October 20, 2010

'The Piggery' --- short story

So we just had another '20 Melbourne Writers' workshop. This month the image that we had to use as the starting point was a bonfire in a paddock at dusk, with a black dog running around it. Here's what I came up with:


The Piggery 

“I didn’t even really wanna fucking go. Stu made me. He said ‘Brad, you’ll totally regret it if you don’t.’ Said ‘There aren’t many times in life when tomorrow doesn’t matter one fucking bit.’ When that didn’t work he came round my house and honked the horn on his ute for about five minutes.

“I could tell he was set for a crazy night soon as I stepped out the door. He just had that look in his eyes, y’know? I had to ride in the backseat ‘cause he had a slab next to him in the front. He’d broken it in, as well.

“Mel’d been talking about a bonfire party for weeks, since before our exams even. Everyone from Year 12 was invited, and we all took our textbooks out to her farm, and we made a big-arse pile and lit them on fire. It was pretty cool. The flames got pretty high. Aaron Marshall chucked his graphics calculator on as well, and the plastic stank so bad when it melted. Mel’s dogs were out there running around, but that smell sent them back to their kennels.

“For a while the party wasn’t too bad. Everyone was just wandering around, asking everyone else about their plans and stuff. I’m going to Uni in Melbourne, if I get the marks. I should be alright, I’m not too worried.

“Stu’s fucked. He didn’t study at all. I’m surprised he even bothered to sit the exams. During swotvac he was such a fucking pain in the arse, coming round to my place at all hours. He treated it like a fucking holiday. Dad nearly called the cops on him once when he was sneaking through the garden to my window. Ironic, hey?

“At the moment he’s got some bullshit plan for next year about breeding greyhounds. Before that he was talking about growing dope somewhere up in the Ranges. Next week he’ll be wanting to buy a pub—with what money, who the fuck knows—and the week after he’ll be talking about a plumbing apprenticeship. My prediction? The dole. Course he fucking will. What else is he gonna do?

“Tell you what, I started getting pretty fucking depressed. Nearly everyone I talked to was staying in town. ‘I’m gonna work at Safeway.’ ‘I’m gonna work with my mum at the hairdresser.’ ‘I’m helping my folks on the farm.’

“I’ve wanted to leave this town since forever. I couldn’t believe I was the only one.

“Well, not the only one. I got talking to Lauren Hardingham, and she was doing the same as me. Going to Uni, heading down to Melbourne. I’d never talked to her much, I don’t think we’d ever even had any classes together. It’s a big school, y’know? And, well, she hasn’t got a face that you notice, really. Glasses, and acne, and … well fuck, I’m hardly one to talk.

“But yeah, she wasn’t drinking much either, and we moved away from the fire to where it was a bit quieter. We … we talked about books, mostly. She’s read more Stephen King than I have, I couldn’t believe it. We got arguing about whether the film of The Shining is better than the book. She knows Kubrick as well. Awesome.

“Then I told her about how, for my seventeenth birthday, my folks had sent away to the city and got a really nice copy of Lord of the Rings for me. It’s got one of those ribbons that you use to mark your place, and heaps of illustrations and stuff. A few weeks after that, Stu was over at my place and he said he just wanted to have a look. Course, when I gave it to him he somehow ended up ripping off the back cover. Cunt.

“The party started going downhill. Course it did. The Wiggins don’t have pigs anymore, and someone had dragged the old troughs out and filled them with ice, and that was where everyone put their drinks. I made the joke with Lauren that the pigs were back.

“While we were sitting on the fence talking, I was keeping tabs on Stu. At first he was the life of the party, racing round like a trapped dog. Then, when the sun went down, he spent about five minutes looking at the fire like it was a hot chick’s tits or something. Staring at it. I’d never seen him stay still that long.

“Then he noticed me watching him, and he winked at me, and gave me a thumbs-up. Dunno what about, maybe he thought me and Lauren were gonna … you know. She noticed, Lauren did, and she got a bit quiet after that. Looked at her shoes for a while.

“Anyway, you know Mel Wiggins, yeah? She’s fucking hot, right? I mean, I know she’s too young for you and stuff, but you can admit it. Well, Stu started zeroing in on her. At first I just thought he’d embarrass himself, and she’d tell him to fuck off, and that’d be that. But she was drunk. Really fucking drunk. And she didn’t tell him to fuck off.

“They spent the next, I dunno, two hours talking to each other. There was always larger groups of people forming and disbanding around them, but Stu stuck to Mel like glue. The only time he left her side was to go get her another drink. One thing I did notice was that he stopped drinking himself. Just nursed one VB for the rest of the night, while he was plowing Stolis into Mel. She got wobbly on her legs after a while. Took her longer than I thought it would, to be honest.

“Stu was laughing at all her jokes, but even from twenty metres away, I could tell he didn’t really think they were funny. I know Stu pretty well, and yeah, he was only pretending to laugh along with her. The only light in his eyes came from the fire, y’know?

“About two in the morning Mel suddenly slapped her hand on her mouth and staggered off to puke. She didn’t get far, she could hardly fucking walk by that stage. She ended up on the edge of the circle of light, puking into the grass. And into her hair, I suppose. And all her friends, they looked all concerned for about two seconds, then Stu said ‘I’ll look after her,’ and everybody went right on partying.

“Stu hunched over her, patting her on the shoulder and stuff, and he pulled her hair back over her neck so she wouldn’t chuck on it worse than she already had. That looked pretty funny, Stu holding her hair back like a girl would.

“The party was getting rough by that stage. One or two fights had broken out, and couples were starting to move past me and Lauren to go and fuck in peace and quiet in a dark paddock somewhere. Lauren and me were just starting to talk about splitting the cost of a taxi back to town.

“Then Lauren nodded at Stu and Mel and said ‘I hope he puts her to bed.’ Stu was picking Mel up, and he carried her away from the fire. None of her friends noticed. Nobody noticed but Lauren and me. Mel was moving her head and her legs a little bit, but she had her eyes closed. When he picked her up, she didn’t fight it. Fuck, she might not have even noticed.

“The Wiggins’ piggery is old. It’s not brick, it’s made out of these old grey stones, and it looks like it’s about to fall apart. The doorway into it was pitch fucking black. Stu didn’t carry Mel back to the house. He took her into the piggery.”

Brad, his head tucked as far as he could manage into his high shoulders, bit his lip and rubbed at an old biro mark on the desk. He didn’t want to describe what happened next.

The detective leaned back in his chair and waited to see if Brad would keep talking. The silence stretched out. “And then what happened?” the detective asked.

Brad glanced at the uniformed cop who sat in the corner of the bare room running the tape machine. The detective, with his suit and his tie, obviously wanted the truth, but Brad could feel the disapproval leaking off the uniform cop like old B.O. Don’t ever dob in a mate, the cop was saying with his eyes, and with the set of his jaw, and with the way he stabbed at the buttons on the tape deck in front of him.

“Lauren said ‘What the fuck’s he gonna do to her?’ and I said I didn’t know.”

“You didn’t know?”

“Yeah, I knew. I just didn’t want to believe it. Lauren and me talked a bit. I was trying to say it couldn’t be what it looked like. She said ‘Just because he’s your friend, there’s no excuse for this.’ ” Brad shifted uncomfortably in his seat and looked at his hands. “She was right. Eventually, she got fed up with me and left me on the fence and started walking to the piggery.”

“And you went with her?”

“Eventually. It took me a while to … to … fuck, to get up the guts, I suppose. When I caught up to her, Stu was just coming out.” Brad shook his head, tears beginning to form in the corners of his eyes. “I’ll never forget the fucking smile on his face. The triumphant, stupid fucking smile. He thought he was top shit. For fucking a girl who couldn’t move. What a fucking hero.”

“And nobody else was in the piggery at the time?”

“No.”

“You’re certain?”

“Yeah. Lauren and me went in. It was so fucking dark, we couldn’t see anything. We ended up pulling out our phones and using them as torches. Mel was there. Passed out. With her jeans around her ankles.”

“And that’s when you called the police?”

“Yeah.”

The detective sighed and closed the manila folder in front of him. “There aren’t many people who’d have done that. Thanks, Brad. Your story and Miss Hardingham’s, they corroborate each other. At this stage it seems like Miss Wiggins doesn’t remember anything of her ordeal, but that might change. If it doesn’t, then your testimony will be absolutely crucial.”

Brad didn’t answer. He just stared at the table. Somebody had carved PIGS into the top of it.

The detective lowered his voice. “I know that wasn’t easy, what you just did. I know Stu is a friend of yours. But it was the right thing to do.”

“It doesn’t really feel like it,” Brad muttered.

The detective nodded slowly. “I can understand that,” he said. “Now, your parents are waiting outside to take you home. I’ll go get them.”

When the door closed behind the detective, the uniform cop stopped the tape with a thunk, turned in his seat, and glared at Brad. “That kid’s family’s got a lot of friends,” he said quietly. “You should be thankful you’re about to leave town.”

Brad stared at the engraved PIGS. “I am,” he mumbled. “I fucking am.”
THE END


Story notes:
  • Man, did I hate growing up in Wangaratta or what?
  • Man, am I snarky about people who drink excessively or what?
  • The biggest stylistic point of interest in the story is the switch that occurs about three-quarters of the way through, where what was (seemingly) a first-person story broadens out into the third-person, and the fact that Brad's talking to the cops is revealed. It might be too self-consciously 'clever', and I suspect that it will always drag the reader out of the story. If you've gotta stop and think and go "hang on, wait, what?", then it's not worth doing. For all that, I still kinda like the idea of structuring the story that way, I probably just need to do it better.
  • I enjoyed writing in Brad's voice immensely. It flowed really naturally and came out really easily ... and the word 'fuck' spewed out like lollies from a pinata! Did people think the swearing was excessive? That's pretty much how I spoke at eighteen (hell, that's pretty much how I speak now), but it might be over-the-top when you're reading it on the page. Or computer screen, as the case may be.
  • Yes, Stu is named for a specific person. He was my arch-nemesis. Fuck him.

Oh, a quick point of interest for any heroically dedicated readers who have made it this far. When I finish Burmese Days I'll have done my ten, and I'm allowed to buy a book. Exciting times! If you've got recommendations, now's the time to share them.

Cheers, JC.


currently reading: Burmese Days by George Orwell
books to go: 121

10 comments:

  1. Get "House of leaves", my Mark Danielewski. One of the most interesting and complex books I've ever read.

    ReplyDelete
  2. haha I believe I might've been at that bonfire. Though I don't recall there being as much angst as that... though definitely the excessive drinking... which might be why I don't recall the angst!

    I highly recommend "Captain's Diary" by Ricky Ponting or one of the numerous Warrick Todd books...

    but I jest, you've probably read "The Shadow of the Wind" by Carlos Ruiz Zafon, but if you haven't then I highly recommend it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hooray!

    We share many of the same bitter neuroses!

    ~Love Andy

    ReplyDelete
  4. Fantastic, John. The narrative change in the middle was pretty slick.

    *trying to deduce who Stu is based on. Currently suspecting that it's Hibbo.*

    ReplyDelete
  5. exford legs I think you might find that the nemesis' surname was Evans... at a guess

    ReplyDelete
  6. Given names have now been ... named, we probably need some kind of disclaimer on here that all characters and events are fictional! Allegedly.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Old Major is on the button ... allegedly.

    Of course, given that every fourteen year-old boy is kind of an arsehole, and given that was fourteen years ago now, one option might be for me to get the fuck over it.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Relax Tyrone Biggums, I use the internet to slam people all the time. John has been quite discreet.

    *re-reading story with different dickhead in mind*

    ReplyDelete
  9. Loved hearing you read it out loud. Turn it into a one-act play like we suggested! :)

    ReplyDelete
  10. Let's remember, there's a big difference between 'named after' and 'based on'!

    ReplyDelete