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

DECEMBER UP THE HILL

 

DECEMBER UP THE HILL

  

 

I met a woman on Sunday. I was pushing myself up the hill from Icebergs when I saw a man and a blonde woman walking alongside pointing at me and asking something. I put the brakes of my wheelchair on and took my headphones off so I could hear what they were saying. The man was asking if I would like to be pushed up the hill? I laughed and told him it was nice of him but I considered it to be part of my day. We talked all the way up the hill and then stopped and continued talking on the corner of Bondi Rd. The conversation was running out and it was feeling uncomfortable when the man told me that he would go for the woman if he weren’t already in a relationship. My mind raced. Was that a hint for me? Did that mean I should ask the woman out? It’s all a new experience for me. I’d never asked a woman out before I broke my back and hit my head at work. It was always easy. They all asked me out. I never had to try. I never had to face the possibility of rejection. The man also told me that she wasn’t like most women and wasn’t looking for a man to support her. He told me she had her own money. Sunday smiled at me and asked for my phone number. I smiled and gave it to her and told her to leave me a message with her name otherwise I would forget who she was.

 

These days I am constantly misreading situations. I will have a woman flirt with me so will ask her out to be told no. I had a woman walk besides my wheelchair all the way from the corner of Penkivil St to the corner of Bondi Rd and Notts Ave. I would have called the talk flirting but obviously I am no longer aware. I have been made to see a psychologist recently. I was telling him about this. I told him I had never asked a woman out before; they had all approached me. He told me it’s a numbers game. He told me I might have to ask a dozen women out before one will say yes. What I didn’t tell him is that every woman who says no is considered a loss to me. Every woman who says no is a chip off my already fragile ego. I really can’t handle it. Maybe if I had been rejected as a boy I might have built up a resistance, tolerance, to it. Every time I am rejected I question my ability and the way I must be seen in my wheelchair. There’s been a long line of rejections that have made me feel this way. I can now see how some men remain virgins for life.

 

I saw a woman I used to know ages ago today. She used to go out with a friend of mine from New Zealand. She told me that I am too negative and that I am not attracting the positive. She might be right but she is probably wrong. I felt comfortable enough to share the negative that is happening in my life at the moment with her. I try really hard each day to be positive and meet a woman, the woman (where are you babe?) who will love me. Anyway she gave me a necklace with stones on it and told me it would heal me. She pointed to and named each of the stones and told me the healing properties each stone carries with it. She took it off her wrist where it was doubled over and put it around my neck. She stood behind me and started to tie it up. She choked me. As she was putting it on she told me it would be tight and that I would have to cut it off I didn’t like it. I don’t like it. When I got home I looked at myself in the mirror wearing it and laughed. I will cut it off tomorrow.

 

I rang another friend from New Zealand for some advice about Sunday. I rang and told him that I met a woman who gave me her phone number. I told him that I liked her and asked if I should call her that night. He reminded me of Swingers and I laughed. Three days is money. I thought about her all night and rang her the next day. She did not answer her phone. I didn’t leave a message and called her a slut after I had hung up (shit maybe I am too negative). I decided it was worthless and contemplated suicide for a few minutes. I reckoned that the Gap was probably the easiest way to do it: a few seconds exhilarating free fall and then a millisecond of pain. Yeah, that would be best, I said aloud to myself as I pushed my wheelchair to the fridge for a beer. I’d forgotten about beer, that’s worth living for. I told myself I should join a monastery as I twisted the top off the bottle, either that or I should chop my penis off and sell it on Ebay.

 

Sunday eventually text me on Monday (what’s happened, don’t people talk anymore?) and in her text apologised for not answering my call. I felt bad for calling her a slut. I told her I was going home to New Zealand for Christmas and that we should meet up for a drink when I returned and waited for a response. That’s what I don’t like about text messaging, waiting for a response. It’s almost like I can feel my brain ticking while I wait. The phone lay silent. I told myself to forget about her as I put my phone down. I wheeled my chair into my bedroom and started rolling a smoke. I was straightening the tobacco out in the paper when I heard my phone beep. I said, slut, aloud (alright I am too negative, so what?) and decided to finish rolling it before I saw what she had said. I licked it and liked what I saw. The hand-rolled cigarette was as good as a bought one. I pushed my wheelchair out into the lounge and picked up my mobile and put it on my lap (not too close to the balls, that’s one cancer I do worry about).

 

I got up over the ramp and slid the ranch door closed behind me. On the balcony I lit, drew and exhaled. The nicotine coursed through my veins. It was just what I needed. If she wasn’t too fussed about quick replies, why should I be? I put the phone down on the air-conditioning unit on my balcony and decided to finish my smoke before I cared. I couldn’t do it. I do care. After three drags I picked the phone up to see what she had said. She suggested that we go out for a health drink. Oh fuck; I said aloud to myself, I’m sitting smoking fags while she wants a spirulina smoothie. My hormones got the better of me so I replied telling her, that that would be great. I suggested we meet up at Gusto. She didn’t reply for a good ten minutes. I thought to myself that I’d blown it when she text me. She told me that she used to work there and wouldn’t feel comfortable going back. She asked if I would like to meet at Gertrude And Alice instead? I text back that that would be fine while wondering why she wouldn’t feel comfortable there? Maybe she pissed in somebodies porridge?

 

I didn’t want to be late so arrived there early. Sunday wasn’t there. I saw the owner J and said hello. One of the waiting staff asked if I would like to sit inside or outside? I told them I would prefer to sit outside. All the tables were occupied so I sat in my wheelchair and looked at the bookcase full of second-hand books. There weren’t any good ones but I had to occupy myself so I studied them all. Eventually a staffer told me that there was a free table so I went and positioned my chair. I faced looking down Hall St towards the ocean and ordered an orange juice. It arrived at my table in a bottle with a large glass filled with ice. I filled the glass and wished I’d brought vodka with me. I started to take sips of the juice. I’d stopped in at the Bondi Hotel to empty my catheter bag on the way there and hoped she wouldn’t be too long. It gets embarrassing to have a bulge on the side of your leg. I drained one glass of the juice and was filling another when I saw her coming up the road smiling at me. She wasn’t as pretty as I remembered her to be.

 

She walked up to me and lent down, touched my shoulder and kissed the right side of my cheek and waited for me to kiss hers. I put my arm around the back of her waist, kissed her and asked how she was? She said she was all right and apologised for being late. I told her that she wasn’t late and that it didn’t matter. She smiled. She had felt wet. I questioned wether she had just come back from swimming? She said no. Silence followed behind her as she stared at me. Sweaty bitch. She seemed manic in her every movement. I asked her if she wanted a drink? She said yes and got up and walked into the café. She was a good minute and a half before she came back out. She sat down. She was wearing a beautiful sleeveless halter neck top and a pair of bright pink Daisy Dukes. She didn’t have much breast but had good legs. She had a hint of a black moustache over her top lip. I had remembered her as being a beautiful blonde but now she was sitting in the morning sun I wasn’t too sure of either.

 

I started the conversation. She was from somewhere in Europe and had a thick accent. I made out that she was from Russia. I would tell where from but I’ve forgotten. I turned the volume up on my hearing aids. The talk was uncomfortable. It seemed laboured. I asked her what type of music she liked? She said anything but heavy metal. I love heavy metal. I asked her to be more specific. She said pop. I asked her if that meant Justin Bieber? She laughed and said no, no, she meant Indie pop. It was a bad start. She kept looking down and to the left. I looked down to my right and saw nothing down there. I wondered what she was looking for? Her drink arrived at the table. She had ordered a pot of chai (fuck) soy (Jesus) latte. She put the stainer over her cup and poured some in. I’ve never drunk what she ordered but it looked like something that would come out of an unclogged drain. Bits of the loose leaves filtered down into the cup though the stainer and floated on the top. I wondered if it tasted as bad as it looked. She took a large teaspoon of honey and stirred it in. She raised the cup to her mouth quickly and took a loud slurp before slamming the cup back down to the saucer. I watched the contents ripple like Jurassic Park. I asked her how long she had been in Australia? She said she had been here for four years. I asked if that meant that she was a resident or a citizen? She told me she was on a travel visa. I would not have to read her tealeaves. I knew why she had come on a date with me.

 

I’ve met a succession of women in Australia looking for visas. They must think I look dumb. Most of them have been from the former USSR. They all try really hard but I haven’t liked any of them. Sunday had come out on a date with me thinking I might be her ticket. I’m not rich but I am indifferent. Some women confuse the two. I had come on a date thinking I was going to fuck her. You can call me old or indifferent again but I’m over dating. I’m too old to beg. If the conversation’s good I might try. I can tell by looking at a woman’s body if it’s worth it. I hadn’t acted with any of them until now. I am blessed to have been with some incredible women. I know what it takes to be with a woman. I know what it takes to be with a woman but I still haven’t found her. I keep going on dates where I sit and wonder what the fuck they’re talking about? I have become lonely horny and desperate for love. I haven’t the courage to ask the woman I really want so I stay floating chin-deep in ordinary. I keep going on ordinary dates with ordinary women. It’s horrible sitting looking at a face that I don’t or won’t remember. I’ve sat in my wheelchair at tables watching women’s faces talking and not been able to hear a word and have been glad. I love women but women are mad. Does that make me mad too?

 

I’m deaf in one ear and have twenty-five percent hearing loss out of the other. I now wear hearing aids. I’m deaf in my left ear but I wear a hearing aid in it anyway. The one I wear in my right ear has a transceiver at the bottom of it that picks up the hearing from the one I wear in my deaf ear and morphs it with the hearing I have in my right. I can hear stereo in the mono. The café was loud where we sat. She seemed well known there. People kept walking past and touching her on the shoulder. She kept slurping and slamming. Throughout our date I kept (I thought I did) hearing her mentioning some man’s name. I had to ask her whom she was talking about? She said it was a man she knew. I asked if she was talking about a boyfriend? She said no. She told me nothing about herself but asked me a hundred questions to reveal myself. I thought it was worth a shot. I am horny and lonely. She kept talking telling me nothing. I’ve got to ask questions. That’s what I told myself. All the answers she gave me led me round and about. I’ve only had one woman since I was broken and she told me to be open, she told me to give women a chance. I kept asking her questions. She kept slurping and answering.

 

I hate myself so wonder what women see? Dating is horrible for me. It’s a ritual that I have never been initiated in. I’ve been lucky enough to have a life of sex and relationships without dating. I am old enough to know if a woman is the one. She was not the one. I knew it and I think she knew it too. She kept looking down to the left. I kept checking to see what she was looking at. There was nothing down there. The light of the sun had shown the holes in our attempt. I don’t know what she’d expected. I don’t know what I’d expected either. The weight of our expectations had strangled any chance we had at conversation. We were two lovers without love. Every time I floated an open-ended conversation towards her she shot it down with a one worded response. I didn’t mind because I couldn’t hear her answers anyway. I was getting sick of asking her questions. Silence fell between us as she stared at the brown sugar. I couldn’t think of anything more to say. I was bored and wanted the date to be over. She could tell and started asking me questions. I finished the rest of my orange juice in one swallow. The last of the ice burned my lips. She had started asking me another question. I did not answer her. She asked me what it was like in a wheelchair? I raised the glass to my lips to my lips and the ice burned me again. A drop of watered down orange juice dripped down on to the tip of my tongue. Eventually I got the courage to tell her that I had to go. She stood up and looked at me. I pushed my wheelchair up to the till and drew my wallet out. The person used a calculator to draw the bill. She had paid for her own drink.

 

As our date ended she told me she wanted to be friends on Facebook. I have no idea why I gave her my email address. She friend requested me so I accepted. When I read her profile it said she was in a relationship with a man called Richard. What the fuck? I think i know nothing. The older I get the less I know.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Andrew Stuart Buchanan

THEY WERE ALMOST SKI JUMPS

THEY WERE ALMOST SKI JUMPS

Have you ever seen the Hudsucker Proxy? I’m just like Norville. I am a grade-A ding-dong. I arrived early for my flight to Christchurch at the airport. I went with my favourite carer up to the desk, gave them my passport and waited for them to process my ticket. The lady checked the book, frowned and said to me, err, your passport has actually expired. What a ding-dong. It’s not even as if it was a day or two out. That might have been okay. My passport had expired four years ago. My face burned crimson. The lady behind the counter asked me, what have you had a brain injury or something? Could, should, I blame it on my acquired brain injury or was it just a result of me being a grade-A ding-dong? If you’ve had a brain injury and no one else knows it it’s like farting alone in the woods. I asked if they could just let it slide. The lady smiled and said she couldn’t. She asked if I had an Australian passport? I said no. She asked, but you do live in Australia? I looked at her, she had a shaved head and her sleeves were cut off. She had a tattoo on her left bicep. The tattoo said I HATE MEN, in bold black letters. She also had a big black tattoo on her right bicep that said I LOVE MUFF. I told her I did live in Australia but that I’d always be a New Zealander. I told her I didn’t see a need for an Australian passport. She told me that Australian passports expire every ten years and New Zealand passports expire every five years. I told her that that didn’t help my situation. She told me it would have if I had an Australian passport. I twisted both of my ears towards her and poked out my tongue. She picked up a phone from her desk. I heard a loud squeal and then her voice calling for security over the intercom. I held both of my hands towards her with my palms out and said, hang on, steady babe. She wrote something down on a piece of paper then looked up and told me that she wasn’t my babe and would be suing me for sexual harassment.

I turned and said, ok, so what now, to my favourite carer? Get a good solicitor, she said. No, I said, not about that muff lover, I don’t care about her or her lawsuit, I mean about getting home to New Zealand? How will I get home now? She asked me if I was a strong swimmer. I told her I wasn’t. I told her I would probably drown before I got out of the bay of Bondi beach. She asked if I had a driver’s license? For what, I asked, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang? There’re several thousand kilometers of ocean to cross for me to get home. Oh yeah, she said, I forgot. I told her that she probably caught it from me. What do you mean, she asked, do you mean caught fish from the ocean you’re going to have to cross? No, I said, forgetfulness. They say that fish don’t have a good memory, she said. I said, they also say that they don’t have feelings… I wish I didn’t. Have what, have fish, she asked? Have you got crabs? Have feelings, I yelled. Why, she asked? ‘Cause then I wouldn’t feel embarrassed about turning up at the airport with a stale jam sandwich in my hand. You didn’t turn up with a stale jam sandwich, she said, you turned up with an expired New Zealand passport in your hand. I know I know, I said, I was trying to be clever. Clever with the jam, she asked? No I just meant that both things are useless to me. You could feed the bread to the ducks. To the fucks, I asked? No, she said, the ducks. What ducks, I asked? The ducks you see flying around the skies, she said. Do you think I should harness them, I asked her? For what, she replied back? Well maybe if I got enough ducks together and enough stale jam sandwiches then maybe I could feed then tie some rope around the ducks and get them to fly me home to New Zealand. I wouldn’t need a passport then. She looked at me and told me I should go boil my head. She turned her head and started driving towards the embassy.

The guards at the embassy lowered their guns so we could enter. They both lowered their air rifles to the ground butts first. One of the guards brought his rifle down too quickly and the gun accidentally fired a pellet into his forearm. The guard screamed and yelled, holy shit, and pulled his sleeve up. There was no blood but you could see where the pellet had ended up in his arm. The guard leant his rifle against the gate of the embassy and asked the other guard to help him dig it out. The other guard lay his gun down on the bitumen and rolled his sleeve up higher. I looked at my favourite carer and raised my eyebrows. She raised her eyebrows too so we past both of them into the compound. If the guards didn’t care about us why should we care about the guards? We had to go up in the lift to the first floor. There was a security video mounted on a flagpole but it was positioned so it faced down into the ladies toilets in the park across the road. There was a topless woman standing in the toilets playing with her breasts. Another of the guards was standing with a pair of binoculars looking into the ladies toilets. There was dribble dribbling down his chin. He kept licking his lips but he wasn’t fast enough to catch all his saliva. The guard suddenly started rubbing his crotch. He rubbed it faster and faster until smoke started to rise from the front of his pants. He put the binoculars down on the ground and hurried towards the toilets. I wasn’t sure if he was going for a wank or to douse the smoke. He was probably going to do both.

I picked up the binoculars and saw her. I started dribbling. She had great boobs. They were big and kind of pointy. They were almost ski-jumps but with enough round in them to not be. Her nipples were bigger than fifty-cent coins. I started rubbing my crotch too until my favourite carer slapped me around the side of the head and told me to watch it. I told her that I was watching it. She slapped me upside the head again and told me to behave. I hung my head and said, okay, and followed her into the office. I turned around for one last look before I put the binoculars down on the desk. I pushed my wheelchair into the room. There was a topless Maori woman wearing a grass skirt sitting on a big rock in front of the main desk. I said, Kia Ora. She said, gidday mate. I asked her what she had just said? She said, nothing cobber. I told her that her boobs were not as good as the ones of the woman in the toilet across the road. There is no woman in the toilet across the road, she said. Whatever, I replied. I’ve come to renew my passport, I told her. Why, she asked? Why not, I said. I want to know why, she stated? I told her I was off to join the French Foreign Legion. She laughed and said, death wish. I told her she was right.

We sat and waited a good half an hour before a man wearing a pair of black rugby shorts, gumboots and a red and black checked sleeveless Swandri walked up behind me. He said, are you here about the Legion? I said, no, I’m here about the Hari Krishna’s in the square. He laughed and patted me on the head before pushing me out of my wheelchair. I hit the ground face first. My nose started bleeding and the tinnitus in my ear turned up the squeal. He yelled out, there isn’t any square any more. I called him a bastard. He asked me, well what about your father? He’s a Hari Krishna in the French Foreign Legion, I said. The man sniffed and beckoned me into his office. I got back into my wheelchair and pushed myself into his room. There were four sheep in one corner eating a bale of hay. The sheep had left their little black poohs littered all over his office. The room stunk sour. I asked him if he wouldn’t mind opening a window? He said, that’s going to cost ya. How much, I asked? About four hundred dollars, he replied. Okay, I said, don’t worry about the window, I would prefer to smell sheep shit than your shit. I leaned into his desk and told him, the real reason I’m here is for a passport renewal. He laughed and told me that he couldn’t renew my old one because it had expired. Well, I said, can I buy a new one then? That’s going to cost you four hundred dollars too, he said. What is everything here four hundred dollars, I asked? He said, everything but the sheep shit. I asked why, is that more?

He went off to some room behind him and came back out with a game of Twister. He laid it out on the floor, spun the dial and told me, if you can beat me I’ll give you your passport for free. What’s that got to do with the price of chips, I asked him? The price of tits, he asked? No, I said, the price of chips… tits are free these days, I’ve already seen two sets today. I asked him if I could have a new passport now? What for again, he asked? I told him to stop jerking me around. Ok, he said, I’m sorry; I’ve been having a bad day. So have I, I said. I went to hop on a plane and was told I was four years too late. The man winked at me. Please don’t do that, I told him. Do what, he asked as he winked at me again. That, I said. He winked again and asked what? What you’re doing, I said firmly. I’m not doing anything, he said, I’m waiting for you to give me five hundred dollars so I can give you a new passport. I thought you said four hundred dollars, I said. He sniffed loudly and winked at me again. I told you to stop that, I said. Stop what, he asked? Stop winking, I screamed at him. He smiled and said, I’m not winking I’m blinking. Do you only blink at the end of each sentence out of one eye, I asked him. Yes, he said as he winked at me again. All of you should be locked up in an asylum, I told him. All of us, he asked? All of you but the topless wahine in the lobby, I told him. What topless wahine, he asked? Ok, I said, I’m ready for a game of Twister.

The man reached under his desk and pulled up a dark (well it wasn’t really dark, but it wasn’t really light either, it was a cross between dark and light) blue chilly bin. He pulled out two cans of Canterbury Draught and slammed them on his desk. He pointed to them and said, the first one to skull his gets his passport for free. Don’t you have a passport, I asked him? No, I swim home, he said. He looked me in the eye and said, are you ready? You slammed the cans, I said, the beer will be too frothy. He grinned and said one… two… three… fou… I picked my can off his desk, pulled the ring tab and started swallowing. Beer froth spilled out the corners of my mouth. He was halfway through shouting the word, Hey, before I’d finished mine. I slammed my empty can on his desk and wiped my mouth with my other hand. The can crumpled under the pressure. You cheated, he screamed. No, I said, I pre-empted. That’s the same as cheating he said. No, I said, that’s the same as clairvoyance. I knew you would come in here today, he said. Crystal ball, I asked? No, he said, I’ve got crystal balls. Well what about my passport, I asked? Can you look inside your pants and tell me my chances? I don’t have to, he said, I already know. And, I asked? Maybe, maybe not, he replied. All I came in here for was a passport, I whined, and you people keep fucking with me. Do you mind, he asked? I’d prefer to be fucked by the topless wahine in the lobby, I replied.

The man snorted and coughed up a big light green piece of phlegm. He spat it on his desk between us. You just spat on your own desk, I told him. So, he said, it’s my desk. You’re right, I said. I know I’m right, he said, I always am right. I’m bored, I said, I came in here for a passport and all I’ve seen are topless women and your phlegm. What would you rather see? A passport so I could get the fuck out of here, you people are crazy. We’re crazy, he asked, you turned up to the airport four years late and you have the gall to call us crazy? That’s right, I drawled. Okay, he said, give me a minute and I’ll see what I can rustle up. He left the office and was gone for five minutes. I looked at the pictures on his wall. My favourite was a photo behind his desk of a large ram with it’s back to the camera. It had a huge set of wrinkled balls that hung almost all the way down to the ground. He came back in to the office with a pile of papers. There would have been at least four hundred sheets of A4. He stacked them between us and said, you’re going to be here a while. Do I have to fill all of those in, I asked him? No, he said, the first three hundred are photos my mate took of the topless women who uses the toilet across the road. What do I want to see those for, I asked? They’re not for you to look at, they’re for me to look at, he said. Can I just have my hundred to fill in, I asked? When I’ve finished looking at my three hundred, he replied. I snorted and spat a big piece of brown phlegm on his desk. Hey, he shouted, that’s my desk! I told him I knew.

The door to his office suddenly burst open. The hinge on the top of the door splintered away from the frame. Two guards stood in the doorjamb holding big bags of paua. The biggest of the guards looked at the man behind the desk, pointed at me and said, is this the man bro? The man behind the desk said, look at him; he’s not a man he’s in a wheelchair, he’s only half a man. The guard said no that’s not what I meant. I meant is this the man who was sexually harassing the woman behind the desk? The way he said the word desk made it sound like he had said disk. I turned to face the guard. He was twice the size of me. The man behind the desk said, this is the man and this man is being a nuisance. I turned and told the guard that the incident at the desk had been a simple misunderstanding. He smiled at me. He didn’t have any teeth. He said, there is no such thing as a simple misunderstanding. He said, it would be simple if there were no misunderstanding. Are you a scholar, I asked? I’m not giving you a dollar, he shouted at me. I didn’t ask you for a dollar, I asked if you were a scholar. He turned to his mate and said, listen to this Pakeha; now he wants two dollars. Listen mate I don’t want any money from you. I actually came in here to give YOU guys some money. How much have you got, he asked, how much are you going to give me? I didn’t mean you, I said, I meant that I came in here to give some money to get a new passport. Are you a Kiwi, he asked? Yes, I said. How did you get here in the first place, he asked? I told him I swam. He said, bullshit. Ok, I said, I actually gave some ducks some stale jam sandwiches and got them to fly me over here. Ok, he said, now I believe you. He picked me up out of my wheelchair and threw me into another office. There was a lady with hairy legs sitting behind a desk. That’s not fair, I said. What, she asked? Your legs are hairier than mine, I replied. You should shave them, she said, that would make them hairier. You’re the one that should shave your legs, I replied.

I spent half of a day, almost twelve hours in the New Zealand passport office slowly devolving into madness. Just for the record I am already mad but I spent half a day devolving into their kind of madness. I rang the airline of the flight I had missed and the person who answered the telephone only laughed at me. They laughed so hard that they must have pissed their pants. When they’d finished laughing I asked them if I could buy a new ticket to get back to Christchurch? They said yes, but it will cost you five thousand dollars. I told them I had expected as much. Okay, they said, it’s now gone up to six thousand dollars. I had learned from my mistake so kept my mouth shut and just gave them my credit card details. The person on the phone asked if I had any luggage to take on board? Yes, I said. Any sheep, they asked? No, I said, just a topless wahine sitting on a rock, a ram with balls hanging down to the ground, three hundred photos of a topless woman playing with her breasts in a toilet, an empty crushed can of Canterbury Draught, a man who won’t stop winking and a Hari Krishna in the French Foreign Legion. The person on the phone said, all right buster, the ticket’s now seven thousand dollars. Ok, I said, do you accept New Zealand Express. They said no but they would accept a photo of the ram’s balls as payment. I told them I was putting it in an envelope.

I arrived at Mascot and wheeled up to the gate with my favourite carer. I thanked her for wasting her day with me. She said it was okay. I told her that I couldn’t believe she had been and was so nice to me. She told me that I was nice to her in return. I don’t think I am that nice. I feel like I owe her now. My favourite carer stayed with me until she was sure I would not get lost and was positioned right in front of the departure gate. She gave me a big hug (just what I needed) as she left. I flew Big Bird. Each seat on the plane had a set of peddles in front of it. I looked out the window and saw paper propellers. I told the stewardess that my legs didn’t work. Okay, she said, your arms do, you can shovel coal into the boiler. Ok, I said, that’s better than shoveling shit. By the time I arrived in Christchurch I was covered in dust from the coal.

I smoke. My mother and her partner don’t but they said it would be okay if I smoked in their driveway. I was sitting in my wheelchair having my fifth smoke for the day when I saw a naked man running down the cul-de-sac towards me. He was old. As he got closer I saw his face was a bright pink. He ran right up to me and asked, do you know how they made Lake Wakatipu? Lake Wakatipu wasn’t made, I said, it was formed hundreds of millions, or billions of years ago. No it wasn’t, he said, I saw it being made. Ok, I said, how was it made? The Japanese, he screamed! The Japanese, I asked? Yes, he said, I watched them. They all formed a circle and pissed in the hole. Really, I asked? Yep, he said. Can I ask you a question, I enquired? Go for it, he said. How come there’s no competition here? There’s plenty of competition, he said, there’s the rugby and the cricket and the sailing and the rugby league and the hockey to name a few. No, I said, I didn’t mean that I meant for products. I passed a service station before and they were charging fifteen dollars a litre for unleaded petrol and I went to the supermarket and there was only one brand of deodorant. With no competition it becomes a monopoly. I prefer Operation or the Game of Life, he said. I asked him what he meant? He said, as opposed to Monopoly. I’m not good at that game, he said, I always blow all my money buying Mayfair. The porno, I asked? No, he said, the street on the board game. I’m not talking about the board game, I told him; I’m talking about a free market. I’ve never heard of that game, he said. It’s not a game, well it might be to traders, but do you mind paying world market price for everything and having only one brand to choose from, I asked? What choice do I have, he said? He was right. Do you want to borrow some clothes, I asked him? No, he said, but could I borrow four hundred dollars? I told him, no, bugger off. He turned around and I watched his skinny white bum wobble away from me back up the cul-de-sac.

I don’t know who I’m angriest at, my #, the ^ in New Zealand or myself? I’m probably angriest with myself for believing/trusting my #. They had arranged for the ^ to assess my mum’s house to make sure that it was wheelchair accessible. I was told that it was. It wasn’t. It isn’t. I’d asked my Australian # to arrange a commode chair with an opening on the right hand side for manual evacuation. Manual evacuation means sticking a finger in my bum to pull the poohs out if the enema won’t get them out. When I got here I found the commode chair had no opening on the right hand side and the hole for my bum to hang through was no bigger than a fifty-cent piece. My poohs are sometimes bigger than a can of tennis balls. More importantly the doorway to the bathroom is too small to fit my wheelchair through. I’ve been going for a shit in the bed that I’m using and I’ve been wiping my arse with the sheets. I’ve been pissing in the corner of the room I’m staying in and spraying it with air freshener afterwards. The corner of the room is getting damp and mouldy and there are big red toadstools with white dots on them growing there. I asked my mum to cook them up for breakfast for me. She told me that she wouldn’t because the toadstools were poisonous. I told her I didn’t care. She said, all right then, and asked me how I would like them prepared. I told her to sauté them in a little butter. I’ll let you know how they taste.

I’ve only been here three days as I write this. I’ve only been here three days and so far I’ve eaten more red meat than I have in the last ten years. I turned on the telly last night. There are only three channels. I turned the television on at seven-thirty (prime-time) and flicked around the channels. One station was playing Open all Hours. The next was playing Only Fools and Horses and the other was playing The Billy T James Show. New Zealand is the land that time forgot. I saw a boy riding a Moa to school yesterday and today I saw a young boy flying a kite standing next to a girl flying a Pterodactyl with a piece of rope around it.

Oh yeah, I don’t think I even told you why I came to New Zealand. I came here for my mum who is getting remarried. I met my father while I’ve been here and even he has a new partner. I am happy for my mum and my dad. They have both got new partners. They are both happy with new partners, new friends and new lives. They got a chance to turn around. I met and went on what I thought was a date with a woman before I left Sydney to come to Christchurch. All throughout our date she kept mentioning some man called Richard. I eventually asked her, who’s this Richard you keep mentioning? Is he your brother? No, she said, Richard’s my boyfriend. She stole the smile from my face. She stole the smile from my heart. I sat and wondered why she had come out for dinner with me when she had a boyfriend sitting at home waiting for her? I sat and wondered if I would ever be happy again? Everybody gets a chance to turn around. Everybody gets a chance to turn around but me.

Andrew Stuart Buchanan