Sunday, September 15, 2013

The Fairy - Part 1



I discovered the fairy propped up against a colourful tower of sticky notes at the far end of my desk. It was hidden at first behind a stack of files that I had been neglecting to update, but revealed itself upon my feeble attempt to create the illusion of a smaller workload by dividing the pile into two.

I remember the ensuing moments in a comically slow haze. I languidly cocked my head to the side as I stared at the tiny creature, motionless and unexpectedly dull next to the fluorescent vibrancy of my sticky notes. It had an almost bat-like appearance, dark and furry, with grotesque anthropomorphic features in the form of a face, and arms, and legs. Its wings were milky-grey and translucent, and currently fell in a wrinkled heap around the tiny entity like a blanket of decaying chicken skin.

In a former life, I might have recoiled. Let out a yelp of shock, jumped from my seat. But after six years of working as a Quality Customer Experience Agent at Omninet, the regional leader in mobile phone services, I could proudly say that so long as I sat at that desk, nothing could surprise me. So I didn’t waste time trying to convince myself of a reasonable explanation. I simply thought to myself, “Well, that’s it. You’ve gone off the deep end now, Tansy. Your years of coping with absurd customer complaints through improbably high caffeine consumption and casual drug use have finally rendered some part of your brain permanently unable to operate on the normal human spectrum.”

I resigned myself to this fact and got up from my seat, reaching for the mug I had picked up from the thrift store after my first day on the job, which had loyally taken up residence to the left of my keyboard ever since.

I had dropped out of college a couple of months before Omninet called me to the ranks, so I didn’t have a lot of money to pool towards personalizing my desk space, but that receptacle for the dark nectar of life was an investment I have never regretted. It is a simple mug: a classic white cylinder with a handle that extends from the top of the mug to the very bottom, enabling the user to comfortably grip the cup in a secure, four-finger manoeuvre. Its glossy exterior bears a picture of a specific human bone and big, blue block letters that read, “I FIND THIS HUMERUS”. It’s become such a natural part of my working environment that the text is almost invisible to me now, but I still let out a chuckle every time I happen to make sense of the words.

This is my life. Mugs. Corny jokes. Ordinary things that seem mundane, but in fact are not, because their apparent ordinariness is a human imposition based on the frequency of their appearances in a given culture. Take that tower of sticky-notes on my desk. There are thirteen layers of varying thickness in six different shades – pink, green, blue, orange, white and purple. A staple of the Western office environment, yet, there is nothing natural about this item, and its place on my desk, or any other desk in any other office for that matter. Certainly, it serves a useful purpose – temporary physical notation to alert the user of something relevant to the object or document to which it is attached – but need it come in a rainbow of colours? Need it come in a myriad of shapes, sizes, and even textures? There are traditional yellow square notes, semi-transparent plastic flags, neon pink abstractions, blue rectangles fanned out in a spiral that beg you to whisper “He loves me” whenever you pluck a petal from the papery bouquet... There are even companies that will create custom sticky notes that can display anything from a washed-out stock photo of running wild horses to a portrait of your grandmother.

Call me crazy, but I find that interesting.

This supernatural stuff? This was out of my league. At least while sober.

I walked into the lunch room and poured myself a fresh cup of coffee. I gulped back about half of that and then emptied the rest of the pot into my mug. Freshly wired, I made my way back to the cubicle.

When I returned, I couldn’t help but notice that the illusion persisted.

At second glance, the thing was perhaps not as hideous as I had originally perceived. Its upturned snout was actually rather dainty, its long eyelashes feathery, and even the chicken-skin wings, in life, might have been silvery and beautiful. But I was fairly certain that this creature had not been alive for quite some time. Hours, if not days.

As I gazed in curiosity, as much in regards to my own condition as the condition of what appeared to lie before me, it suddenly occurred me that my line was ringing. This occurrence came in the form of my floor manager, Carl, who had walked up to my cubicle and tapped my shoulder before calmly stating, “Tansy, your line is ringing”.

Carl was only a few years older than me, but he had been working for Omninet since he was 16 years old, and the years of front-line customer service had taken a toll on his appearance. His hairline was retreating from his forehead like a waxing crescent moon, his belly was increasingly rotund, and his promotion to manager had been accompanied by an underwhelming moustache that he refused to acknowledge with anything but pride. However, all these things combined served to enhance a fatherly, jovial appearance that was well suited to his personality. Carl and I had become good friends over the years, and I enjoyed working for him.

“Carl, what’s that on my desk over there?”

“You mean the stack of files I asked you to update by last Tuesday?”

“No. Past that.”

“It’s a tower of rainbow sticky notes.”

“Anything else?”

“3 pairs of scissors, one of which has my initials on the handle.”

“Right, you can have those back.”

He picked up the scissors. “What’s this about?”

He couldn’t see it. He could acknowledge everything around the lifeless fairy creature, but the creature itself did not seem visible to him. I considered what my possible courses of action might be. It seemed that the likely outcome was as I had originally suspected – I was experiencing some sort of sudden-onset hallucinogenic mental illness. But I couldn’t help but wonder for a moment whether it truly was an illusion, or whether I had simply managed to pick up a visual signal that only seemed invisible to an office drone who was accustomed to pay mind solely to the collection of strange artifacts that make up his working habitat. What should I do next? What could I tell Carl?

I took my mind back to Client Interaction training. The key to any good customer service experience is an approach of understanding. In difficult situations, the best thing to do is to clearly explain your interpretation of the problem to the customer, acknowledge their feelings, and ask them what they want as a solution.

So that’s what I did.

“Carl, I see a dead fairy on my desk. I know that sounds crazy and I don’t expect you to understand entirely, but I needed you to know so we can decide how to move forward.”

“A dead fairy?”

“Well, I think it’s dead. It looks dead.”

He looked at me quizzically, and didn’t turn back towards the sticky notes. There was concern in his eyes, for me as a friend, but it was gradually being buried by a mask of “I don’t have time for this”.

“I think you should take some time off, Tansy. I’ll find someone to cover you for the rest of the week. Let me know if you need longer.”

“Maybe that’s best.”

“Ask someone in Security if you need help getting home, and make sure you have someone to check up on you.”

“Thanks, Carl. I’ll do that”.

“I’m late for a managers meeting. We’ll talk soon.”

“Sounds good.”

And then he walked off, at an unusually frantic pace.

I wondered if my condition was contagious.

I turned my attention now towards logging off of the phone system, shutting down my computer and packing up my meager supplies. I polished off the contents of my humerus mug and left it on the desk. I’d wash it when I got back.

Then I thought of something else. Sliding over to the area beside my stack of files, I leaned in close to the infected area of my vision. I brought my face within inches of the tiny life form and stared at it dead on. The image was constant, unwavering. I reached for a pencil and slowly directed it, eraser-first, towards the fairy-bat. My hand started to quiver as I drew closer and closer, aiming for a section of torso covered by the flaccid wing.

Splllrghffff.

In reality, there was probably no detectable sound from the impact between eraser and wing, but in my head, it was amplified to stereo volume.

I pushed at it. I felt the resistance of object against object. I saw the textures of its body bend and move with the pressure of my pencil probing this way and that. If this was a trip, it was some trip.

I slid back to the other side of my desk and grabbed my lunch bag, pulling out a Tupperware container and emptying the dry salad into the garbage before lining it with a handful of tissues from the box I keep on top of my computer tower. That should be about the right size.

I shimmied back to the spot beside the files and hesitated a moment. My last experiment suggested that this was more than a hazy mirage – this was something that I could touch, and feel. If I took it home with me, took a long nap, maybe I would open the container again and find a pen, a banana peel, or nothing at all. If the little fairy-bat was still there... well, I’d cross that bridge when I came to it. But if I left it here on my desk, and returned to find it gone, I’d always have to wonder if it was ever really there. I had to take it with me.

I looked once more at the tiny coffin I had prepared. I was almost entirely sure that the thing, if it really existed, was dead, but there was still something unsettling about placing it in an airtight container. I grabbed my other pair of borrowed scissors and stabbed a few jagged holes in the plastic lid.

I considered how to transfer the body. I considered leveraging it between two file folders but that seemed imprecise and, well, a little tactless. If you’re going to dump a body into a Tupperware container, you want to treat that body with respect.

I settled on a blanket of tissues and my bare hands.

I felt a shudder course through my entire body as I wrapped my hands around the cold, limp figure. Its eyes were shut as if it were settled into a deep slumber. It might have looked peaceful, but any colour that might have been present in its small, fuzzy face was drained entirely. I gently lowered it into the pillowy tissue cradle and blanketed its body, hesitating once more to examine its face before I snapped on the lid. I wanted to remember it in fine detail, even if it was a figment of my own imagination. I had never considered myself to have any exceptional artistic vision, but if this was all in my head, then I was clearly loaded with untapped potential.


With the lid secured and the container packed carefully level above the rest of my belongings, I finally said goodbye to my little slice of routine for an undetermined period of time and walked in the opposite direction Carl had gone, past the lunch room and out the doors.  

To be continued...

Untitled

And so they dance across the sky
like characters that live and die
touching stars and scraping moons
disgracing lies
unending eyes
they're gone too soon.

Rainbows float amidst the dust
purple satin lined with rust
banana pie and ocean blue
A fading green
explores the scene
unearthly hues.

The song that plays is heard by none
yet known by almost everyone.
The dance comes easy with the tune
and off the floor
they twirl some more
cascading dunes.

The one who strays is unaware
a different song is playing there
but longs to spin and flow and sway
down on the floor
as long before
the legends say.

A falling star
a faded dream
deserted dance
and frozen steam

A memory 
of long ago
before the mortals
came to know

A silent wish
that took away
the magic of
the ever-day

And she.
She let it go.
She didn't know.
She let it go.




**- I found this in my old creative writing binder from around 2007. Make of that what you will. 

Introducing The Dump

This is my new blog.

To be used solely as the title implies - a dump.

No promises of regularity. No goals or illusions of somehow becoming more accountable for failing to accomplish them. Just a place where I can post something, if I feel like it, and others can read it, if they want.

Thank you.