The Strange Truth About Us

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The Strange Truth About Us Page 8

by M. A. C. Farrant


  — So. The steel door shuts behind you.

  — It slammed. The steel door slams behind us.

  — All right. Slams. Then what?

  — We set up camp.

  — On the other side of the door.

  — Yes.

  — The whole thing begs credulity. You call yourselves explorers and yet you don’t move five feet beyond the steel door?

  — Well, no. We were busy making base camp. We put up the tent. Tethered the mules. Brought out the folding canvas chairs. Then I made notes in my journal. My companion set up his easel.

  — Don’t say it. He was working in oils.

  — Water colour. He did a rather deft likeness of our surroundings.

  — Deft likeness ...?

  — It’s a phrase explorers use. He called the picture Journey to the Unknown Regions of the Extreme Outside.

  — So there you are sitting on the other side of the steel door writing in your journal while your companion executes his deft likeness.

  — Yes.

  — What did you write about?

  — You can have my journal. Everything’s in there.

  — We’d rather hear it from you. If you don’t mind.

  — Well, the first thing I wrote about was hanging a net from one of the mule’s saddlebags. My idea was to capture the insects.

  — There were insects.

  — There seemed to be. There was a loud and pervasive insect buzz. We couldn’t see them. Only hear the noise. I wanted to catch the insects so I could identify them.

  — And you found?

  — Nothing. After my companion completed his picture he used the loudness meter to measure the sound of the buzz. It came in at 28.6 which is high but well within international standards. Then he used the transducer prism and discovered the sound was not insect buzz at all but amplified silence. Which explains why the net remained empty.

  — There were no insects.

  — No. No insects. But there was multi-directional wind and the colour of the sky was strange. My companion painted the sky the colour of concrete.

  — How long into your expedition were you at this point?

  — Forty-seven minutes.

  — So all you discovered in forty-seven minutes was that the extreme outside is silent. Didn’t the wind make any noise?

  — No, the wind was silent.

  — Okay. As you say. What about the terrain?

  — It was made up of rocks varying in size from small stones to boulders. All the surfaces appeared to be covered with a white knobbly material.

  — And the vista?

  — It stretched unimpeded to the horizon in all directions so that the effect was like being in the centre of a white saucer.

  — What did you make of that?

  — That human beings are indeed the centre of the universe, even the universe of the extreme outside.

  — What about the steel door? Where was it?

  — In the centre of the saucer with us.

  — Carry on.

  — Using a penknife I then gathered particles from the ground cover and mixed them with the bottled water we’d brought. The mixture turned out to be plaster of Paris.

  — The material used for making moulds.

  — Yes. This fact scared us, and also the fact that the plaster appeared to be the quick-drying kind. We became careful not to spill water or urinate near our feet or the feet of the mules. We feared the environment might be a hostile one.

  — This fact never occurred to you before you went through the steel door?

  — No.

  — What was your companion doing while you made the plaster of Paris?

  — Preparing lunch. Mushroom omelettes. Greens in vinaigrette. White wine. He’d unpacked the China and silverware and the Primus stove from our luggage.

  — And after lunch?

  — We napped. Then we recorded the wind velocity which remained fairly steady at 4071, gusting to 4083.5. It was then my companion noticed the sky was staining.

  — Staining?

  — Looking wet. Like stains on concrete.

  — What time was this?

  — About two hours into the expedition.

  — And that was when?

  — Yes. We noticed that ours and the mule’s exhalations of carbon dioxide began turning into clouds of vapour. Small cirrus-like clouds began forming about our persons and about the mules. The clouds were quite incredible. They had a blue and gold tinge around the edges and were beautiful to look at. They shimmered.

  — Was this when you started banging on the steel door?

  — Not then. My companion began work on another picture, this one in oils. He was captivated by the clouds. He called them sublime.

  — Sublime. And you?

  — I became excited. Not so much because of the clouds, but because the longer we remained in the extreme outside the larger our personal clouds became and the smaller we appeared in relation to them and to our surroundings. It was as if we were shrinking as the vapour around us expanded. I said to my companion, Hold on! There might be a theory and an equation here!

  — When did the rain start?

  — Right about then. It happened suddenly. There was no lead up of singular drops. It was as if a switch had been flipped. It was a light though steady downpour. I didn’t get a chance to figure out an equation.

  — And the banging on the door started then.

  — Yes. Because the rain and our vapour clouds combined to liquefy the plaster of Paris surface. Then the wind whipped it about. We had to keep moving so we wouldn’t harden in place.

  — How long did you and your companion bang on the steel door before you were rescued?

  — A long time. Maybe thirty minutes. Meanwhile the rain stopped and everything around us was rapidly hardening. We were near exhaustion. Finally, we thought to use the wooden tent poles, our fists being useless. That’s what caused you to hear us.

  — And the mules?

  — We lost them. They were covered in white plaster of Paris by then. But we could hear them braying faintly. It was awful. Soon after they became boulders.

  — You must realize how lucky you are to be rescued.

  — We do.

  — It wasn’t an easy operation. Heavy equipment had to be used. The plaster of Paris had to be pulverized around your persons. You were already hardening in place. Your companion had fallen ...

  — We’re very grateful.

  — We will confiscate your journal and your companion’s two pictures, of course. Besides your selves, that’s all that survived the expedition.

  — Of course. Take them.

  — For obvious reasons.

  — Yes.

  — And you will forget about the steel door and what you saw on the other side of it.

  — We will.

  — If any mention is ever made ...

  — We understand. And we’re sorry. We don’t want to go there ever again. It was the worst experience of our lives. We’d rather remain in the familiar world. We don’t want to be in a world made up of silence, rocks, and vapour. And we hate plaster of Paris.

  — Good.

  — We have one last question, though. Is the extreme outside where you put criminals and dead people?

  — A question like that will jeopardize your rescue.

  — You mean we shouldn’t ask such questions?

  — That is correct.

  — Ever?

  — Never. Do you agree?

  — We do. As we said, we don’t want to go through the steel door again. We’ll never ask another question.

  — All right then. We believe you. Yours and your companion’s stuffed moose are waiting for you in the anteroom.

  — Thank you. We’re really grateful.

  — You can count your blessings.

  — We do. We will.

  — Then we’ll call in the birds to sing do-wop. You’d like that, wouldn’t you?

  — We would!

&
nbsp; — Here they are now. They’ve come to close the pages of your story ...

  d.

  Woman Interviews Self with Reference to Stories

  — Where does it come from?

  — What?

  — Your peculiar slant.

  — Well, according to my sister I arrived late. That’s how she explains it.

  — What sister?

  — My twin sister. I emerged six years after her. There was something like a fallen tree blocking my exit.

  — You’re making that up.

  — Everyone lost their minds when they heard this. It was fantastic.

  — I didn’t know you had a twin sister.

  — She goes ahead like a scout, reports back.

  — A fabrication.

  — The other thing is that early on she looked in my mouth and said you’ve got a waterfall in there, no wonder your slant is peculiar.

  — A waterfall.

  — It’s given me no end of trouble.

  — How so?

  — Tilt and pitch. Slope. Declination.

  — You’re still making things up.

  — It’s still fantastic. Well, some of the time.

  Acknowledgments

  I would like to express my deep gratitude to Karl Siegler for his continuing support of my writing and for his thoughtful editing of this book.

  The cover painting, Interstate 5, is by Gertrude Pacific of Sechelt, British Columbia, and was inspired by the gas shortage of the early 1970s. It is used with permission and thanks.

  “A Serious Story,” “What Mattered,” “Along the Way,” and “The Outlook for Quirky” first appeared in Geist magazine, with thanks to editor Mary Schendlinger. “The North Pole” first appeared in Down the Road to Eternity: New and Selected Fiction, edited by Karl Siegler (Talonbooks, 2009).

  Thank you to the Canada Council and the British Columbia Arts Council for grants received and to the respective juries for their votes of confidence.

  About the Author

  M.A.C. Farrant is the author of ten collections of satirical and philosophical short fiction, a novel-length memoir, My Turquoise Years, and a book of essays, The Secret Lives of Litterbugs, which was nominated for the 2010 Victoria Butler Book Prize.

  Previous award nominations for Farrant’s work include the Commonwealth Writer’s Prize, the BC Book Prizes, the Vancity Book Prize, the National Magazine Award, the CBC Literary Award, and the Gemini Award for the screen adaptation of her story “Rob’s Guns & Ammo.” She has also been the recipient of numerous Canada Council and BC Arts Council writing grants.

  A full-time writer currently residing in North Saanich, British Columbia, she reviews books for the Vancouver Sun and the Globe & Mail, has taught writing at the University of Victoria, and will be on the faculty at the Banff Writing Studio in 2012. Farrant’s work is infused with acerbic wit and iconoclastic innovation. As the Globe & Mail has noted, “Farrant is better at startling us with unnerving, often misanthropic, visions of everyday life than perhaps any other Canadian writer.”

  OTHER BOOKS BY M.A.C. FARRANT

  Down the Road to Eternity: New and Selected Fiction*

  The Secret Lives of Litterbugs

  The Breakdown So Far*

  My Turquoise Years

  Darwin Alone in the Universe*

  Girls Around the House

  What’s True, Darling

  Word of Mouth

  Altered Statements

  Raw Material

  Sick Pigeon

  *Available from Talonbooks

  Copyright © 2011 M.A.C. Farrant

  Talonbooks

  P.O. Box 2076

  Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6B 3S3

  www.talonbooks.com

  First printing: 2011

  Cover painting: Interstate 5 by Gertrude Pacific

  Cover design by Adam Swica

  The publisher gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the Canada Council for the Arts; the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund; and the Province of British Columbia through the British Columbia Arts Council and the Book Publishing Tax Credit for our publishing activities.

  No part of this book, covered by the copyright hereon, may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic, or mechanical—without prior permission of the publisher, except for excerpts in a review. Any request for photocopying of any part of this book shall be directed in writing to Access Copyright (The Canada Copyright Licensing Agency), 1 Yonge Street, Suite 800, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5E 1E5; Tel.: (416) 868-1620; Fax: (416) 868-1621.

  Cataloguing Data Available from Library and Archives Canada

  ISBN: 978-0-88922-734-7

 

 

 


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