("`-''-/").___..--''"`-._ `6_ 6 ) `-. ( ).`-.__.`) (_Y_.)' ._ ) `._ `. ``-..-' _..`--'_..-_/ /--'_.' ,' (((' (((-((('' (((( K R I S T E N' S C O L L E C T I O N _________________________________________ WARNING! This text file contains sexually explicit material. If you do not wish to read this type of literature, or you are under age, PLEASE DELETE THIS FILE NOW!!!! _________________________________________ Scroll down to view text -------------------------------------------------------- This work is copyrighted to the author © 2006. Please don't remove the author information or make any changes to this story. You may post freely to non-commercial "free" sites, or in the "free" area of commercial sites. Thank you for your consideration. -------------------------------------------------------- Piano by Chronic fantasist (chip_potts@yahoo.co.uk) *** This is a story about someone who plays the piano. It's kind of inspired by a Smiths song - when I was very young, I thought a line in the Hand that Rocks the Cradle was "there will be blood on the piano tonight" which made an impression (this isn't what he says). Also, the idea of Charlie Mingus's clown that realises that the more he beats himself up, the more applause he gets was an influence. (M-solo, v, ritual, suicide) *** Greg lived in an old flat in Edinburgh’s Tollcross, with a cat called Marmeladova after his favourite novel character and on account of her honey coloured fur that seemed to catch fire in the sunlight and made Greg’s eyes sting with admiration. The highlight of Greg’s day was to sit, sometimes with Marmeladova on his lap, sometimes without her, at his enormous double windows that pared the walls away from his house and let the light of the outside in, inescapable. Greg tore down the curtains that had been there when he’d bought the flat. He would sit in front of the windows, sometimes for hours, and gaze out of them, at the concrete ground three stories down, at the rows of sandstone tenements that sprouted perpendicularly from halfway along his own street, and this filled him up the way that food fills some people up, or books, or friends, or family. Greg had left his family behind because they had wanted him to go into the family business, which was farming, while Greg had wanted to be a musician. It had been a messy business, his leaving home, with the family refusing to believe that their last hope of continuing their centuries old family business would disappear with their only child, and unable to comprehend the meaning of music to the boy, for to them it was just so much clatter. As for friends, he’d never been very good at making them, because his obsession made him a very dull and selfish person to be around. Greg knew that he could never be a whole person, and believed it was because he was a vessel for the expression of something more than himself. However, he had recently begun to think that he may have made a mistake. Perhaps he should have stayed at home and farmed. Perhaps he should have chosen to be a full person and live a real life instead of living this shadow life. Perhaps he had been too bloody minded, too arrogant, and too dismissive, and only now was he was learning his real lesson, that it was impossible to give up the real world and survive. There was actually nothing more than himself, that he had been deluded and childish to think that there was. Because, even though he was a very talented pianist and had many interesting ideas for compositions, every time he sat down to write a happy song it ended sad, and every time he gave up with a sigh and decided to just go ahead and write a sad song, he wouldn’t be able to finish it for crying. One day after Greg felt he had not more energy to go on with the music that he knew was inside him, he happened across an inverse law between his insides and outsides, purely by frustrated accident. He realised that if he cut his arm just a little bit, the music that was inside him but that was too sad for him to stand to write, would emerge little by little instead of choking impotently in his throat and wrists and veins. So he kept a razor and a bag of towels by his piano each time he sat down to play, and every time he felt he couldn’t go on writing, he cut his arm a little bit more and made sure not to get any blood on the piano, and then he could go on. Greg started to write the masterpiece of his life. He could feel it, the genius of his music, as though he had channelled the voice of nature through his fingers into the notes floating from the piano. He was to reach the beautiful high point of the piece any day now, he could see the music before his eyes physical and precise as a map, and could feel the approach of the climax as if he were standing at some point along the map, before a jaguar shocking him straight in the eye with its own keen, violent eye. He knew exactly where his melody was going, and how he would harmonise it in just such a way that had never been heard before. He could taste the chords in the distance and his fingertips ached to transfer their ungraspable soul from his head to the manuscript paper before him. The emotion crashed against him in waves and his sight cleared, his head was no longer muddled, every sound was conducted directly to his chest and the cotton wool bubble that had seemed to coat his senses all his life evaporated from around his nerves. For the first time he recognised what was important, and what was beautiful, and what he had done wrong in his past, and what he would never do wrong again, and what he would do again and again and again no matter how wrong it was because, after all, he was only human. And all the time the waves of music crashing against his insides increased in force, itching against his veins to burst out, his arteries clouding in the perfection of the music, his head swimming with sforzandos and crescendos and diminuendos and ritorendos... …and with all of this bursting inside of him, he found that he could not get the music out. As soon as he played the first chord of the climax, as soon as he tried to put his pen to the paper, his stomach churned, his eyes filled with tears, sometimes he was physically sick, and he had to lie down all day and all night, unable to do anything, just shaking, sweating, weak with longing and burning quietly with frustration, the music swelling inside his head into the cacophony of limbo that he feared would choke him to death or drive him insane. He could not sleep any more. His block plagued him and his focus was so intense that he could think of nothing else. His cat crawled out of the cat flap and never looked back. Having given up everything else for his music, Greg decided he could not afford to look back, or sideways, or even forwards and out of his window any more. He looked at himself, he looked inside himself and he looked at the piano, and that was his life. He cut his arm, slowly, and the blood welling from the fresh, deep wound echoed in shards of sound in his head and flushed the music out of him and onto the page. He took the knife to himself again, slashing across the previous cut, and the initial surprised tension of the resisting flesh to part gave way to the slow seeping of blood that increased to a thick flow that he could not stem and that fell in a contrasting deluge of shocking bright red onto the black and white keys of the piano. His sight was becoming blurry but his strength was all in his hands, he could play and write and that was all that mattered. The keys were not allowed to go sticky as the blood was not allowed to dry for the fresh blood that spattered onto the old pattern. The blood oiled his mind and gave him the breath he needed to write. Having run out of unbroken flesh on his arms to cut, he unbuttoned his shirt and sliced the knife cleanly against his chest in an arced rainbow, which wept slowly down his torso and into his jeans. He undid his jeans and kicked them off, then cut down his groin, inside his hip bone, down his thighs, his shins, his ankles, and immediately after a cut, his hands would fly back to the piano, back to the page, and coast on the rush of the adrenaline until it ran out and he needed to cut more. He was reaching the last line of the music, he was so weak he wasn’t sure if he could stay upright and he leant his head against the head of the piano. His hands were shaking but did not betray him as he struggled to copy the final notes from the keys onto the page. He felt he had cut away all the ties that had been holding him back, piece by piece, as if he had finally uncovered himself, and there was only one bond left that kept him from completion. He took the knife shakily to his throat and sliced diagonally across it, from his jaw to his collar bone. As he felt the life seeping out of his body, he committed his last notes onto the manuscript paper and then his arms rested, his bloody carcass tilting over the bloody piano, and the paper bloodied underneath him, but still legible, although this meant nothing to the policemen who found him two weeks later. END Email me with abuse/admiration/whatever. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ This story was written as an adult fantasy. The author does not condone the described behavior in real life. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Kristen's collection - Directory 42