I'd like to think I'm man enough to say I got something wrong and last night I did. Maccy, I apologise. I could blame it on the booze (so much booze, dear God) or any number of other things but I won't. I carried over a disagreement from an earlier post of mine in another thread when I shouldn't have - not because the rules say I shouldn't but because I don't think anyone should do that.
I still think you were wrong to delete my post but I should never have been so petty earlier in this thread. So, genuine apologies from me, I was stupid.
Back on track - anyone else have any writing they want to share?
e : content from me, it happens after the bit I put in the OP.
“No, I’m fine. Absolutely great! Really,” I say, “Definitely very, very good! Perhaps world beating!” I laugh, a bellow. “Well, City beating, anyway, and that’s the important thing – am I right, Samantha!” I exclaim and even with the crackly line I can envisage her mouth becoming a smile, the eyes becoming alive and the hemline touched, perhaps raised, legs uncrossing.
“Sure, David, sure,” she laughs and my face is blank, void. “So your numbers are looking ... positive?” she asks even as I pound both fists onto the desk (I’ve muted her, a tip I think the editor gave me when we last spoke) so she doesn’t hear it but I want her to feel it and then I say,” Very.”
“Very, David?” I can hear planes in the background and wonder if she’s at an airport.
“Yes, very,” I say, teeth clenched, before having to add, “Very, very, very, very, very good.” Pause. “Dramatic, even.”
“Well, David that’s gre – wait, dramatic?“ she begins. I cut her off. “These things almost make me smile,” I say before adding apologetically, “Yes, dramatic.”
I stand up from the desk and check the charge on the wireless handset I’m holding. “It’s all so very ... dramatic. Don’t you think?” I gulp. “Global,” I say with a sense of finality. “Maybe even ... pan ... global?” I suggest. “Perpendicular yet ... vertical,” I say flatly.
I’m blind, floundering. I envisage sandcastles that are so tall I can’t even see their summits; huge, spiralling structures and foundations so deep that they touch the core. I see a space so vast that I can’t really comprehend it.
And then I feel very nervous so I suggest, “Samantha, look. I think it’s important that, even with a divide, there should always be a sense of space, width, and – perhaps – light,” I say before smiling, grimacing even, and finishing with “And of course, it’s words that mean something, defining themselves or a situation. Brilliant –“ I wave an arm vacantly around the room, showing both composure and elegance, perhaps greatness, then –“waves of light. A crescendo, if you like. Of,” I stop, eyes cast down, confused, “light?” I finish.
“David? Is everything ... is everything okay? You sound ... uptight, maybe a little highly strung,” she says. Muttering, she adds, “I don’t even know what dramatic is supposed to –“
The editor – who I was pretty sure wasn’t even around – looks on with disdain, both hands at his face, clawing dramatically at his eyeballs, pretend tears rolling down his face on to his full, fat, red lips.
“Samantha, I need some air,” I almost shout and rush outside where it is somehow still daylight, still summer, still current. The sun looks like a sun so I suppose it is and when I go back inside Samantha is not on the phone that I threw at the wall any longer and I’m not sure if this even happened anymore.
From the corner of my eye I see the editor score through something with a red marker and this worries me. He looks up and winks.
He does not exist. You have to believe me on this one. He does not exist.
The editor, I mean.
He just cannot exist.