by Bill Turpin
Essential Prose Series 128
To Lindsay Brown,
the love of my life
and my indispensable editor
Contents
NOW To the Edge of the Abyss
NOW Present But Not Accounted For
1975
1983 The Nature of Horse
1981 The Smiling Cobra
1981 How to Piss Off a Living Saint
NOW Welcome Back to the Dungeon
1969 Friday Night at the Strip Club
NOW The Great Escape
1981 Talks with Collective End Well
1983 A One-Child Family
1983 A Column from the Editor
NOW Minor Incident Blown out of Proportion
NOW Girls in Their Summer Clothes
1985 CFA Shows Flair for Halifax Real Estate
1988 Bingo!
1973 Smoked Meat Provokes Wild Encounter
1981 Wife to Max: Don't Hurt My Baby
1975 Trout for Breakfast
1995
1969 The Dancer's Proposition
1996 Guru Likes Beer, Credit
1975 Reporter Gets High on Poorly Aimed Gunfire
1954 The Yellow Pencil of Doubt, First of Two Parts
1973 If You Go into the Woods Today
Five Months Before Now Loss of a Lifetime
1994 We Have a Commodore Here?
1986 Bastards of the CBC
1995 His Excellency Requests a Favour
1973 Editor in Close Touch with his Emotions
1975 Reporter Gets Big Story! (Some May Have Died)
1987 Keeping the Bad Man at Bay
1995 Holy Threat
1961 The Yellow Pencil of Doubt, Second of Two Parts
1995 The Campaign: "Pilot" Is "Plot" with an "I"
1995 Beloved Cleric Treated to Scenic Tour
1973 Cat Shack Routine Ignored —What's Going on Here?
NOW Visit to a Holy Place
1995 The Campaign: And They're Off!
1995 Service with a Smile
1995 A Quiet Talk with Sergeant Fury
1995 The Campaign: Cartoon Shocker Boosts Soda Biscuit Sales
1995 The Campaign: Flacks' Night Out
1995 The Campaign: Enough!
1975 Reporter Meets El Mago, Gets Even Bigger Story
1995 The Campaign: Bentley & Steele's Problem
1995 The Campaign: The Ride of the Valkyries
1995 The Smell of Napalm in the Morning
1995 The Campaign: Sic Transit Maximus
2005 You Think You're So Clever and Classless and Free
1973 Seduction Truth Revealed!
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Copyright
NOW
To the Edge of the Abyss
MAX SET HIS smartphone on vibrate-plus-tone and slipped it into his breast pocket so he could “feel the buzz”. Then he put his wristwatch on the same settings, plus a beep every minute. The phone was set for 1:40, the watch for 1:45. Failing to be at the office by 2 p.m. was not an option, and Max’s formerly excellent relationship with time was no longer reliable.
He was walking around downtown Halifax, something he did religiously when he had problems to solve, and he had three of them. Big ones. He struggled to focus on the most urgent, but his issues with time had gripped him hard and would not let go.
Until recently, Max had paid little attention to time, even though it had been kind to him. (He looked young for his age, everyone said.) On the rare occasions when he thought of time, he pictured himself on some sort of rocket-sled; the future and the present blurring by him, the past a short, bright rocket-flame pushing against his back. And, sometimes, Max could see just enough of what lay ahead to give him an advantage. So for decades he had been secure in his rocket-seat, content but not grateful for time’s gifts to him. He was untroubled by the time paradoxes that so tortured other people.
Lately, though, time seemed like a neglected friend who had finally left Max’s life, creating an unexpected hole in his cosmic view and causing him to think about it constantly. Worse, time had taken to leaving him ominous messages. Once long ago, after a disastrous high school prom, his date scratched a note on his car door: “You’ll be sorry, psycho!” That’s how the messages from time felt. Just the other day Max was wholly engaged in thinking about time (and boiling an egg) when he felt someone squeezing his right elbow.
“Ground control to Major Max . . . ground control to Major Max . . .” the Wife sang, her voice affectionate but artificially bright. “Ground control to Major . . .”
“I get it, Cactus, I get it,” he said as reality — for which he also had a newfound respect — flooded the room.
The Wife said she had been all but hollering at him, trying to get his attention, but he was just staring at the stovetop. She thought he might be having a stroke. “Headache? Vision problems . . .”
“No. Nope. I’m fine.”
“Well, pay attention, then. You scared the hell out of me.”
“A watched pot never boils,” he said. “I was watching this pot until you interrupted and now, look, it’s boiling.”
“You going all inscrutable on me?”
Max tried to return the hard look she was giving him, but couldn’t. Instead he kissed her left cheekbone and grabbed her right buttock, one of his favourite moves.
“Don’t even think about jiggling my butt-fat,” she said.
“What fat?” he asked, squeezing a little harder. “This is all muscle. You could crack walnuts with those glutes.”
The Wife leaned into him: “That’s more like it, Maxie.”
Watching the water simmer, it had occurred to him that you need more than heat and a copper-bottomed pot from La Cucina to get water ready. You have to have time. You have to allow the pot to move through time. Time is a critical ingredient for boiling water. Does that mean the cook and the pot move though time at different speeds? Does “turning up the heat” really mean speeding up time for the pot? Jeez, what if you could really do that?
Could this be an insight? Max tested the idea in his usual laboratory — an imaginary, gas-lit, 19th century lecture hall where he stands before a learned but rapt audience. “And so, ladies and gentlemen,” he says grandly, “I submit to you that time is . . . an INGREDIENT!”
Alas, no one in the audience gasps in astonishment. Instead they arise as one and file out of the hall in an orderly fashion. So, not an insight.
Max’s grandmother once told him that time is a river. The metaphor was lost on him because he imagined himself on the riverbank, watching dark water slide by. Now Max realized he should have been on the river, paying attention to what he saw on the banks. Damn, he thought, is it possible for someone to be so wrong about something for so long?
Now — walking downtown — Max was worried about losing time’s greatest gift of all: his ability to travel it. Time travel was getting harder to control.
To his mild surprise, Max had already reached one his favourite stops — a flower shop. Its most colourful blooms spilled from the front entrance onto the sidewalk display from the earliest days of spring until autumn snatched the last of the leaves from the trees. Max admired the owner for his determination to ignore the weather despite the toll this took on his product. He stopped and bought his customary discounted bouquet of whatever was about to become unmarketable. Tulips, on this occasion.
“How are you doing?” the shopkeeper asked, bowing quickly at him, like a bird bobbing for insects at the beach.
“If I
were any better, I’d be dangerous,” Max replied brightly.
Time-jumping had been helpful in all aspects of his life except, maybe, family. At work, though, where Max was his firm’s head of communications, it was critical. He always seemed to know what others at meetings were going to say a few seconds before they uttered the words, and he was ready with the right response before they even completed their sentences. Clients were in awe of his ability to know what they were thinking before they thought it.
Max’s enemies were aware of it, too. He once overheard their take on it while walking past the smoking shelter. “If you think you’ve got a bright idea about how to cool the fucker’s jets, forget it,” one of his victims was complaining. “It just means he’s set a trap for you. He does it for sport.”
Well, that was true, but Max focused those efforts exclusively on the shitheads the CEO liked to hire.
“It’s always good to keep a shark in the tank,” the CEO liked to say. “It keeps the other fish alert.”
But Max enjoyed a happy workplace. He admired and loved his younger colleagues — almost everyone — so when a shark showed up, Max would wait patiently until the moment he had foreseen occurred and the big bully-fish exposed a flank. Then Max would casually fire a political spear into its vitals.
The CEO hired the sharks, and Max got them fired. It was part of the rhythm of the office. It kept all the fish alert and happy.
Max passed the drugstore, a key landmark, which displayed a large sign declaring “your health matter’s”. The owners imagined this to be a clever pun, but it earned only derision from Max because of the egregious use of the apostrophe. But health definitely mattered these days. Max had heard through the family grapevine that the Brother was having “difficulties”, and he suspected these, like his own troubles, involved the same ability to travel through time. Why wouldn’t time-jumping be an inherited trait?
He felt terrible. Time-jumping had been critical to his life but his head had been so far up his own backside that he never really noticed. Now — and this felt like a premonition coming on — it might even be too late to talk it over with the Brother.
The need to talk was urgent because time-jumping had begun putting Max out of sync with the rotation of the Earth, and sometimes he would find himself east or west of a destination without any recollection of how it happened. This was because during the jump Max would continue to “rotate” from east to west, while the planet and its inhabitants stood still.
Max attributed these difficulties to his metabolism changing as he aged. He adapted by buying the latest in wearable “smart” technology. This brought most of the jumping outcomes under control. He dealt with the rest according to circumstance. If his trip took him west, he would compensate for rotation by walking faster. When headed east, he set his watch for 10 seconds less between beeps. This kept him out of the harbour. Walking north or south, he would subtly walk to the east by leaning that way to resist the rotation. He could not imagine how it looked to passers-by, but it seemed to work. On the other hand, it might explain why the CEO had been urging Max to ride with him to meetings in a taxi.
Max stopped at the newsstand which, as usual, was festooned with Cosmopolitan magazines that were in turn festooned with images of women who lacked pores and apparently knew gazillions of sexual techniques: The longest weekend: Blast His Roman Candle to New Heights, Six Ways to Make His Star Burst, How to Make his Cracker Fire.
Sex was another facet of Max’s life affected by time-jumping, although with results that were more agreeable: the marital bed, mostly lukewarm since they hit their forties, had re-ignited.
Until recently the Cosmo surveys the Wife left lying around indicated that she was “not at all interested” in sex and “almost never” had an orgasm “with a partner”. Max concluded that he must be at fault for this. Faulty time-jumping, he deduced, was causing him to “arrive”, as the French say, early.
But now Max sometimes arrived later. This development might well be what shifted his wife to “somewhat interested” in sex, and it got Max thinking. He realized that if he could point the Wife due east, he would finish inside her no matter when he arrived. So, the next time he came to bed and found the Wife nude under the sheets, which meant that sex was on the table, Max seized the opportunity.
He climbed into bed and kissed her while sliding his hand over her abdomen, his customary opening move. “I want to try something,” he said. “I want to line you up a certain way before we do it.” To his surprise, instead of rejecting him, she smiled a little sheepishly and flushed. Her nipples perked up.
“Okay,” she said, her voice croaking ever so slightly, whereupon she threw off the bedclothes and lay naked before him with her arms stiffly beside her. It had been a long time since she displayed herself like that. Max had earlier made a small mark on the wall that was due east, so he quickly grabbed her ankles and swung her around. She actually giggled as he took sightings along the length of her bare body. When everything was set, he eased between her legs to her centre, where he found a warm welcome.
Even better, the eastward dislocation had the effect of making his thrusts seem harder and increasingly rapid. That, combined with his newly late arrivals, eventually moved her along Cosmo’s continuum to “very interested in sex” and “almost always” having an orgasm “with a partner”. She began to suggest new positions and methods for lining her up. Once, breathlessly, she suggested that she go on all fours. It took Max far longer than usual to line her up, in part because she seemed to be resisting while at the same time insisting that the task be accomplished with absolute precision. By the time he had them both arranged, the Wife was urging him in the frankest terms to begin the final act. Max accomplished it easily, she being wildly wanton and he stiff as a flagpole. His last memory before the time-jump was her lovely long back extended out before him, her spine precisely in line with the rotation of the earth.
When he caught up in time, he found she had cuddled up and was looking at him softly. “It’s been a long time . . .,” she said.
“We married young, started a family,” Max said quickly, “and we had busy careers. There’s hardly been time. But now we’re in a new phase of our lives.”
Max was back on the street, relieved and grateful that his mind had turned to the business problem at hand. He checked his watch. Five minutes to go. He felt the countless ideas that had been teasing him for days coalesce into a solution. Time to get to work. The remaining item on his mind, the mystery of his secret admirer at the office, would have to wait.
• • •
Max was at the head of the agency’s long table, which he knew was little more than a glorified piece of Plexiglas skilfully designed and polished to look expensive.
Paintings, rented from the government art bank, tastefully lined the tasteful walls. They were well-done and interesting, but not so much that guests would be distracted. The Company Values were inscribed on a plaque: “Kindness, Kindness, Kindness.” When asked about it, the CEO would explain that it was at the insistence of the company founder.
The CEO was to his left, flesh spilling over his collar. Nose hairs were visible, poised to become the leading feature of his physiognomy.
Next to the CEO was Max’s Communications Director, playing the foil to the CEO’s iconoclastic genius. Dressed in spotless casuals, she was calm as a cat enjoying a sunbeam, charming the clients and patiently awaiting her day as head of the firm.
The clients — two men and two women, one in a wheelchair — seemed out of place but he couldn’t put his finger on it. Max fished his notes from his jacket pocket, gave them a quick glance and started in.
“Thank you for coming today,” Max said. “Out of respect for your time, I won’t beat around the bush: people love your product.”
Max’s Communications Director was the first to signal alarm, pushing her note-book away and firing her deer-in-the-headlight
s look at Max.
Christ, only four words into it and already she’s bitching. Max moved on.
“And they love your employees . . .”
Suddenly the CEO looked like he was about to drive his new Mercedes into a concrete post. He stared at his notepad and muttered something like “For the love of . . .”
“. . . But they hate your company,” Max said.
The clients’ eyes widened as though Max had pulled out a gun. The CEO jumped to his feet and escorted Max to a corner. “They’ll just be a second,” the Communications Director said casually, making it clear it was all part of the creative process.
“Maxie,” the CEO whispered. “The power company was yesterday.”
“Yeah,” Max said neutrally.
“Today it’s the Abilities Bakery. Their bakers are all mentally or physically challenged and they have to lay off four of them. You’re giving them the presentation we did for the power corporation.”
Max pursed his lips: “It just seems like that. Let me run with it.” Worst time-jump ever, he thought.
“Please, no,” said the CEO.
“It’s all good,” Max replied.
He returned to the head of the table and paused for effect.
“Ladies and gentlemen, my partner has reminded me that you’re not ‘suits’.” He looked at each pale face in turn: “A teacher, a retired engineer, a former elite athlete and an accountant with a private practice. You are a volunteer board.
“Sometimes I like to show clients how bad things could be if they don’t take action. It’s a shock tactic. But I can see I’ve done you a disservice. You’ve invested heart and soul in the Abilities Bakery. You are not complacent.”
More pause for effect while he ransacked his memory for the correct talking points.
“And I don’t need these notes,” he said, tossing the power company index cards into a wastebasket. He picked up a brief from in front of the CEO and held it up.
“I’ve read your recovery plan, and what we communications folks call the ‘key messages’ are already written — by you. Here’s how it works: