Archive for December, 2011

12/13/2011

Ablation

by Pierce Nahigyan

It was a spot of bad luck that Johann Strauss, the glacier (no relation to the German composer, glaciers being generally older than most Germans), hadn’t joined his fellow ice sheets and drifted south towards the pole. Luck is the stock in trade of the glacier lifestyle, you see, for lacking limbs or flippers they are subject to the whim of the inscrutable ocean. Once, in Johann Strauss’s prodigious memory he recalled another glacier contriving to attach itself to a great billowing steam engine. But it bonded to incompetent partners, and wound up as just another icicle in the Scotia sea.

So, unfortunately, Johann was headed for the same sea, fated to receive the slow ablation that was the bane of his race. Better to have been a mountain, he thought. Well, no, he reconsidered. Mountains had it just as bad. Come to think of it, Johann had eroded a mountain or two in his time. And where were such geographies now? Buried a mile thick under glaciers, that’s where!

But this thought, unlike so many times before, failed to raise his spirits. Well, grass, maybe, he decided. Except grass was munched on by just about everybody. And it died when it got cold, or at the very least turned an unwholesome shade of yellow six months out of the year. All in all glaciers were no more permanent or steadfast than any other feature on the big blue planet.

It could have been the heat getting to him but Johann decided this was comforting, in a doomed sort of way.

12/10/2011

Ablactation

by Pierce Nahigyan

While his brothers went to the big sow for their fourteenth daily ablactation, the small piglet wandered out of the barn and to the far side of the farm, where a little wooden fence stood, in the little abandoned corner of the yard. Here the grass grew long and unchecked. No scythe had been taken to it in many seasons. Weeds sprouted from between the dirt and the fencepost. And the little pig stuck his snout between the rotten planks.

“If you do not eat you won’t grow big, like your brothers,” said a sheepdog on the other side of the fence.

“How did you get on the other side of the fence?” said the piglet.

“The farmer let me out,” said the dog.

“Oh?” said the pig. “How will you get back in?”

“The farmer will let me in,” said the dog.

The piglet thought about this. “Is it true what the chickens say? Will the farmer eat me for breakfast, like he eats their chicks?”

“He doesn’t eat the chicks,” said the dog. “He eats the eggs.”

“Same difference.”

“Alright, well, yes. Most likely you will be bacon, some morning. But probably not until much later, when you’ve forgotten this.”

“Don’t think I will,” said the pig. “I think I’m going to escape.”

“You can’t,” said the dog. “Even if you did, there’s nowhere for you to go. It’s only humans that have roads and houses and cities. There are no pig roads.”

“Then I will make one,” said the piglet.

“Well you can’t.”

The pig squinted at the dog. It is an eerie thing, to be squinted at by a pig. “Then I will eat the farmer.”

“You can’t.”

“Then I will eat you!”

“You can’t.”

“Then I will eat myself!” And the pig did just that. First he ate his hoofs, and then his little legs, his pot belly, his haunches, even his curly pink tail, he sucked up his fine hairs, his neck, and devoured his head, snout and all. Finally nothing was left of the pig, not even the peculiar scent of him.

The dog stared, dumbstruck. In fact, he never spoke again.

12/06/2011

Abjure

by Pierce Nahigyan

“I abjure writing!” the ragman said, bursting into the courtroom to the awestruck stares and foul consternation of the people at work. “Never was any good at it but Hell I gotta tell someone. Hey! Did you hear me? I give it up!”

The guard tried to restrain the ragman but he tore himself out of the man’s arms and trailed thin pieces of himself as he approached the bench. “I wasted my time,” he said to the court. “I never did what I said I’d do, didn’t sit down, didn’t hack it out. Hacked it out, half-heartedly, let the whole thing go. Let it all go. I stunk! I never got any better!”

He slapped his hands down on the prosecution’s table. Each thump bumped another book off the side, the prosecutor dashed away to the jury, and the judge called for order. But the ragman kept on thumping. “I abjure, ya hear me! I dithered, man, I just didn’t have what it took. Cripes, I thought I had it, y’know, for a couple years I coulda swore I was the guy.” The guard threw his arms around the ragman’s shoulders and dragged him backwards. The ragman twisted and ripped but couldn’t quite get himself free. He writhed, in dry shreds, as they carried him up the aisle.

“Yeah, take me away, boys, maybe I’ll do better stamping license plates. Takes less time than writing, doesn’t require so many convictions. But, man, I just ain’t got it. You gotta be honest with yourself!” he cried out to the court. “You gotta say enough’s enough! Game over, no resets, pack it up and knock it off. I spoiled!” He leapt in the guard’s arms, leaping to the middle of the high doorway. “Any of you creeps try to lie your way outta this lifetime, I’m comin’ for ya! You step outta line and I’ll eat ya! I ain’t no ragman no more – I’m just a hungry BUM!”

Then the door slammed and the ragman was gone, a rowdy voice screaming in the hallway. And laughing, and laughing, and laughing like that was all he had to say.

12/02/2011

Abject

by Pierce Nahigyan

There was a scrap of land not far from the shore, which wasn’t a very good shore at all, for it leapt abruptly from the thin beach into columns of dark brown rocks that hunched over the sea and ran deep into the misty distances of the horizon. And on the island there was a little town of no consequence, built to face the rocks and the shore.

To a man standing on the cliffs the town would have looked like an abject patch of gray and saffron on the water, in danger of being swallowed in a tempestuous moment. But the town was in no danger. Danger did not exist in the town, only fishing poles and wet, imperious dogs who looked up at the cliffs and did not bark, simply watched and snuffed.

They licked their salty snouts and waited for the fishermen to take them into the sea. And the fishermen, when they awoke, lifted their boats from the sand and called the dogs in for their breakfast of fish and wine. The days began and ended in much the same way.

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