Authors: Kevin Barry
John stands up and stretches. He groans from his yearsâhe groans from deep inside.
J
OHN
I'm getting old, Charlie. And I think I might be getting a bit fat again.
There's no odds in engaging here, thinks Charlie Haimes.
C
HARLIE
Italian caff won't be long opening. We could get a couple of sausage sarnies in?
J
OHN
Oohâ¦
John looks wearily now towards the studio door. The drear fucking repetition of it all. It's never a picnic, this.
J
OHN
Maybe a trout farm in Wales is the way to fucking go.
C
HARLIE
They get lice, trout.
J
OHN
Which is neither here nor there, Charlie.
In the studio a tape spools and resets and comes to life againâa sudden squall, a half-rhythm.
J
OHN
The fuck?
C
HARLIE
I dunno how that's come on.
John stands up to listen; Charlie sits and listens. It's got a low slithering thread, a half-rhythm with a chanted beat, an arcane air.
J
OHN
Charlie?
C
HARLIE
I know.
J
OHN
You hearing this?
C
HARLIE
I think I fucking am.
And now the beaten hollows of a chest, and a theremin's loops, and the squall of a fuzzbox, and there are white horses riding the sea. John fishes out his box of fags and he pops one with a squeeze of the box and he lights it. A peregrine falcon crosses the sky.
J
OHN
Here's a question for you.
C
HARLIE
Okay?
J
OHN
In some of this stuff we've put down, right? Is there a weird kind of sex heat coming off?
C
HARLIE
A sex heat?
J
OHN
A kind of sex feeling. A kind ofâ¦clammy feeling?
C
HARLIE
Can't say as I've noticed, John.
Ever the diplomat, Charlie Haimes, who's been six weeks in the studio trying to look the other way.
J
OHN
But fuck it, you know? All that matters is that it's a fucking masterpiece and that it's better than what the rest of the whey-faced cunts are coming up with.
Kate Bush is going to be a walk in the park, thinks Charlie Haimes. And heâJohnâleans out across the rail and looks to the new morning across the bone-dry city; London hasn't had a drop for weeks.
C
HARLIE
I wonder if we shouldn't knock off for now? Come in fresh tonight.
J
OHN
Nonsense, Charlie. We'll push on through.
They both stand and turn to look at the steel door that leads to the studio.
J
OHN
Care less. That's the way to go with this thing, Charlie. Don't you think?
C
HARLIE
Now you're talking.
J
OHN
I mean have you heard what Scott Walker's been up to? With his plinkety fucking plonk plonk?
C
HARLIE
Avant-garde, John. Is what it is.
J
OHN
My peasant arse. This is going to make Scott Walker sound like the Mamas and the fucking Papas.
I quite liked the Mamas and the Papas, thinks Charlie Haimes. Those were very lovely, those harmonies. Between the backs of the buildingsâthe laundry, the Turkish restaurantâthere's a sliver of street to be seen, and it's Tottenham Street, coming around from Goodge Street station, and here's the old Italian prowling by, always first about the street. He must be tipping eighty, an old-stager, and he'll have the café open any minute now. Charlie's stomach rumbles. He could use a bacon sandwich and a mug of scald.
C
HARLIE
We could line our stomachs, John?
J
OHN
I'm good for now. But you look after yourself. I've eaten a pig and a half this last six weeks.
They stay on the fire escape. It must be going on for half past six if the old Italian's about. The heat is building.
J
OHN
There are times I wish I was a geography teacher in fucking Woolton.
C
HARLIE
Patches on your elbows and a broken mug for your pipe cleaners.
J
OHN
Saturdays? I'll nip out for an hour. Teatime. Two and a half pints and a read of the pink. Some peace from the kiddies.
Charlie Haimes hears a stack of newspapers slapped down on Tottenham Street. A shutter rises with a jaunty screech. There is a maniacal holler, indecipherable, from the vicinity of Goodge Street station.
J
OHN
It's going to be a stinker, Charlie.
C
HARLIE
It's going to be a tar-melter. You want to go in?
J
OHN
Let's give it half a tick.
They've been in since nine the evening before. It's going to be another twelve-hour run with a squall of broken notes to show for it. A tubby kid goes by on Tottenham Street with his bucket of paste and the last of his posters. He'll have been plastering the town half the night. Elvis Costello. The Slits. African Head Charge in the Hackney Empire.
J
OHN
You notice the way it's the last hour we often get something?
Ever the optimist, thinks Charlie Haimes, who's been having his tinnitus againâa worryâand that's not to mention the bloody piles. A tub of salt, apparently, tipped into a lukewarm bath. Is the way to go for piles. Charlie Haimes has a farmhouse to pay off. The plan is to pack all this in and stick to the homestead on a three-six-five basis. Run the place as a donkey sanctuary. He has a thing for a donkey has Charlie Haimes. There's something about them that's spiritual, kind of. And Dora had two as a kidâBilly Joe and Dixie.
J
OHN
I'm going to do some words, Charlie. Just roll a tape and I'll do some words for this fucking thing.
The story has been coming through in odd scraps all summer. He talks about the island and he talks about the cave. Some bloke with one earâa badger had his other. Charlie Haimes has mixed feelings about badgers. Tuberculosis. Spread of. Or so they say.
John sings a bit in Americanâan old jingle-type snatch:
J
OHN
“Everyday's an holidaaay, at the A-me-thyst 'otel⦔
Amethyst? Like a jewel? Like a gem? Colour of a bird's eye in the rain? He slaps his hands together, John. He pouts a kiss for the sound engineer Charlie Haimes. He pushes through the steel door.
J
OHN
In your own time, Charlie.
C
HARLIE
I'll be with you.
J
OHN
He's gonna make a hames of it!
C
HARLIE
Tell me one I've not heard.
J
OHN
He's a proper Charlie!
The morning sun tips over a rooftop. The sea? In fact he was never gone on the sea was Charlie Haimes. Give him a nice placid lake any day.
John sticks his head out again.
J
OHN
The way I'm thinking, Charlie, is I'm going to utterly fucking transmute myself.
C
HARLIE
Careful how you go.
Charlie counts the fags in his box. Nine. He'll have to nip out for fresh. Cornershop's open for seven. Can show his face in the Italian caff, too. The old-stager will be at his rituals. Wipe the coffee spout, leave out the grease traps. Get your wireless on. Hasten slowly. You make the moments of a day and a life is what you do.
This story that's been coming through? The room marked nine. The crows like Gestapo. The voices in the trees.
J
OHN
I'm going to turn myself inside out. I'm going to fucking express myself, Charlie. I'll do the fucking words for this thing. About what happened to me on the island.
C
HARLIE
I'll roll a tape, John.
J
OHN
Finish your fag first.
C
HARLIE
Alright then.
J
OHN
And do not lose this fucking tape, Charlie.
He pushes the door out and Charlie Haimes is left to himself for a last few morning moments. It is the Thursday of the week, with a Thursdayish air. Not unhopeful, actually. The emptiness of the street is framed by the shunting of the trains for Goodge Street station. Now a post van slides past and beyond the steel door John is singingâhe's lah-lah-lahingâand Charlie stubs his fag on the rail of the fire escape, and inside John is singingâhe's hah-hah-hahingâand the coil of the morning tightens and turns.
The sound engineer, Charlie Haimes, rights himself for the last of the work, a new tape to loop and the last tracks to separate, and John is singing insideâhe's tra-lah-lahingâand now two kids appear on Tottenham Street, a boy and a girl, and he is long and thin with a mess of hair and she is tiny and they just idle there, and they're looking this wayâaren't they?âwith a slouched and watchful air, and inside John is singing, and the boy leans into the girl and he speaks to her, and she agrees and they move on again, and there is something about them that unsettles the sound engineer Haimes because about the boy there is something wolfish and about the girl there is the sense of an elf.
Charlie Haimes enters the studio and kicks the steel door shut behind. Bolts it. He spools a tape on the Telefunken M12 Magnetophonâtape tension is constant, no need for brake solenoidsâand John sits crouched and
smoking with a blanket around his shoulders and Charlie rolls the tape, and John beginsâ
[transcript]
and if i have nothing left to sayâwell okayâbecause when i have nothing left to sayâ[indecipherable]âthere was an enormous fucking egg on the rocksâis it rolling charlie?âi can see it very clearly in factâbrownish actually with yellow speckles onâdo i sound like i'm going to fucking sing, charlie?âi'm on my island at lastâan enormous fucking egg the size of me head and bigger again an egg that big a baby baboon might step out pinkarsedâsmeared light and blue voidâ[indecipherable]âi will keep my distance from that fucking eggâit seems to move just a bitâsomething's got to crack and something's got to giveâi'm not having in with that fucking eggâsay a newborn john steps out and spits the mucusy bits awayâpale and moonfacedâskinny new john with an heron's legs and a reedy chestâa hairless reedy art college chestâpoeticalâtubercularâit grows worse by the hour, my loveâi'll give it some richard fucking burton shall i?âboskierâwhat's fucking bosky when it's at home?âmy words are fucked and all overâin the city my head feels big as a melonâtoo much noiseâon the island my head feels tiny as a peaâi could belly across the rocks and tip my ear up against that giant eggânews therein I daresayâshells and walls and caves and holes and rooms and hollowsâhere's a wordâencasementânot one to linger on, doctorâclose my eyesâi could walk the rocks for a while it would kill a fucking hour like a tall dark bird as the last of the daylight goes on an ink-black stick-bone night-dark heron's walkâoh let's get richard fucking burton in altogether, shall we?âthey say the welsh are thieves, don't they?âat least in liverpool they doâcount the silver once richard burton's fucked off againâall this chatterâi mean, really!âas I still can I willâboskier!â[indecipherable]âi'm on my fucking island at lastâclose my fucking eyesâwalk a slow curve around that fucking eggâthe giant egg shimmers and rocks a bitâsoft throbs or thuds of life thereinâthe past is aboutâthe black skin of the water movesâi'm as well to walk onâflower-brained and heron-eyedâjust leave me fucking be just leave me fucking be on my own fucking island at lastâat the bottom of the sea there are a million tiny rooms but no doors no locks no keysâit's the past that gets locked inâthe sea is moving its inks aboutâclose my eyes as i walk i've gone inside the past againâslip inside the old house thenâuncle's come up the stairsâuncle travels on a broken lungâwheezes like a busted accordion uncle maudlin's travelling lungâthe way his lips make the words and the news they bringâshe's gone, johnâmotherless waif left on the docks or some such violin fucking thingâshe's goneâput a hole in my arm and let all the money inâa rabid fast snare here? and building?âthe stars hang down like blue fruitâlovely?âthe past is aboutâye cracke is my boozer it smells of dirty girls and beerâi am made of bile and nerves and broken glassâi've got such a screechy, such a girly laughâthe war room at ye crackeâkeep it fucking down, johnâmidnight by the churchbellsâfucking some girly in a doorway someplaceâback arse of bold streetâa knee-tremblerâthe city is held in the palm of its own lightsâoh to be on an island by nightâthe birds home in like rueful thoughtsâthank you, charlie, it is niceâthere's a great lairy bird on patrolâdon't give me the nazi fucking eyes, palâi'm the intruder on the stones and grassâthere is no salve and there is no fixâshe is on the dark side of every passing momentâthis is my diseaseâshe's a shadow just beneath my skinâjuliaâand the island seems to move or give in the night's black windâ[indecipherable]âlet me go back there, mr. haimesâclose my eyesâthe island by nightâthe giant fucking egg groansârouses from a sour dreamâthere's a strange green light across the skyâgreen as a starling's coatâiridescentâthis is going fucking beautifully nowâa sea-holly or an ivy's greenâivy as of a churchyard in novemberâthe past is aboutârain in liverpool, a november, about the time of all souls, in the midweek, it's late in the morning, i should be in the schoolhouse but i'm notâi'm in a churchyard having a fag under the dripping ivyâthe way it's dull but glossy the way its own lights are trapped withinâi've got a throb on but one must not attend to that in the out-of-doors as it sets a dangerous precedentânext thing you know you're wanking off all overâthere is rain on the island by nightâthere is no way to mark time out here but day for night and night for day againâthe years might go pastâthe rain tastes of salt and earthâthe giant fucking egg groansâwho'll step out from that egg in a bit?âi'm in on business i'm in on executive fucking business to haunt the rooms of my own black selfâthe past is aboutâover the ice fields of quebec we flewâfour voices in a great dark hallâmontrealâthose sexy rascalsâ
lah-de-dah, lah-de-dum-dum-dahâ
screams and mouths like black maws like the mouths of tiny birds to be fedâwhat if the giant fucking egg cracks and the past steps out?âi'd like five minutes back, not moreâset me down on bold streetâon the island the night crowds in and i scream but it gets swallowed up againâslap my head off this rock for a bit?âwhat if there's not much time left after this?âall the black chatter that goes onâwalk awhile across the dark and stones of itâthere are lights on the hills on the mainlandâthis exiled prince on scepter'd isle, handsome, beak-faced, and heron-thinâi'll have a fag in a bitâi am so many miles from love and homeâthe night birds shriek and grumbleâthe black water movesâwhere you lie down is the centre of my world, my loveâi wanted to fuck you eleven ways and didâcrossing the causeway is like crossing the moonâgreat boulders and stones and the black water movesâthe starlight runs on cold enginesâbirds in conference the length of the nightâa huge grey bird hides its head beneath its wing but fans it back slowly to show the evil eye as i passâsomething regal, isn't there?âi'll have a sitdownâauntish momentâdarling mimiâi lean back into the night skyâit's terrifying, of course, this fucking sentimentâso crucify me up top of fucking bold street thenâsell fucking ticketsâis there not such a thing as agency? my sweet english fucking arse there isn'tâthere's maggots under the rock with more agencyâthere's pigeons up the town clockâbut you can be for a while whoever you decide to beâthat's allâwhere I walk is the centre of the fucking universeâthis is what you must always believeâhave you got that, kids?âwhat did it feel like in sefton park?âhe's a gimp and she's a skittery a nervous a scattered young thingâdid she call him alf or did she call him freddie?âhe's doing all the voicesâthe way she fixes her hairâhe wants to have inâshe wants to let him inâdid he drop the hand first thing?âon lark lane i will walk you home againâthey are so far from me now and goneâacross the fields of the seaâit's harder to think about him than herâthe cold is deep in my blood and bonesâwalk awhile under the dying starsâthe morning comes across the waterâthe giant fucking egg groansâthe giant fucking egg cracksâhe climbs out in red raw skin and greasy feathersâhis blistered black beseeching eyesâalright, freddie? alright, kid?âhe lies among the rocks in his feathers and bones and cowers from me thereâalfred?âhis first war faceâand i have nothing left to sayâlay my hand to his faceâhe sighs a tiny breath onto my palmâhe grows smaller with each breath that I takeâi have nothing left to sayâtake me away from hereâput me back on bold streetâlet me walk the street in the crowdâthe bombed-out churchâthe starlings mobbed above the ropewalksâa fair-minded breeze lifts the cup of a skirt and shows the back of her kneeâshe is not a showstopper but stillâbold street movesâa mam and a dad and a sticky-faced kiddieâthe bawl of the child as it comes pastâhe's pig-ugly him, missus, there's a case here for your coupons backâa weary widow on a ritual traipseâit's all ahead of you, loveâand a toppling quiff above a dummkopf faceâa whiskied old fart in his green and piss-stained gaberdine twillâthe lyceumâthe tunnel for central stationâbold streetâthe chinless wonders and the gin-blossom nosesâi might have a show coming soonâi might get to play out again soonâif it works out with mr. knowles in ecclesworthâwho's a cuntâor mr. eccles in knowlestonâfifteen bob and a root up the arseâthe street movesâthere are pale sisters by cripp'sâthey're having a bead at the girdles and the daintiesâif i burn the eyes on hard she'll sense it and turn, the prettier oneâshe turnsâalright?âperky noses, sisterly grinsâbold street movesâthe way the knit of her collarbone turns as she goesâa cat watches from the lyceum stepsâall the calm of china in its bone-white eyesâthe busy facesâthe pug facesâthe lancashire-irishâthe eaves of the stores and the eaves of the churchesâi'm by the fucking lyceumâi'm by the window of cripp'sâi'm the natty cocksparrowâthe turn for the tunnel for central stationâthe sisters againâthey whisper and turn againâthe prettier's hand is held over her mouthâher face is pale and interestedâher hand is white and tinyâa glove of bird bonesâi'm by the lyceumâi'm by the turn for the tunnel for central stationâmilitary click of high heels on the stones of bold streetâthe city rumbles beneathâits limestone air and secret reachesâthe scent of the girls' voices is on the airâtheir voices are coloured yellow and racing greenâtheir voices come from the hollows of the woodsâby the steamy window of a murderous caff a gummy old coot commits an act of murder on a plate of black pudding and chipsâhello, tony? hello, taffâi walk the street in the crowdâpub voices bounce from the tiles and brassâsexy cured tobacco voicesâladies of special vintageâthe painted lips and map-lined facesâthe bowl of the town fills up with nightâout there is the green moving estuaryâout there are the devil-haunted hillsâthe first stars light the cold estatesâi'll make a nonsense rhyme for my dandy lipsâ
oh to be a suburban jack,
fit for the mirror and fit for the rackâ
the turn for central stationâthe white cat smilesâand listen?âthe world is still this faraway evening, as hushed and hollow as an empty church, and we can be quiet now if we want to be.