BLOODBATH AT THE PERFUME FACTORY - RICHARD GODWIN
Rosemary of the soft skin had been acquired by Ronald Noble as his latest accessory.
She had wild blue eyes that had been switched off by the drugs and she liked to cover her skin in the oils sent from the exclusive perfume makers of France.
She had accounts with them all and knew the combination still used from the originators from Grasse.
Now, one Sunday, away from the sweaty advances of her husband, she dipped her body in the hot water of her bath and read about the US economy.
The book she held in her hand was called ‘Pissing It Up The Wall’ and she already loved the first paragraph.
She enjoyed the sensation of hot water lapping around her body as she digested the economic jargon and felt herself sliding into a tidal world of politics and manoeuvres.
Beneath the fiscal pomp she sensed a darker glory, a codification of need based on the control of dependence engendered by the economic relation between the pharmaceutical companies and the politicians.
And as she sipped her wine she sensed a way to crack her husband’s hollow skull.
She read about the waste incurred by the government, its statistical lies and obfuscations, its declaration of foreign support based on nothing more than reinvestment in its own economy and she began to feel hot.
Outside the window cleaner leaned on his ladder, a twisted allegory of pain.
He was the hanging man of her dreams, the one she could sup from.
And within that dark and bleeding moment she thought she was haemorrhaging on knowledge borne from the cup of sinful knowing.
That she had transgressed some hidden law and she felt the water had turned dark and she were bathing in blood.
The window cleaner leaned to watch the flesh on offer and his ladder slipped.
He reached out a hand and caught hold of an electrical cable plunging Rosemary into darkness.
He hung from the wire and managed to fall softly into a tree from which he made his escape with the cash he had earned.
Rosemary reached for her handbag, fumbling for her torch.
But there was no light in this economic blackness and she dropped a wad of cash into the bath.
The moon broke through some clouds and sent a distant ray of light into her steaming bathroom and as she stood and reached for the cash it seemed to her she was pulling the notes out of blood, each dollar dripping with blood and strangely erotic by the light of the moon.
And she realised as she stood there that the economy was nothing more than that and she knew all she needed to know.
Downstairs, she found the trip switch and lit the house.
Then she poured some wine and returned to her bedroom to dress.
She went into the bathroom and watched the steam swirl in the air and it seemed to her like the vaporous economy she inhabited.
She pulled the plug and watched the red water disappear down the pink drain and she knew the menstruating economy was another shell.
She made a salad Nicoise and waited for her husband to return home.
As she handed him his plate, she said, ‘I’m thinking of starting up a bank.’
BIO: Richard Godwin is the author of crime novel Apostle Rising, in which a serial killer is crucifying politicians and recreating the murder scenes of an original case. The novel has received great reviews.
It has just sold foreign rights to the largest publisher in Hungary.
He is widely published in many magazines and anthologies and also writes horror and Bizarro as well as literary fiction and poetry. You can find out more about him here. His Chin Wags At The Slaughterhouse are popular and penetrating interviews he conducts with other authors at his Blog.
His second crime novel, Mr. Glamour will be published in April of this year by Black Jackal Books as a paperback.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
9 comments:
A'yup. The gal, with her particular emotional set, would be a perfect banker/hooker (no difference really between the two professions -- except that whores are a lot more honest). Love the poor electrician's fate. Sounds like he had a "golden parachute." And of course, with her peachy plums and other goodies on liquid display even without the parachute, he'd have died a happy man.
As always, gorgeous language in service of dark thoughts. Compelling.
Pretty and painful. Just the way i like 'em!
"Eyes switched off by drugs." Wow, great line.
Great writing. Really enjoyed this.
Richard - You had me with...
"She had wild blue eyes that had been switched off by the drugs."
Dark, beautiful writing... my cup runneth over...
A great twisted telling, Richard... first rate!
All Richard's female leads are beautiful, soulless bitches. Loved how she pulled the "bloody" dollars out of the bath, & how "she knew the menstruating economy was another shell." I had a friend once, who said she could cum just from watching a man count money.
I'm glad you enjoyed this one. Many thanks to all of you for your comments.
Twisted, smart stuff.
Post a Comment