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Current mood:  amused Category: Writing and Poetry
I'm not the kind of person to disclaim my writing, or my words, or my
actions, however it's always nice to introduce a story with something
completely irrelevant.
Birk is a young man with a different perspective on reality. Our world to him is but a shell for the real universe.
Birks Works
Part 1
Birk came up with the perfect response three days late. A day earlier
than usual. He found himself happy smiling because he was getting
better, much better. He looked forward to the future when he would know
how to respond in but a few hours.
He closed his eyes, wishing he'd never opened them. The gray light of
the day swept through the shades he had forgotten to shut the night
before and reminded him of the unfiltered light in a gas station
restroom.
It wasn't that he didn't like restrooms in gas stations. Birk often
compared gas station restrooms to great oases in the scorpion filled
deserts of modern transportation. He reflected that it was unfortunate
how often he died in his imaginary desert and with a shudder imagined
scorpions smiling as they danced on the dried out husk of his corpse.
Birk stumbled out of bed and made the decision to open his eyes.
Oh, he wouldn't fall on the rusty spikes just yet, he would make sure
his underwear had no holes that were not supposed to be there. He
always listened to his mother. "If you go to the hospital and need
professional medical attention, be it from a car accident, an incident
involving pizza that was too hot, random panther attack, or even
falling on the rusty yet unnaturally sharp spikes in your bedroom, a
well-to-do woman doctor just might be the one fixing the broken and
twisted wreckage of your mangled body. In fact, she just may take a
liking to you while she was at it. Well, Birk darling, it wouldn't do
to be wearing old underwear full of holes and unsightly stains."
Birk always remembered things. Things like brushing his teeth at night
and sometimes in the morning if he wasn't in too much of a hurry. Also
things like it was good to have both of his socks either right side in
or inside out, but not mixed. Birk remembered a lot of things, even the
mean length of the little metal whiskets that happened to fall off
street cleaners when they brushed up too close to the curb. No one
seemed to care about the little metal whiskets, but Birk knew them
well. Birk collected them and had many uses for them.
Birk looked around for a couple of socks that were the same color and not inside out.
After Birk dressed and managed to escape piercing himself on the rusty
spikes, he picked up the three cactus plants he'd been growing since
the week before and moved them to the other side of his room. Next to
the rusty spikes, the plants looked much more at home, and almost like
they had found a brown inanimate friend to laugh at. Birk would have to
chat with them about that later.
He did morning things and then left the house with only a slight wave
good-bye. The special pink morning rock in the rock garden seemed to be
smiling at him and Birk stopped for a moment.
"Hello rock. Today I'll speak to the evening rock, but not the
afternoon rock. I have a special meeting this afternoon. I'll need good
luck in my meeting, so I'm wishing you good morning. Since I like good
luck, as you well know, I wish you good morning every morning, but
today is special. I'll give you the good morning greeting with double
power since I'm not going to give a good afternoon to the afternoon
rock. I hope it understands that it's nothing personal." Birk waited,
but the rock said nothing. Birk actually didn't expect it to say
anything. It wasn't even seven in the morning yet.
Part 2
Birk thought about the afternoon rock as he walked to the bus stop. He
never really liked the afternoon rock, but what could he do? He'd been
pretending for several years, and it would be awkward to suddenly tell
the afternoon rock after all this time, "Believe me, it's nothing that
you did. It's what I've done. I simply don't deserve a rock like you.
I'm not worth it. It has to end now, for us both, before it lands us on
rocky shores... no pun intended."
On the bus Birk sat next to an elderly woman who didn't like the way
Birk smelled. "You should blow your nose young man and you'd be able to
breathe better."
Birk didn't believe in blowing his nose. After he was dead, his nostril
tissues would have plenty of time to be destroyed by more natural
causes than blowing. And he wasn't very good at it. Sometimes he would
miss.
The elderly woman knew none of this, and Birk opted not to tell her.
She was annoyed at Birk's unresponsiveness. "You should answer when
your elders speak to you, young man." Birk said, "I think you have
something in your nose."
When Birk left the bus he was happy.
He stood on the concrete of a cracked and dusty sidewalk bordering the
sand of an ocean beach. It was not a very big beach, but it was big
enough. Birk glanced.
He strode with a purpose through the parking lot and walked carefully
down some faded beach logs to the shore. He found a sand magnet and
picked his way among the spit of boulders that made it up. He waved to
a stray piece of kelp, then crossed to the other side and jumped off.
Birk glanced again, this time in joyous rapture. In a state of pure
contentment, he caressed the softly rounded beach rocks he found all
about him.
Weathered by the elements over uncountable years, these rocks were
free. All bright and smoothly rounded, they wandered where they pleased
and then sat with measured determination in their own spots next to
other rocks just as free, creating a wonderfully uniform pattern of
smooth roundness. These rocks were refined. Their neighbors were
refined. These were clearly high class rocks, all different yet the
same. Birk always enjoyed this part of the beach.
He felt mildly guilty about flirting with strangers, but he didn't think the morning rock would be hurt if it never found out.
"My smoothly shaped beach rocks!", Birk said with a lung full of air.
"How I enjoy your eternal presence! The gracious granite, the nefarious
gneiss, brooding basalt, lecherous limestone, and the little pink ones!
Oh is it not enough to just bask in your eternal strength and
fundamentally sound molecular structures? No! No, I say! It is NOT
enough! "
Birk went on for bit, to himself, in his head, knowing all along that
the E.S.P. enabled rocks nearby would pick up on his thoughts and
transmit them to the other less gifted but nonetheless wondererous
rocks also nearby.
Part 3
After Birk left the beach, saddened that he would not be able to return
until the next day but happy in the fact that he had enjoyed himself in
a harmless manner for nearly an hour, he considered for a moment and
then agreed with himself that he would find a bus to continue his
journey for the day.
He later reflected that it was his love of corn dogs that ultimately became his undoing.
Those tender morsels, oh so carefully wrapped in a deep fried golden
brown batter mixture, always different yet lightly crisped with a
delightful and delicate corn flavor. Really, who would have known the
little stick would be rooted so deeply in the dog section?
In his bliss of peeling off the outer pastry layer, he never
anticipated the stick becoming a problem if he ever ate the dog section
at some point in time. And on this day he had not eaten breakfast.
So with much worry and apprehension he bit into the dog section and in
the moment it takes an eye to blink, in the brief span of time between
when the turn signal is on and when it is off, in the micro-moment when
it is just right and when it is too late to go to the bus stop, Birk
knew he had mistaken.
The stick would not go down.
Longwise it would stick in his throat, sideways proved equally awkward,
and the nose option never even crossed his mind. Even if it did, he
wouldn't have acknowledged the thought due to his strong position on
natural nostril habitat and exploration.
Birk had always been close to his nostrils. During his childhood he had
frequently explored their inner depths. He came to think of himself as
an amateur nostril spelunker, or nolunker for those in the nose (a
favorite inside nolunker joke of Birk's). Birk watched in fascination
the professional nolunkers as they would mine the rich depths of their
nostrils in search of the precious emerald treasures that were always
found within. Birk really never came out of the closet with his
nolunking, though, which prevented him from competing at a professional
level. Society still looked upon nolunkers with a certain degree of
disgust, and Birk could ill afford to be looked upon with disgust since
he had so much trouble with society anyway.
Birk put the corn dog stick in his inside jacket pocket to deal with later, and then missed the bus.
The corn dog incident took away forever the three minutes and fifteen
seconds he had needed to be present in the bus stop area when his bus
came. Birk watched it recede in the distance as it followed the road
past three green lights and finally turned right until it was lost to
view forever in a hazy mixture of drooping power lines and old brown
sedans.
The road in front of Birk had the same characteristics of any road.
Some cars went up, and some cars went down. On each side of the road
followed an aged sidewalk with brown sidewalk grass poking out of dirty
sidewalk cracks. Birk sighed. He knew that someday it would come to
this. However, the act of attempting levitation gave him a headache, so
he gave up. Birk knew without even trying that clicking his heels
wouldn't work either. He forgot his red shoes. So he started walking.
Down the street.
Subconsciously Birk knew that walking down the street would be easier
than walking up the street, just as walking south would be easier than
walking north because north is always uphill. Birk didn't know where he
was going, but he picked up a small rock for good luck and started on
his way.
Right at that moment, Birk felt as free as the small pink beach rock he just put in his pocket.
Part 4
As the sun dipped low and began the great escape from the night, and
the night began the great hunt for the sun, Birk also hunted. He had
found another beach, but could not find the sort of rocks he knew so
well. He had found a beach crowded with unsmooth and oddly shaped rocks
that were not at all rounded the way proper beach rocks should be. Birk
was not used to harsh, rough stones such as these. He was not surprised
to encounter aliens, though, being so far away from.
In the darkness, Birk couldn't discern if these new rocks were of
familiar colors, and that fact would be important when deciding if
these were good rocks or bad. Their shapes alone suggested them to be
different in more ways than he had ever foreseen. The smooth round pink
rock, now in Birk's hand, also seemed colorless and bland in the dim
starlight, but Birk knew the rock from memory. A refined and
well-educated rock with an intellect polished by the infinite wisdom of
forever sand.
All around him the crude and primitive rocks on this beach were of a
different sort, inferior, and their asymmetrical unevenness gave Birk
the willies. Birk climbed into a nearby beach tree for safety and fell
asleep.
In the morning Birk felt hungry. He experimented with the corn dog
stick, but without proper study there could be no way of dealing with
it. And perched in a beach tree was no place to conduct a thorough
examination of something as important as that, not before noon at least.
Birk climbed out of the tree and saw the sun return after successfully
evading the hungry night. The night had given up and gone away, and
Birk smiled. The sun would never be outfoxed. Birk privately felt the
sun had created the night just for thrill of the chase, and enjoyed the
unending hunt.
A very bright day, Birk decided, with the sun gleaming and sparkling
and blinding in all directions. He pondered a moment and tried to
recall the last time he saw the sun gleaming and sparkling. Usually it
simply made shadows and melted crayons. Then Birk saw.
The beach sparkled and gleamed and played with the sunlight like a
cosmic ball of yarn, and each of the dull outlines the night before
were now transformed into crystalline masses exploding with light.
Fiery colors flickered and raced back and forth along the beach and
Birk knew without a doubt that he died sometime during the night and
had gone to the Good Place.
People who knew him thought Birk strange, perhaps different in odd
harmless ways, but no one, except maybe for the old woman on the bus,
would call Birk stupid. Once again he proved his unseen observers
correct. He turned around to make sure of his existence and unhappily
saw old brown sedans going up and down the aged beach front road,
birthing small brown dust devils in their wake.
Birk apologized to the rocks. He apologized for his xenophobia the
night before, he apologized for his thoughts of superiority, and he
apologized for not searching hard enough for a standard restroom.
The rocks said nothing in response, and Birk broke down. and took a deep breath.
"In all that people who know about such things believe is holy, forgive me!"
His shout echoed across the parking lot behind him and startled a few
birds who went off to ruin someone else's day. But the rocks remained
silent. Birk couldn't think up any good adjectives to describe quartz
and calcite, so left the beach sobbing and distraught.
The little pink beach rock, so bland and ordinary, lay forgotten in his pocket.
Part 5
Birk rode the buses for most of the day. He enjoyed the brief moments
when a sudden left turn would take him by surprise and he'd fall
sprawling out of his seat while laughing and crying at the same time.
Otherwise he brooded, his time spent pondering rocks, corn dogs, and
things his mother said, and yet he found nothing to explain what had
transpired. And when the elderly woman asked him if he had learned his
manners yet, Birk could only say, "They wouldn't forgive me because I
thought they were terrible once. And now the little round pink ones
aren't as special anymore."
This confirmed the elderly woman's belief that Birk was truly stark raving mad.
Late in the afternoon Birk was forced to leave the bus. After pushing
Birk out, the bus driver said, "This is your stop buddy, like it or
not." Birk turned to the man but he had already closed the door, and
the bus was accelerating down the street, flowing past two green lights
and then stopping briefly at a red before taking a free right turn to
pass from Birk's life for the rest of the day.
Birk stopped in front of his rock garden, shaded and cool, on the way
to the front door. He took out the little round pink rock from his
pocket squatted down to place it next to the morning rock, also pink.
"I brought you a friend."
The afternoon rock looked forlorn, somehow sad. Birk said, "I can't
bring everyone friends. You know that." As usual the afternoon rock
remained silent and closed and all Birk could think to say was, "How am
I supposed to know what's wrong if you don't tell me?" He went inside,
making a mental note to say hello twice to the evening rock once the
sun left on its merry chase.
Birk turned on the television, then turned it off. He did that for
nearly an hour, creating and destroying random pictures that meant
nothing, snickering with glee and inner turmoils all his own. And
another hour of nearly harmless entertainment passed on.
It was not yet time for the evening rock, because the sun hadn't fully
escaped, as if it were waiting for Birk while peeking over the fence of
the horizon to see what he would do.
Birk sharpened his rusty bedroom spikes, scolded the cactus plants
about being nice, and spent some time carefully not falling on anything
sharp on his way down the stairs. The sun had finally gone about the
business of hiding.
Night had taken over the game now and the stars laughed at its
futility, or at Birk. Birk hadn't yet made any decisions about that.
In the dim starlight he scrutinized. His rock garden seemed dark and
absent of color and form. Of course, night had that effect on things.
The small pink rock, the morning rock, and the afternoon rock, they
could have all been conglomerate masses of glacial spankings, embedded
in the ground before him as dark lumps of homogeneous non-interest.
Birk playfully tugged at some extra long hairs poking from his nose,
and glanced as his mind slowly began the process of pondering.
Birk stepped back and glanced again, and the process sped up slightly,
the gears and machinations of his mind smoothing out, and then every
rock in the rock garden looked the same. Birk stepped back, a few
paces, and realized that every rock in every rock garden would look the
same. He forgot about nose hairs.
At a few paces back again, ever rock in every rock garden and beach and
mountain trail would look the same, and then in the morning their full
glory would shine and it would shine because of how different they all
really were. And the sun, triumphant once again in the game, would
smile upon each one as it has throughout time, regardless of shape,
form and color.
Birk lost his balance and fell into the rocks, and this was okay
because in Birk's rock garden there was nothing sharp to fall on.
Birk stood up after a few moments and wondered if he should brush
himself off or brush off the rocks he had been lying on. Normally when
confused in this manner Birk would go to sleep. So he said goodnight to
the afternoon rock, said it twice to the evening rock, then carefully
avoided the spikes on his way to bed.
Birk dreamed while the offspring of the sun laughed and sparkled in the
darkness above and the night gave up the chase for just a little while
to spend a moment pondering the proper method of eating a giant,
cosmic, corn dog.
The End
Copyright © 1996 by Scot Ranney
2:08 AM
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