Pixie arrived in the world on Golgotha ejected from an injured earth: a small thin blue waif older than sin; a slim emerald of sunlight streaked with darkness.
Pixie chewed her lip. She witnessed good and evil on that hot nailing hill and could not tell the difference.
She crouched behind the cross, a shadow on the future.
Wary of tomorrows she stole a drop of blood from beneath the tongue of the magpie pecking the wounds and squeezed a tear from a robin soothing the scalp.
She hid them beneath her wings.
As the dying sun set on this world she fled the execution. Looking back she saw night descend like a brute and a red wisp rise.
Pixie entered eons in search of fate, a newborn puck from an ancient race which had ruled the dawn forest and owned the sun's first day before Man had stood erect and cursed the land.
But they'd vanished and she was very annoyed.
She knew not where her destiny lay but had an inkling that with clenched fists she would wrestle it from the glint, the twinkle, the sinking of some unknown tomorrow. She would bathe in its splashdown. Yes.
She sought herself. A maggot in her flesh.
Pixie flew, landed, crawled and screamed a song of surging primal oaks and water slapping on the blasted shores of creation. Her blue hands weaved cradles of anguish as she whirled and wheeled across pointless ages, her saxifrage cap soaking up her sweat under the sun's searing corona, her pointed ears piercing its petals like horns. She was a chameleon of time and place; the slang behind the platitudes; the eel in the piss.
She pushed through the legs of Charlemagne; she loped with the wolves of the Serengeti; she blew dust in the shot eye of the dying Harald and whispered in the poet's ear, "Xanadu!".
She skated on the rims of volcanoes; ran down the running mountain screes; she belly-slid along turquoise glaciers: whooshed down the curves of Mammoth tusks and dived in the dizzying drop of the Angel Falls grabbing lizards from the cliff.
But where were her damn kin?
She flew through the black smoke of Popes blowing raspberries and much worse emissions spewing from wars. Singing Tipperary with ailing Tommy's, the world remained dogged by the good and evil she had been given at Golgotha.
Pixie sat on the head of a brush in Da Vinci's pot kicking paint. She stared past the smiling Lisa toward the ripening earth beyond where the future pulled faces.
She hummed and cussed and chucked her cap. She flew off like a dot leaving the funny page.
A dunnock hopped by.
"What's your name bird?"
"Dunstable. Dunstable Dunnock at your service young Sir. And what, may I ask, are you? For, I have never seen the like before!" replied the little bird cheerfully.
"I'm Pixie, bird. And yep. I'm alone, so don't rub it in!"
The dunnock stopped pecking and eyed the angry blue sprite ruefully.
"Do you know the nature of evil Pixie?" asked the bird.
"Not exactly bird .... but I have some under my wings. It makes me hot and mean," replied Pixie.
"Do you know the nature of Goodness?" asked the Dunnock.
"Why the questions bird? ..... I think its soft and tingling against my wings if you must know. Its getting on my wick!" she replied.
"Perhaps you can find others like yourself somewhere in between," mused Dunstable.
Preening his tartan wing he continued.
" I have seen children playing together and feeding my closest friends with smiles and seed. I have also seen my kin shot by cruel men and children ripped apart by pounding canons. This is the nature of the human world, the two live side by side, as they do in you. They are in eternal struggle with each other. I sense that your fate lies somewhere between them, between sins and love."
"Thanks bird, though I'm not sure what you're on about. Sins and love!" bellowed Pixie flying up into the blue, almost invisible as she stretched her wings. She closed her eyes for just a second and an aeroplane pilot caught a hint of her grimace as she bounced off his cockpit.
"Toerag!" she yelled.
"Ice?" he wondered.
Pixie read the fading word 'Enola .......' on the plane's fuselage as she somersaulted away through its contrail.
Wheeling back through the years Pixie came to rest over sharp spires one clear sunrise.
"I'm so damn tired of flying round these stupid apes!" She ranted.
She alighted in an open window and stood upon an old desk to pause for breath. A wizened old man was writing runes and scratched his chin as he struggled for a certain word.
Pixie squinted at the old man and his runic script and without being seen scribbled 'dork' in the ink with her big toe. Rising she smudged the d and wondered where middle earth was.
She careened through the dawn air and slurped the liquor hanging from catkins. She stole hazelnuts from a family of squirrels who said go to hell. Pixie added hell to her list and soared on the thermals above the trees. She felt at home in the wild: the forests, glades, hills and scarps and saw the dark ravens guarding the edifice.
Pixie planned to bug them but seeing their massive bristled beaks thought better of it but swaggered on their ledge nonetheless.
"Hey ravens. You seen anyone like me 'ave ya?" she asked kicking a twig off the edge.
"Be cautious imp. We are the Kings round here. Speak with respect or die in our nests" the huge birds cawed.
For the first time Pixie actually felt something like fear and said she was sorry, head bowed and ears lowered.
"We have heard of imps and urchins like you in the mad dens of Men, which they call supercities. Mother Nature is not welcome there. Their wild young are caged and men murder in the alleys, slick with blood, till there is nothing left but night carrion for us!" they warned, "The wild children may know of you."
Pixie curtsied and flew off yelling "Fleabags!" when far enough away. Stupid old coots she thought. Cities. Blood. Cages. Bollocks.
She sheered wings through the solar breeze and soared above towering huts of rusted steel and glass, forced skywards from the earth like decaying inkcaps.
"The supercity" whispered Pixie.
Packs of thin unclothed children scrambled toward her as she paused on their sills high in the gas clouds, whilst deafening aid rockets zoomed to Mars and trucks landed on the rooves filled with rotting meat, which men stuffed down mincers for the kids. Everywhere was the thrum of rusted motors and the stench of corruption.
Pixie's simian face smiled but her lips trembled. Her good side ached and she was overwhelmed with sympathy. She waved back at the prisoners as they ran across shit-stained rooms to see her take off and thought she saw herself, a ragged stray, reflected in their punched-in eyes. Could these wretches be her kin, the sad guttersnipes beaten and locked up at the top of the world?
She desperately wanted to help them but these cloud-scratching towers were damned fortresses where lives were trashed and childhood seeped away in the bloodied waste running through the streets. Red Kites arced in the puking fumes and picked at the carrion of the perished.
"It makes me so sad to think of you", she mouthed through the last glazing she passed. "Bastards!"
Pixie felt her torn heart break and wished she had company more than ever as night came down like smog over the city. Alone and desolate she slept fitfully in the filthy down of a tower nest as a scheming Cuckoo came ever closer toward her, issuing its two-note lies like a mermaid.
The cuckoos suddenly became a clamour and Pixie was wrenched from her sleep.
"What the .....," she yawned as shrill alarms yelled like grieving skuas allover the globe.
Pixie followed the din and in the vast white dome of government shaking men were muttering codes of doom like gibbering wigs as Pixie entered a war room. She sensed the embittered heart of the Chief and saw his reddened finger teetering on the switch of a last terrible oblivion.
Somewhere between sins and love.
Pixie whispered in the President's ear ....
"You fat fuck!"
He whirled round to see the turquoise sprite flying round his office waving a white flag.
She zoomed out of the window into the daylight, a neon missile of the third kind leaving the old man to consider his encounter.
Somewhere a David Bowie song was playing on a videomat.
"Sailors fighting in the dance halls, oh man, looks at those spacemen go ......"
He swigged some scotch and pressed.
Pixie sneaked into a new movie plex on the rich side of the city and watched a holo-D screening of the old flick Star Wars. She saw human couples fumbling in the darkness and fans dressed as huge bear monkeys long- growling at the screen..
She nestled down in the Gods with some chucked popcorn and shouted "Shut the fuck up" at the bears.
For some reason she kipped and dreamt of the rebellion far away. Her ears pricked up when she heard Yoda whisper:
"There is another."
Pixie felt a current of charge tingle through her small body and oscillate her wings. She felt sure, like Skywalker, that there was another like her in the city.
"Oh my God," she wailed and whizzed round the cinema like a balloon above the fans.
Pixie flew here, flew there, flew everywhere and asked every living thing whether they'd seen a pixie like her.
The answer was always no. Always get away, we've no idea, no we haven't so get lost imp.
There was no sign.
But then she heard the workmen cursing the gremlin.
"Jesus wept, we've got that god damned gremlin back. The rocket doors just won't fuckin open," yelled the gaffer, "If we don't get it open and stop the timer the thing will fly. That bastard missile will take the whole colony out."
The gremlin.
It rang a bell with Pixie.
She followed the men and came to a secret building dug into the mountain.
On the vast double doors it read "SILO".
Between Sins and Love thought Pixie. She was close. Her destiny lay behind those doors.
Invisible to the guards, the handles were jammed with a huge wooden cross.
Pixie had seen crosses like it before and knew the wisp of Golgotha had followed her here, to this point, to this exact spot.
She entered the silo through the air vent and landed on a giant concrete floor.
Gremlin was waiting.
"So you made it Pixie!" he yelled, a small red goblin with bow legs, clutching a remote control.
"Who are you?" she asked standing before him.
"I am your reflection. Your opposite. I am your doom and your people's captor. I have followed you since the crosses on the hill and luckily for me I found this place first."
"And were are my people?"
"They were hiding here, like cowards, away from the bombs. I have told them to get inside the biggest missile for safety. They were happy to oblige. I shall launch it tonight and kill them all. The day of the goblin is here Pixie. Blue imps are history," he chortled.
"You red bastard," cursed Pixie as she leapt furiously onto the laughing hob.
"I've pissed in your milk blue boy!" ranted Gremlin.
They grappled in the shadow of the massive missile as Pixie's folk looked on in horror from the timer window, hundreds of them locked inside the warhead set to target Martian City.
Pixie beat Gremlin with her wings repeatedly. The good. The bad. It all rubbed off on him. Gremlin staggered and stared through confused eyes.
He pressed the remote.
SWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOSH!
The silo roof yawned and the missile launched on a heading straight for Mars. Pixie raced and grabbed the tailfin as it escaped the hatch. She grabbed Gremlin too.
"You'd better defuse this thing you tosser or else you're a gonner too!" whispered Pixie to the squirming red. He crawled to the timer.
"Neither good nor evil will have their day today," bellowed Pixie as they left Earth's atmosphere, a burning cylinder of magic and make-believe bound for a new world.
Pixie saluted the ejected timer as it tumbled away. This was her destiny after all.
She was sure she could hear Bowie singing Is There Life on Mars somewhere in the distance.
A dreamlike journey through time and space, propelled by the powerful language of imagery! I like it, Woodsy... it's a heavy weight hitter!
ReplyDeleteFave line - 'Pixie read the fading word 'Enola .......' on the plane's fuselage as she somersaulted away through its contrail.'
Thanks Tine and thanks for taking the time to read my scribbles! I enjoyed writing Pixie especially the rolling around the epochs. I could have done more of that and had her affecting history. I wasn't that pleased with the ending after I'd written it including the character gremlin but I had to find a way to draw the story to a close which made sense and reunited Pixie with her people. Glad you like the Enola line. I enjoyed writing lines like that.
DeleteTine? Tone! Doh!
ReplyDelete