He started yelling at me to stop laughing. He held his gun on it’s side like a gangster and said, you gonna get shot boy’! I ended up giving him twenty dollars so he didn’t shoot me. I could see the blood.

I took it and went back to the hostel. I opened the piece of cellophane. It looked like a piece of soap. I’d never heard of a crack pipe so I smashed it repeatedly with the back of my cigarette lighter and spread the pieces into a hand-rolled cigarette. Smoking a piece the size of a split pea had me pacing out of the hotel into the dead heat of the swamp night. I walked back to the French Quarter. I had no intention of slowing or stopping. I had little to no regard for the looks and stares of startled passers by. I was sweating uncontrollably. I’m a friendly man but couldn’t stop glaring as I paced up the street. My blistering intensity made a middle-aged Texan man stop talking and sway on the spot as I passed him. I heard him say, what the…. as I swept past him. It looked as though he was pushed by the wind. I was scared of nothing. I walked until I was tired and then walked back to the hostel and lay down. I tried to sleep.

I woke from my daze to find the inside of my mouth raw. I must have been chewing on my cheeks. The sun wasn’t at its peak but it was still hot as I stirred. It felt like an oven. I was still high. I was still high but hungry so I walked down towards Canal St looking for a café for breakfast. I couldn’t find one. All I could see were bars. I walked into an empty one and ordered a beer. I felt dumb and suicidal as I stood there. The bartender looked at me strangely. I wondered if he knew how high I’d been? Every time I raised the beer to my mouth I would see him staring at me. I waved him over for another beer. He asked me if I was okay? I told him I was alive which was as good as. He looked bored and walked to the other end of the bar and sat down on his stool. He was reading a newspaper. He lifted it up in front of his face. I finished the second beer in three raises to my mouth and got out of there. I kept walking the streets looking for life but all I could see were more cardboard people. I went back to my room and tried to sleep.

I still couldn’t sleep. I had a cold shower and got dressed. I had a splitting headache. I started walking again. I still walked quickly and still didn’t know where I was going. I walked and walked still looking for it. The exhilarating high of the night before was in no way a match for the pains that cut me down at regular intervals throughout my hangover. I’d have to stop walking and put my hand on my stomach. I had abdominal cramps as if I’d done one thousand sit-ups. I felt miserable and sick. There were couples everywhere holding hands. Every woman I saw looked like cardboard. Every man I saw looked like cardboard. I felt low and hollow as I turned my head and crossed to the other side of the street. I stopped at the next intersection. My head rang as I looked at my feet. I saw the hole in the top of my right shoes and I sneezed. I wish I hadn’t sneezed. I had to start running as I felt my bowels about to open. I could see a shopping mall across and down the street so I ran down the road and was about to cross but was stopped by a cargo train. It took five minutes to pass. As the train swept past me I farted. It felt wet. I cursed the fact that I was wearing two hundred dollar jeans. I got to the mall and headed straight for the toilets. There were two stalls in the men’s, both occupied. I slammed my fist on the closest one and it flew open. There was no one in there. I farted again. I got inside and pulled my pants down and there it was. Diarrhoea. A waterfall of shit left my body. I sat and farted and shit and smiled. I sat on that toilet for a good twenty minutes. I still didn’t get it out of me. I still haven’t gotten it out of me. Some people die from their sins. I live from mine.

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

I’VE BEEN LOSING MY MIND

I’ve been losing my mind. I keep doing wrong things twice

 

 

 

 

 

I was waiting for a carer to come pick me up and take me to the airport. I was nervous and smoking heavily. I smoke cigarettes on my balcony. One of my Neighbours doesn’t like me.  He probably doesn’t like me smoking. Him and his wife always say something to each other and he quite often glares up at me like he’s a menace as they walk past. Today he walked past my balcony with his wife. His wife looks like a ghost. She’s pale with no features. He is short and podgy with a potbelly that he tries his hardest to suck in and has a receding hairline but wears his hair in a ponytail. He also wears a goatee to hide his double chin. He carries himself like a fat teenage girl. He walks awkwardly on the tips of his toes. As he passed my field of vision he flipped me the bird without looking. He kept his finger up at me with his stare facing down my street. Coward, I muttered under my breath. No one likes meeting a winner. I wanted to give him some back but I didn’t. I let him have his win. I’ll have something ready to throw next time.

 

A kangaroo lost my wheelchair. Getting on in Christchurch a Tuatara placed a kangaroo tag on the back of my chair. The tag was a long rectangular piece of cardboard on which they had gotten me to write my name, flight number, phone number and address. Once I had provided my details they doubled the piece of thin white elasticised thread it was attached to and then went through itself to it to tie it to the back brace. They then took a piece of fluro-orange paper tape with my flight details and also attached it to the piece of aluminum brace. There was also a large rectangular pink and white candy striped ticket with ‘SPECIAL ASSITANCE’ that they looped to the back of my chair.

 

Getting on an airplane in a wheelchair is an experience. They make people in wheelchairs get on first. It’s really not that good because they make people in wheelchairs get off last. They probably do it so people won’t stare at us and so we won’t get in the way. I pushed myself up to the departure gate and handed her my ticket. If you are able to do so yourself you push your way down the ramp to the airplane’s door. At the bottom I put the brakes on and transfer onto a skinny chair that can fit inside the aisle of the aircraft. They place my cushion on to it as I transfer. It looks like a trolley from a warehouse with thin black vinyl cushions on the back and bum. To make sure that you don’t fall out of the trolley they strap you on to it with two long black Velcro straps. They strap one around your chest and one around your shins. They will then pull you backwards on to the plane. Every time I am strapped in I feel like Hannibal Lecter being pulled towards his cell. Every time I’m pulled onto the plane I will shout out, I AM NOT AN ANIMAL. That will normally make the person pulling me smile.

 

In New Zealand I ate enough red meat to make a butcher smile for a week and listened to enough Christmas carols to make the baby Jesus weep for a month. Before I left Sydney I told my mum about how fat I’d gotten. When I arrived my mum said she thought I would have been fatter. I never exceed people’s expectations. I was raised Anglican. Growing up a child Christmas was a big deal. I have distanced myself from all who love and have loved me. I attend orphans events in Sydney. We call them orphans Christmases. We call ourselves orphans yet we are the ones who left home.  I attend Christmases where we all get wasted. We drink until we dribble. It’s been a long time since I’ve felt my mother’s love on Christmas day. I couldn’t help crying when I saw her at the airport. She had tears in her eyes that brought tears to mine. Her blue eyes stare into my blue eyes. I was crying on Christmas day and I felt fine.

 

I got so angry I almost cried at the airport. All the animals were ignoring me. I knew that if I yelled I would probably get in trouble so I just sat on the trolley and saw my life ebbing away. People strolled past me and I was jealous. They were getting to go home. I thought of my home and all the people I’ve let in it to it since I fell. I woke out of a coma to find the rules had changed. I woke to find the rules have changed for all of us. The dollar is hard and the dollar is the king. I let two women into my life as I was discharged from hospital.  I didn’t have a choice. The doctors would not let me be discharged unless I was to have twenty-four hour nursing and caring support staff. My best friend has told me that he’d warned me. I told him I’d forgotten. That’s why I had twenty-four hour nursing and caring. I asked my friend what they had seen? My friend said that they could just feel it. I spent three years living in an apartment that didn’t even feel like it was mine. It felt like I was living in a bus shelter. I used to go into my lounge and watch somebody getting paid for being with me. I would ask them if they’d mind letting me change the channel on my television. One would say to me that I could as soon as their programme was over. I am finally well enough to have control over my house and I watch what I want. I am well enough to go down Bondi Rd to the gym and back and well enough to go shopping twice a week. My life may not sound much to you but it is my life and I could feel the airport robbing it one hour at a time.

 

I have a carer who has told me repeatedly that she doesn’t like men. She has repeatedly told me what a lovely man I am. Do you think I should I be offended by her statement? I know that I am not like most men who have properly functioning brains, hearing and spinal cords that let them think walk run piss and shit at free will. I know that I cannot work like most men and I know that I will never love again like most normal men. As I sat strapped to the trolley I could visibly see how I was different to everyone else. People were walking right past me. I only look in the mirror in my bathroom at home. I don’t look at myself in shop windows anymore. I used to do that all the time when I could walk. I’d do it to check how I looked. Conceit is bred of circumstance. When I look at my reflection in a window now what I see is not what I am. I don’t see a man anymore. I see a boy wearing a man’s body. I see a lonely boy who is not old enough to work and a boy who sits at home and masturbates by himself. I see a boy who hides under covers and masturbates into socks. The airline saw less than a boy. The airline saw nothing when they saw me.

 

There were three of us who were led onto the airplane in wheelchairs. There was a long delay because the plane couldn’t board at the airport terminal. They drove out a tall skinny set of steps for everyone who walked. All three of us were taken down to the tarmac by a baggage platform and then transferred and taken back up to the opened plane door on a service elevator. There were two other wheelchair users. One was elderly with one leg and the other had Parkinson’s. The old man swung his head and stared at me in the eyes as I queued behind him. He looked angry as he shouted; you need a haircut you yobbo. I do have a haircut, I said back at him. No, he said, you need some style. You should have a short back and sides like me. I don’t want to look like you, I told him. Do you have a girlfriend, he asked me? I said, no. It’s no wonder, he screamed at me. Do you have a girlfriend, I asked him? You look disheveled and dirty, he said, you’re only going to attract a dirty and disheveled women looking the way you do. Maybe I want a disheveled and dirty woman, I said. He kicked me in the shins with his one leg. I can’t feel that much but it hurt. The old man’s face crinkled as he said, you want to take a bloody good look at yourself. He said, with that haircut you look like you’re saying that you don’t care. I don’t care, I said. You have money, he said, go out and buy a nice shirt and tie, and get some nice pants. I told him that I’m comfortable in tracksuit pants, sneakers and a singlet. That’s your problem, he said, you’re too comfortable. You smile too much for a man in a wheelchair.

 

The airline fucked up and kept my Beverly wheelchair as one of theirs in New Zealand. My wheelchair has a specially designed back and I have a large molded cushion that I have custom designed at a seating clinic. My wheelchair has Spinergy wheels with red spokes and blue tyres. I got off the airplane and waited strapped to the trolley with the cushion under my arm. I asked if they wouldn’t mind un-strapping me as people were beginning to stare. They said okay but only un-strapped my legs. People still stared. I had arranged for a carer to pick me up and was getting anxious thinking that they’d be worrying where I was. A kangaroo walked past me so I pulled on its tail and asked where my wheelchair was? The kangaroo got up real close and sniffed me. It leant back on its tail and pushed me with both of its feet. The kangaroo’s claws dug into me and the one on the left ripped my singlet drawing a tiny bit of blood. The airline trolley shot backwards till I was right at the back of the queue. I looked down to see my own blood. I had to reach right down to push the tiny tires. The tiny grey tires made the palms of my hands black. I pushed my way back up to the front of the queue and slammed my fist against the front of the desk and said, Oi! Did you say something, the Kangaroo asked me? Not yet, I replied. Oh good, it said. It reached down into its pouch and brought out a packet of cigarettes. It shook one out and rocked back on its tail, lit drew and sighed. It smiled and took another deep draw. EXCUSE ME, I yelled. I can’t smell anything, it said. That’s because you’re a smoker, I said, and I didn’t fart I was trying to draw your attention. You can’t draw attention, it said; you can draw an airplane or a packet of cigarettes though. Can you draw my wheelchair, I asked? The kangaroo turned from me and started talking to a wombat beside it. Both animals were smoking and pretended that I didn’t exist. They started talking about the previous nights episode of Neighbours. I twisted my torso and farted.

 

I got so angry I could cry. Everyone from my flight had collected their luggage and was leaving the airport. I am an incomplete paraplegic. That means I still feel pain. I feel pain when I spend too much time inactive. I kept looking around with wet eyes for something to bring me my wheelchair. I spent over an hour and a half waiting strapped to the trolley for the airline to find my chair before another wombat from the airline told me that it couldn’t be found but may still be in New Zealand. What, I exclaimed? How could you’ve lost my wheelchair? The wombat was smoking four cigarettes at once. The wombat told me that they had a wheelbarrow I could use to get me home. How do you lose a wheelchair, I asked? There was no sticker on it, the wombat said. Bullshit, I snapped, there were three on it. We have a wheelbarrow that you can be pushed home in, it said. How is that supposed to help me, I screamed at the wombat? Well, like I said… you could be pushed home in it. The wombat held the four cigarettes up to the right side of it’s head and said, duh. But where’s my wheelchair, I shouted? The wombat took a drag and told me, who knows? It’s probably somewhere over Brussels. 

 

They put me in a red wheelbarrow and started pushing me towards the immigration desk. There was a man walking slowly beside us on the right who looked like the grim reaper. He pointed a skeletal finger at me. He said, hey look I’ve given you the bone finger. I rolled onto my left bum cheek and said, so, I’ve given you the bone bum. A hot Indian girl was walking in time with the barrow on my left. She turned and looked at me. She winked and screamed, any old iron, any old iron? I told her I had some extra bits of metal in my back. She smiled at me. She looked as sweet as a piece of peach pie. I wanted to kiss her. I asked her how she knew that song? The smile drained from her face as she told me that she was born in Sydney. She spat, just because I look Indian; I’m an Australian you know. No no, I said, I didn’t mean it like that; it’s ‘cause you look so young that I didn’t think you would’ve been old enough to have heard of that song. She smiled again and I was happy. She continued walking beside me. Her smile suddenly dropped to a frown as she asked me, so what… you’re an ageist instead of a racist? Isn’t that better, I asked? Her tone was like that of a mother as she said, bigots of a feather flock together. Can we, I asked her? What, she said? Flock together, I said with a grin? You can flock off, she shouted. What the flock, I yelled! Uugh, she groaned, I think I preferred you when you were a racist. I never was a racist, I retorted. I don’t think I know what you are, she said. I grinned again and told her that that made two of us. She kept pace with the wheelbarrow. She didn’t speed up or slow down. My face burned as I asked her what she was doing later? Her face flushed as she asked me, why… do you want to get together for a curry or something? No I wanted to flock you later, I said. I laughed then she laughed. I asked her how come I liked Indian women but Indian women didn’t like me? She stammered that Indian women very seldom went for men out of their own race. Who’s a racist now, I asked her? We were talking about you and not about us, she said. Ok, I said, now how about that dinner? What are we going to have, she asked? I said, a haggis and a fifth of scotch. So are you Scottish, she questioned? No, I said, I just feel like throwing up. She grinned and she said, you’re making me feel the same way. I smiled and she smiled.

 

So do you mind, I asked her? Mind what, she asked? That I’m in a wheelchair, I said. I can’t figure out if I mind that more than the fact that you’re a bigoted racist who feels like throwing up, she replied. Don’t you feel like throwing up, I asked her? Not right now, she said, maybe after you’ve flocked me I will. So we are going to, I said? What, she said? Flock, I replied. That depends on you, she said. I sat and continued being pushed in the wheelbarrow while thinking of what to say next. With my damaged brain I have forgotten the combination to the lock. I can’t even find the lock. Most women would prefer a man quick of wit. These days I’m more halfwit. My face burned as I thought to myself, think man think! What did you say, she asked? I didn’t say anything, I told her. I thought you said, think man think, she said. I could feel my face burning brighter as I wondered if I had said out loud what I’d been thinking. I told her that I didn’t think I had said anything. I thought you did, she said. Oh well, I thought, at least we were still talking. We may’ve been talking nonsense but that was better than not talking to a hot Indian woman at all. So what are we going to have for dinner, she asked? Before we flock, I said? Before we flock, she replied. Whatever your heart desirers, I said. She smiled and I smiled. I had figured out the first part of the combination. Can you cook, she asked? Oh good, I thought, if I can get her to my apartment that was half the battle. I can make you whatever you want to eat, I said, I’m quite versatile. For a bigoted racist who feels like throwing up, she asked? Exactly, I said. I would like a curry, she said. Hot medium or mild, I asked her? She told me none of the above.

 

I asked where she’d just come from? She said Christchurch. I told her, I didn’t think there were any hot girls in Christchurch? There isn’t anymore, she said. I smiled and she smiled. She told me she had never left Christchurch. She told me she had been raised her whole life on a farm that bred whales for people who ate them. I asked her if she thought that was an ecologically responsible industry? She said, probably. I started to say, I wouldn’t think that an…. I stopped. I looked at her and I saw her back straighten as she said, WHAT? Now, I said, … nothing. You wouldn’t think what, she demanded, that Indian people would like eating whale? I looked her in the eye and said, I thought you weren’t Indian. I thought you just looked it. She punched me in the chest and said, WHAT, again? Ouch, I yelled! Can you feel that, she asked? That’s about all I feel, I said. She punched my crotch and said, that… what about that, can you feel that? I can’t feel it the lower you go, I said. What about when you’re flocking me, she asked? I don’t know, I said, maybe just when I’m throwing up after I’ve flocked you. Yuck, she said, can you go back to being a racist for a while? Otherwise I’m not going to able to flock you at all. I told her I never was a racist. I reminded her of how she had told me Indian women were racist. I asked her why she’d left Christchurch. She told me she couldn’t hear the whales cry anymore. I asked her did whales cry a lot? She told me they cried the most moments before they were eaten.

 

Her head swiveled a smile like a sunset. Her smile was enough. She got in a cab and the cab drove away. I asked her for her phone number but she gave me her grandma Maggie’s recipe for Afghan biscuits and a Facebook friend request instead. I sat strapped to a trolley and wondered whether I could fool her into thinking that I was someone she could love. I sat and wondered how much I would have to change to get her to love me. I sat and wondered if the pantomime was worth it? It is. I will definitely be the man she needs me to be. I’ll let you know if I ever get out of this airport.

 

 

 

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

 

ALMOST PISS-FLAPS

ALMOST PISS-FLAPS

 

 

  

One of my mates told me he could have had a threesome last night. That’s fucking great, I said. Why didn’t you? It was the wrong sort of threesome, he said. He told me it would have been with one woman and another man. I bowed my head and told him, you’re right that’s not so great. We both sat silently thinking of what to say next. Neither of us are very good at commiseration. A seagull flew overhead. It gave a great cry and shit. I looked up to see what the noise was and saw a big white shit plummeting down towards me. I was too slow. I was too slow to move and the shit landed square in the middle of my nose. The greatest part of the shit slid quickly and landed on my tongue. I swallowed it as a knee jerk reaction. I started gagging before I dry heaved. I spat on the ground but I only spat saliva. I had well and truly swallowed the shit. I looked down at the saliva and dry-heaved. I blinked before I farted loudly. The fart lasted a good six seconds before it whined to a stop. My friend laughed and told me it was a good fart. I told my friend that I was offered a massage today. That’s fucking great, he said. Why didn’t you? A man offered to give me a massage, I said. He bowed his head and said, okay that’s not so great. We both sat silently while the weight of sorry strangled us. Are you trying to one-up me, he said? I asked him what he meant? He said, well I tell one story so you try and tell a better story. No, I said, and besides your story beats mine. We both stared at a woman walking past us. She was wearing a pair of cut-off denim shorts. The shorts were so short that you could almost see her piss-flaps. I groaned and rubbed between my thighs. My friend shouted at her calling her a whore. We both laughed at that. My friend looked at me and said in ten years from now they’ll be wearing nothing. It was said slowly but surely. He was right. There was nothing left to say. Sometimes you cannot one-up.

 

 

 

 

 

Andrew Stuart Buchanan