The calm shadow sauntered behind him and he could feel the
angle where the imposing presence stood. It would be just behind his earlobe
five paces from him to the right of an acute angle. He could not hear its
footsteps as if the ghoul was walking on a soft fluffy carpet that could tapper
off even the noisiest clatter. Should he turn and come face to face with the
moving figure, an anxiety of imminent danger seized him. And he turned too
quickly to face the assailing motion. And he was alone. The room stretched into
corners away from his sight like a cubicle suddenly filed with tense air but
vividly empty.
Its an anxiety that has been seizing upon him lately. Like
the pain of his arthritis fingers he can sense it tearing through his tendons
clamping around every joint like a drawing curtain of pain, stiff and rigid
searing. When he was younger he could bear pain, he could transform it like
darts of acupuncture and distribute it so the level of intensity would ebb into
waves and wash away. But not anymore, pain perspired him, made little tears at
the edge of his eyes and left him breathless.
When he was younger he could do a lot of things. He could
chase the anxiety following syllables and pictures on a mobile phone every ten
minutes or so trying to catch moments captured every second and prismed through
their likeness to each other than anything else, fed behind by a computer
formula written by a regretting scientist. It kept the Quylph away, or just at
bay long enough that he would fix himself on the dark screen all day afraid to
look away or he would face the medusa who would turn him to stone.
But he had exorcised the gadgets since it had given him a
twitching hip, some form of cancer that migrated in his body like nomads
chasing seasons and cleaved a layer of blindness when he was barely old. He had
built castles in the air to replace his docile life, a house of cards, a story
line but all that came crushing as the façade fell apart.
The peace he had anticipated would be as calm as the sea
drawn and humming in a clam sunlit day. But what he got was the harsh rough
tempest of stormy anxiety, his patience rocking violently as if he was
anticipating something. Waiting for the purr of vibrating pheromone that never
came. He would move his hand to his pocket to fish out the phone but it was not
there and he would search for it frantically at first until his frail mind
would snap back and realize he no longer had it. Then Quylph would giggle just
behind his head where he could not frame the amorphous edges.
Age counts down memories like a school kid on a chalkboard,
starts very fast until it gets to a point when the numbers get fuzzy
repetitive, boring and it cannot wait for death. Is the Quylph his angel of
death waiting for him to stare at depths of darkness before finishing him off? Toying
with his conscience like a satisfied cat with a mouse. He tries to remember
when he first noticed the unacknowledged presence at his side. Was it when he
was a child talking to his imaginary friend that Quylph had grown from his head
to take an unwavering presence. Had he created him in his image like a god and
given him form and emotions. All he knew is that Quylph came and went at his
bidding often when he became intensely lonely or anxious, or too happy that it
would remind him of the impending loneliness or anxiety. He knew its presence
when he felt shivering cold. Goosebumps would crescendo over his skin and his
balls would shrivel and itch. The film of atmosphere would fall over him so
heavily he felt like Atlas holding his world by the shoulders but collapsing
beneath the pressure. Then he would crave reassurance, her warm hand on his
nape, the edges of her nails against his aroused skin. But then instead the Quylph
would make a sudden rushed movement, and he would realize he was not only alone
but being jested.
He tries to move but there is a stiffness in his hip, he has
to use a lot of effort, if he could only get to the window and stare outside,
his loneliness would go away. He craves the tangy taste of alcohol at this time
but he knows his liver cannot take anything more than water. In those younger
days he could plunge at Quylph’s obstinacy with enough alcohol to blur his
senses. In its retreat he would be a murderous god impressed at the demise of
his creation and gloat powerfully to his inviolability. But now his mind is a
maze that requires distraction, anything but the emptiness inside and around
him, a song would do it. A slow monotone Somali dirge maybe, strum oud and sung
poetry flashes incomprehensible images of the past so attached to some
forgotten importance. But first he has
to reach the end of the room and the radio, maybe have to tune it knob by knob.
He had lived most of his younger life without the need for a radio, maybe in
the car where it boomed from a memory stick or listened to online music from
home fibre. But he had exorcised that too, the wifi wavelength twisted his head
and confused him. He had to search for months to get a transistor radio. He
finally got one, a medium range cackling Chinese box that caught static rather
than sound waves. He would rather get to the window and stare outside, maybe he
will see a bird today.
It first started with bees, when he was young he used to
catch the buzzing little things dangling from flower to flower mating inside
the chemise of gaudy petals and extracting ambrosia. Maybe the flowers went
first or the bees followed. Maybe the burrowing bumble bees followed suit. Then
the spotted red tortoise shell of the ladybird or its food the arachnid went
first. Maybe the ants went too and so did the millipede. He had not noticed,
having grown up he had not checked beneath rocks or tussled bushes looking for
interesting things. He had grown bipedal with age staring straight at worldly
worries. When the he stepped off the rat race bent by age he had stared at the
ground and found it inanimate. The pellets of sand stood motionless like
sentries and nothing else moved. The manicured synthetic grass looked like a
football pitch in greenery and thickness but nothing moved in between them.
Where had all those animals gone too.
And the birds, he remembered fondly the sole parrot he had
known as a child which used to live in one of his neighbours houses. What was
his name? he cannot recall. The parrot would repeat everything you said, unless
it was grumpy and would just mockingly stare at the children who coaxed it,
begged it to say even a single word. He had hoped to own a parrot when he grew
up, a talking companion. It would have been nice to have one now, he could
speak his memories and it would repeat as though understanding, sharing his
loneliness. But they had just vanished. So did the noisy gaudy weaverbirds, the
pointy heron, the dashing flamingo, the cooing pigeon, the Superb Starling, the
stocky egret. Did they disappear all of a sudden like a sudden migration or had
they succumbed one by one to a mysterious fate. If only he could have his
laptop here and internet, he would google. Gone in space and time but preserved
in 1s and 0s of the master internet.
Everything could be found on the internet during the good
days that there was no time to look at the real things. Reality shifted in
dimensions so quickly that no one noticed. You could go on a fantastic holiday
through virtual reality, see every nook and crack of every corner of this
world. You could buy anything without having to find where that thing was or
came from. You could meet everyone without touching them and they would come
alive in high definition hologram. Everything was possible without doing
anything. You could be a pilot and fly simulation and soar the skies. Every now
and then some new challenge would be designed and it would be repeated,
perfected and evolved until the whole world had managed the trick like
choreography before anew distraction was found. He lived for the rate race,
getting ahead of the curve, the best picture glossed over like a painter, heck
you could take the talents of Leonardo da Vinci and make Monalisa from the
gadget.
So he created himself in his own image. Let there be light,
on the front and back camera. Let there be a dome to divide the water and to
keep it in two separate places where one would be for the public gallery and
the other for withdrawn depression and anxiety of relative deprivation. Let the
water below the sky come together in one place, so that the land will appear,
like a footnote on an instagram photo complete with search engine optimized hashtag.
Let the earth produce all kinds of likes, those that bear shares and those that
bear retweets. Let night vision appear in the sky to replicate day at night. And
now we will make human beings; they will be like us and resemble us.
In all this the Quylph kept tapping at his shoulder whenever
he got too immersed into the trend as if trying to remind him of something
important. He turned and saw nothing.
The emptiness stared back and there was truth in it. There were
victims of his make believe, real and imagined. She was his biggest victim created
for the public zoo where he had built his tyranny and power over her like a
scientific experiment. His double life mirrored the desire to appeal to the gallery
and the haunting call of the Quylph to aspire to be true to self.
“Was God’s error in creating human in an image that craves
creation?” Quylph asks.