So I got up early, cooked coffee, adios’d long tall quiet O rry now
   tangled in blankets next to sleeping Fiorm aria — O rry grunting
   ‘Bye’ without unlidding his big eyes — and headed for Pororak
   Space Centre. In the mono I watched a man’s face, warm, folded,
   eyes open but flat and not awake, and felt pity for him riding to a
   day of labour in some place thick with the boredom of its own
   familiarity. But you can’t tell ’em. Outside the sky paled to lemon
   beyond endless miles of Dourisburg’s black business towers, and
   paling towers flashed by above us, and dark canyons still quiet
   beneath.
   From the mono dropping me in the passenger terminal I was
   walking through to the amenities block used by staff and ship crew,
   and this uniform stopped me.
   ‘You a pilot?’
   ‘Yeah.’
   ‘No you’re not.’
   ‘Sure I’m a pilot. Brought the Santos in from M eriam yesterday.’
   But he didn’t believe me. ‘On your way,’ he said pointing a fat
   finger at the floor then at my knees with a little wag. Give a floor
   sweeper a uniform and that’s the way he gets. I beat it back towards
   198
   Jagging
   199
   the transit hall.
   The night before, Orry, his lady Fiormaria and I had monoed a
   hundred kilometres down the coast and sat on the end of a spit of
   white sand that stuck out into the gentle sea. We drank a carafe of
   spritzig from the vineyard of Phec, we listened to the tiny dark
   breakers silk-swishing up the sand, we lay on our spines, dark
   shapes of cypress trees back up the spit looming in the edge of sight,
   and we felt our minds flow out among the deep silent loving stars.
   ‘W hen ya gonna jag again, Orry?’
   ‘Ah . . . ’
   ‘Yeah,’ Fior, too, asking him, ‘when we gonna jag?’
   ‘They do pull,’ he said, ‘they do pull, the old stars. Look at em
   twinklin away up there — ’
   ‘An you down here — dirtfoot!’
   ‘Twinklin away,’ said Fiormaria, ‘twinklin away — ’
   You could hear the spritzig stroking through her veins, stroking
   out warm into her voice.
   ‘Ah, you’re a lucky jack, Bandy, jagging tomorrow.’
   ‘You could be too.’
   ‘Ah no, not yet, not yet. I’ve things to do. And the dreaded ennui
   is still hidin in the woods — not so, Fior?’
   ‘Well,’ she said judiciously, ‘just about.’
   ‘Ready to come leapin out like a tiger,’ I said.
   ‘Yeah, yeah.’ She laughed.
   The stars twinkled and beckoned.
   ‘Just up there in them cypresses,’ I said, ‘stirrin like a tiger wakin
   from sleep, stirrin an stirrin an stirrin, an gettin ready to leap out
   an rip yer throats.’
   ‘Aaaaahhh,’ she shrieked, laughing. ‘Aaaah! The dreaded ennui.
   Once a jagger always a jagger. We’ll go again, we’ll go again.’
   O rry said, Just let me finish my paintin, and drink some more
   nights down at Baba’s pickin up on that Ja n ’s mento fragmento
   musico, and finish learnin the old Firensieh jabber and read all
   their litratoor, and finish teachin Benniman to play the karinga,
   and talk to Stefanos some more about his peekoooliar phee-
   losophies . . . ,’ lying long beside me while he said this with his
   gentle head stretching way up the sand above mine and his gentle
   feet going way way down the other way almost into the sea or
   perhaps right into the sea with the silky waves swishing over them
   and kissing them because he is so good a man.
   But I just said ‘Dirtfoot!’ which he took in good part and
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   Anthony Peacey
   chuckled.
   ‘You’ll wish you were stayin and takin in all the sociability an
   kultoor tomorrow when you get out to damned and benighted
   Pororak,’ he laughed.
   I could almost believe, now, that he had prophetically said ‘to
   Pororak with all its uniformed floor-sweepers’. But I was not much
   bothered. I knew what to expect, I’d been in a hundred Pororaks, so
   I just retreated and went outside onto the endless desert apron of
   concrete with a few metal beetle tractors moving slowly and the
   ships tall under the bright fanfare of dawnlight that now conquered
   the sky.
   And made my way to the staff and crew cafeteria through a side
   door that a deep entombed computer without hum an resentments
   opened for me without question.
   Getting a coffee I said to a pilot with crescents of bone beneath
   his eyes, and long lips, ‘Ya know anyone going up?’
   ‘Yeah brother, I know me, I’m going up and I don’t want no dead
   weight.’
   H alf an hour and several pilots later I was alone at a table in the
   cafeteria, the cafeteria getting busier, and there were sad stains on
   the shiny surface, scratches and old burn marks, there was dirt
   under my nails, the keyslip was worn, my coffee cup was empty and
   dirty, a light panel in the ceiling was flickering forlornly and all the
   pilots in their uniforms or their stiff dungarees or their grease-
   polished leathers looked right through me. Once, I remembered, I
   hung around a rotting space port for two weeks while its tables became dirtier, its walls more cracked, its tin roofs more rusty, rotting towards the inevitable heat death the cinder plain the ash heap the
   dust the broken bones of everything cooling and falling to dust the
   graveyard of the universe. A squirt of coffee belched into the back
   of my throat sour with last night’s rotting wine.
   ‘Jagger?’
   ‘Yeah.’
   ‘Where to?’
   Leathers, this one, well worn. He dumped his bag on the floor
   and his coffee on my table.
   ‘Otzapoc. Bennet-Kenny system.’
   ‘Got your sleezy?’
   ‘Yeah.’
   ‘I’ll put you in orbit. I’m going to Jaxon’s, the other way.’
   And me out onto the wide free concrete running in the wide
   Jagging
   201
   bright morning to open the locker so light shines in on my slcezy
   which is like a crab-armoured empty iron red and black dwarf, but
   ten feet tall, garaged in a metal nest, its back open and empty. I
   load my bag into a pocket on its monster thigh. I climb in through
   the back, seal in, power up, bringing my big red and black iron
   man to life — I’m a monster red and black iron man now. I back
   out, metal-bear-swipe the locker door shut, stride over and hand in
   the keyslip to the tired clerk at the window, me wide-grinning down
   at him through the wide wide glass faceplate then striding off with
   seven league iron power boot strides feeling ten feet tall because I
   am ten iron feet tall to the sun-glinting ship where the pilot is waiting to lift with a cargo of ivory and apes and peacocks, sandalwood, cedarwood, and iron man me.
   Twenty minutes later I was beyond morning and night lolling
   weightless on the edge of space’s dark ocean in the silence of a billion years. The island planet Greenball lay ten thousand kilometres away, diametered ten thousand kilometres, Dourisburg and all the
   other burgs with all their tired faces shrunken to invisible specks in
/>
   the perspectives of the universe. The ship was receding above, below or beside the worldball — its pilot hadn’t said a dozen words.
   Down in the rabbit hole of the sleezy arm my fingers played the
   radio buttons and his face ghosted up on my faceplate drawing my
   focus, though stars still blurred beyond.
   ‘Thanks again,’ I said.
   ‘No trouble.’ The voice briefly shared my helmet where there’s
   room for a cat to walk and stroke your face — and was a jagger once
   who used to take his cat with him right there in his sleezy which
   must have been a beautiful friendly sharing of warmth and fur and
   solitude (solitude as I had now) except that there were jokes about
   catshit on the faceplate — he used to feed it something to bind it
   before a trip, except once when he was in a hurry . . .
   The pilot almost smiled, then vanished, joining a host of others
   winked from my faceplate about their business — company pilots,
   astrogators, owner-lighters, work-trippers, richies, patrolmen
   (sometimes), and those without faces — tinskippers and disembers
   — all percolating along their own capillaries through the great
   dark heaving breathing sighing semi-sentient microbic metropolitan lifemass of the universe. Gone. G’bye. Goodluck to you and to me.
   His ship was tiny now, burning off for the jum p to Jaxon, and the
   stars jewelled at me from a million years of serenity.
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   Anthony Peacey
   I was cruising oh maybe thousands of kph in orbit around
   Greenball but it felt as though I lay on my mother’s breast. Oh glad
   now that I had worked like an animal for a whole unending dogged
   year in the mines on Gargantua’s filthy seventh moon — worked
   like a gorilla, like an ox, like a hog tusk-tearing from the rock a
   mountain of cred to spend on my darling baby ten-foot-tall Space
   Life Support System mother of mother’s womb in which I now lay
   in mother space — this iron baby fit to weld up the glaring heart of
   an orbital powerhouse, fit to tear the salvage from derelict fortresses with its laser claws, fit and fitted to mother me for a month then comet me down through deep dense atmospheres and baby
   me into the arms of planetary seas. Oh great Sleezy my Sleezy —
   and I wave my arms and metal-baby-fat legs picturing myself like a
   leg-waving beetle of red and black metal.
   Serenity.
   I fluffed a jet and rolled to float up down sideways — my back to
   Greenball and face open to the loving stars that look distant but are
   near to a jagger, and lay in space flowing out among the stars and
   hearing the swish of eternal seas or of my blood and contented
   body noises and the muted life of the sleezy mothering me, smiling
   a little at the floor-sweeper, the keyslip clerk, the coffee girl —
   though she, young, probably made it with some sweaty youth last
   night bursting the membrane of her life, when his phallus burst in
   her flesh, flowing out when his hot seed lava flowed, flowing out
   into the veiled protoplasmic bejewelled intergalactic teeming
   dreaming lifemass.
   The Jaxon pilot hadn’t said a dozen words but three were ‘revolution on Otzapoc’. Okay, so a quiet affair — Berlit gently removed from office by the firm minions of Jahenry, bloodless, civilised —
   Berlit given a villa in Terengay, in the hills, to live quietly gentlemanly until his years closed or the quietly crazy political tide changed — hardly a ripple reaching the streets as the ostensible
   nominal self-supposed leadership of the Otzapocan local cell of the
   socio-economic natural biologic evolutionary intergalactic lifemass
   changed, hardly a ripple touching the white tree-hidden suburban
   hospital where recovered Kolissa worked and waited. Ah Kolissa I
   see your intergalactic jewel eye swelling sweet glass living lens shining back the light of the universe — soon soon now we’ll be together and jag jag jag the dark lovely highways between the stars hand in
   hand in iron sleezy waldo hand then down to tropic seas a hundred
   thousand lightyears distant and caressful sand no iron between
   Jagging
   203
   flesh and flesh sweet my lovely Kolissa.
   The loving stars shone back at me from far, hard and dying.
   Stars die. Birth life decay and death and decay the wheel of life
   and death. Stars dying. Booted helmeted black-goggled storm
   troopers rushing from Berlit’s rent blood-smoking body to the
   white hospital to spatter its walls with red and rage, Kolissa glaring
   disbelief at the open red mouth across her arm drooling blood from
   open tubes of arterial channels, Kolissa head-lolling sense-battered
   beyond perception of the open red mouth between her thighs,
   helmeted booted black-goggled iron gun-wielding rapists laughing
   pounding laughing raping with guns of flesh and guns of iron.
   H ard and dying stars laughed at me.
   And sneak picked up nothing, no data flashed on my faceplate,
   no luminous ghostly figures veiled the arrogant jewels of dying
   stars. No ship rose from Greenball to burrow through chaos to
   those stars.
   I called Greenball’s Data Central knowing the laughing fat
   Buddha computer would nothing know of revolution on Otzapoc,
   no news service torpedo having been allowed down its black nonspace rabbit hole yet while the new government was still buttoning its pants.
   The taciturn Jaxon pilot had said no word to turn me aside and
   his silence supposed no danger to fellow travellers, angels of space
   keeping their own counsel. Yet I saw the hard stars die with no love
   left for specks of hum an flesh adrift upon savage tides of radiation
   and vacuum and mindless history.
   No ship rose but one making lightplus to the other side of the
   universe as if fleeing benighted Otzapoc. And perhaps they all
   knew, knew more than I, more death desolation and destruction,
   more blood flowing in smoking freedom and white hands half
   closed on severed arms and white faces half closed in raped oblivion
   — perhaps no ship now would ever jum p to Otzapoc where final
   chaos had broken into the universe from the black Outside and the
   seeds of universal perdition germinated at this moment.
   W hen I slept I dreamed we were going skiing but the heel clip
   was broken and I couldn’t get my ski to stay on. Kolissa, Albion and
   the others started to move off, laughing. I cut my finger on the clip
   and the end joint fell off, lying there on the snow, sunshine glinting
   on the nail and three bloodspot flowers in the snow beside it.
   Kolissa and the others had gone. Black storm clouds piled behind
   the mountains and flowed across the sky. I woke gripped by huge
   ‘2
   ,04:
   Anthony Peacey
   rage against Kolissa.
   Two bottomless days I fell around Greenball before my jag came.
   As soon as sneak picked up something, I would send: ‘Jagging to
   Otzapoc, Bennet-Kenny system. Jagging to Otzapoc, Bennet-
   Kenny system,’ along with my everloving face. And this strange
   jack came ghosting up on my faceplate with eyeglasses that I’d
   never seen anyone actually wearing — ‘Yes, I can give you a ride,’ he
   said. Then, ‘I take it you are in orbit — whereab
outs?’
   I sent my path definition.
   ‘How do I find you, then?’
   ‘Your computer will have accepted this data already. Just tell it to
   latch onto my sneak and they’ll close us.’
   ‘Your what?’
   ‘Sneak — Sensory, Navigation and Communications — it’s a
   little computer.’
   ‘Oh yes. Let’s see —
   ‘Problem?’ I said. He was looking at something.
   ‘I was just checking the instruction codes.’
   He must have had them pinned up beside his console. I was a bit
   tickled in my despair over entrusting life and limb to this oddball.
   But we closed, I got into his can, got out of sleezy feeling tiny and
   stick-limbed like an ant on the metal mesh floor while sleezy
   hunkered into the sleezy bay and burbled, beginning to flush itself
   and tank up with expendables.
   And walked light-footed with the coveralls brushing my skin past
   aloof machinery cabinets to the dark control cabin where instrument displays burned green and red and the stars burned cold through vertiginous glass.
   ‘There,’ he said dangling a finger towards a rag hung over the
   couch lieback stick, ‘I spilt coffee on the seat.’
   I started to wipe the sticky black upholstery.
   ‘No, no, just spread it under you.’
   I glanced up: his other hand tangled in the attitude controls over
   his head — head with a reflection of an instrument glow on baldness between strands of hair.
   ‘Oh all right,’ he said.
   But I was an animal, dumb, introverted, incapable of making
   civilized conversation. Destination? Origin? Name?
   ‘Bandy Spiragel,’ I told him.
   ‘Bandy . . . ’ He was a thoughtful old jack. ‘Would that be from
   Pantopash, with voicing of the p and t£’
   Jagging
   205
   ‘No. As far as I know I’ve no ancestors from that arm. It’s short
   for Bandito. My old dear got it one day playing with the library
   keyboard — it means outlaw or robber in one of the early Earth
   languages.’
   ‘Fascinating.’
   ‘Yeah, she thought it was sort of romantic.’
   ‘Does she think catching rides around the stars — jagging, you
   call it? — is romantic?’
   He knew the word all right, it was just his learned other-worldly
   
 
 Strange Attractors (1985) Page 28