Sunday, 21 August 2011

...of an intermission

After the meal, they crank up the gramophone and play music-hall songs. Serge slips out and makes his way in the dark through long grass, then across the shorter grass beside the woods, back to his houseboat. He sits on its deck and watches another barge slide through the oily water, laden once more with objects whose shapes beneath the covering suggests broken or twisted metal, or perhaps animals, the bumps and folds of their limbs and torsos. In the waves left by its passage when it's gone, Serge sees a water rat swimming towards the far bank. The black surface of the water around the rat's head is laced with garish streaks of colour: orange-yellow, greenish white, reflections of the gunfire flickering across the sky. The sound of each volley arrives late, often after its own flash has faded from both sky and river; new waves of flashes catch up with the residual noise, overtake and lap it.
"Intermission," Serge says, to no one, or perhaps the rat.
For a moment, the flickering stops and the whole countryside falls silent. A calcium flare descends noiselessly not far away, silhouetting the poplars and rimming their leaves with frozen light, as though with hoar-frost. Behind it other, smaller lights glow on and off, like fireflies. Then their pops arrive, then louder stutters, then high, booming eruptions: sounds and lights meshing together as the air comes back to life, like a magnificent engine warming up.

[C, McCarthy, T.]

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