by Kim Farleigh
James was beside me in
the van, whisper-hissing: “Idiot. Jeeessuzzz.....”
The driver was talking to
a guy whose head was covered by a red-and-white scarf, a guy
clutching an AK-47, a faceless being, with a gun, beside the driver’s
window, talking to the driver.
“Idiot,” James
hissed, strongly and very quietly.
Julian, facing the
windscreen, feigning arm-stretched relaxation, resembled a statue
facing the world.
“Jeesuzzzz.....,”
James hissed.
The only things moving in
the van were the driver’s hands and lips; and James’s lips that
whispered: “Idiot!”
Because God wasn’t an
objective fact, I had nothing to appeal to, my real magnitude
becoming apparent: I hardly existed. The bloated ball of so-called
awareness that usually floated behind my eyes had contracted into a
microscopic dot in a vast moment housed in by blurred edges. There
was nothing but nothingness in my insect vision.
We should not have been
in that petrol station. We should have been charging down the highway
between Baghdad and Amman. We should not have stopped anywhere. We
should have been flying down that long, straight road, flying back
into the world. But the driver, who didn’t speak English, had other
plans. He should not have had those other plans. But he had those
other plans.
Shrinking into a
microscopic dot, I felt no past or future. There was only a moment –
one that could last forever.
Chemicals, never before
produced, surged up my veins, swirling from my feet, exploding in my
head.
John was slumped against
a door on the middle seat. He was trying to look as small as he felt.
He and I had closed the curtains that covered our windows as the van
had stopped on the end of a queue of cars that were waiting to fill
up. We should not have been in that queue. We should have been moving
at top speed down an asphalt vein of pure directness. We should not
have been stopping for anything.
“For fuck sake,”
James hissed, the driver talking and talking to a gun-wielding being
that had no face.
Unshaven men were
wandering around between the cars that sat in unmoving queues.
Nothing was moving except those men and the driver’s hands and
lips. The cars just sat still. Between the cars, unshaven faces with
guns, roamed, like bandits in a concrete oasis of fuel.
An electron microscope
would have struggled to have located my bloated ball. We were
supposed to be charging down a long, straight road. We weren’t
supposed to be in that petrol station. We were supposed to be flying
along the long, straight road that past by this petrol station on its
way into Amman’s pleasant restraint.
The driver’s hands,
after flying up with mysterious exasperation, grabbed the steering
wheel and we reversed, spinning around, reaching the long, straight
road, hearing a loud, flat, hollow wallop without pitch, a sick
coughing of noise, our heads looking around, searching for damage,
Julian turning and saying: “A car back-firing,” Julian adding:
“He was trying to buy cheap petrol, probably to sell in Jordan,”
all of us yelling: “A car back-firing!”
We fled down the highway
into the desert, the dot expanding into a ball of light, floating air
that fled across the world’s dish, flying out past the horizon’s
clear edges, spilling over the world’s lip, expanding at tremendous
speed into the immense, blue heavens, quickly occupying the
incalculable space of an interminable future.
James’s
dozing head, resting on our backrest, started lolling around in
oblivious unconsciousness, a head without a care.
Kim
has worked for aid agencies in three conflicts: Kosovo, Iraq and
Palestine. He takes risks to get the experience required for writing.
He likes fine wine, art, photography and bullfighting, which probably
explains why this Australian lives in Madrid. 72 of his stories have
been accepted by 65 different magazines.
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