Dance for Me
Cade’s punishment, which he accepted without protest, was to be made into a
clown. The first step in the process was purely bureaucratic: his name was
confiscated, all paper documents and digital records and other traces of his
life up to the moment of his conviction incinerated, deleted, unwritten.
After that, the adjustments commenced. By chemical means his skin was
lightened in phases, until its whiteness was as chalk; his once thin lips were
inflated, puckered, reddened, as if stung by hornets, and his smile widened by
scalpel and repaired with paper sutures that dissolved back into his cheeks.
Under heavy sedation his larynx was modified until his voice reached a pitch
known to draw laughter. His thinning hair was shaved to the skull and a frizzy
bloom of bright blue curls was stitched into his scalp. Bones were shaved, and
joints subtly altered, in his right leg and at his hip and pelvis so that his
gait became a merry roll, the left leg a little longer than the right, each
step propelling him forward with a jolt of pain that could be seen in his eyes
but not the muscles of his face.
The man no longer named Cade never saw the surgeons who worked on him, only
the nurses – brisk and unspeaking – who staffed the prison-hospital, easing
him under and then, later, welcoming him back. After a time he began to wonder
if the nurses were human: in the blank machinic efficiency of their movements
they seemed anything but. Afterwards, he would never be sure if he had been in
a hospital in a prison or a prison in a hospital, or if the difference even
made a difference. Before long such questions would belong to what might have
been someone else’s life.
Out of surgery, the new clown was dressed – seemingly at random, in a room
stuffed to its narrow, high windows with disarrayed costumes – in multicolored
pantaloons, an over-sized white shirt, and red bow tie, and his feet shod in
curling bright green shoes as long as his arm. Dispatched from that grey
institution, a mismatched bray of colour on an overcast morning that someone,
he wasn’t sure who, had told him was a Tuesday, he wandered back into a town
he no longer recognised as home.
Of course his housing situation had changed. He could no longer make the rent
on his flat, a one-bed attic in a Georgian townhouse – issues with rent,
specifically the payment thereof, had been a part of the problem in the first
place – and in the absence of private accommodation he was condemned to sleep
in a yellow car alongside twenty-one others consigned to the same fate. The
space was tight and there was always some noise going off – a horn or trumpet,
a squeak or honk or maudlin wordless song, the spray of forced laughter or the
weeping of a child sentenced as an adult to lifetime harlequinade – but, the
clown told himself, he would get used to it.
The man no longer called Cade could get used to anything – that was his view.
He had chosen to see the upside, the silver lining, the opportunity in the
disaster he had made of his life. But it wouldn’t be easy: he had been
debanked, barred from employment, rendered invisible to the automatic doors of
supermarkets, made to clown for his supper, to dance and sing, that he might
glean a little loose change from a public already grown tired of clowns.
⚬
One early summer evening, many years later, delirious with hunger and
exhaustion, the clown found himself drifting through a part of town he
recognised as if from a dream. For a moment he could not locate himself –
sometimes it wasn’t clear anymore that there remained a self to locate. Those
memories of his old life that occasionally troubled him felt like a film he
had seen once but mostly forgotten. But as the light began to turn, he saw it:
his old digs.
The clown gazed up at the building, its cream frontage made golden by the
setting sun, and felt a swell of emotions he did not have the vocabulary to
name. A man was standing with his back to a second-storey window. As if he
could feel the weight of the clown’s gaze pressing on his neck, he turned
around, then stepped to the window with his hands cupped around his eyes,
peering down into the street. After a pause, the man started to laugh. With
some effort, he lifted the sash. His laughter was terrible, uproarious, full
of savage disbelief.
Cade! the landlord called.
Or was it the son of the landlord? The clown who had once been called Cade
didn’t know. He wasn’t sure who ‘Cade’ was, but he knew full well that the man
meant him: the fellow was, after all, pointing at him.
Cade! Dance for me, Cade. Dance!
Unwittingly, the clown began to tap his foot.
Dead Babies
I started seeing them soon after we left the hospital. Lying on the roundabout
or facedown in the road. By the parked ambulance, by the entrance to A&E.
There and then not there. Clouded eyes wide open, blind yet sighted. No, I
don't know how it works: but I didn’t doubt that they could see me. I didn’t
tell Sally, and by the time I realised I should have told Sally, it was much
too late.
Jack was okay. That was what mattered. I told myself: Jack is okay – that is
what matters. That’s what I’ll focus on.
But my focus drifts.
We didn’t watch much TV in those days – there was never the time, or never the
right time – but on the few occasions I turned it on, I saw them there, too,
staring out from the screen. Once, when Sally was napping Jack, or trying to
nap him, I put it on low, for company, I suppose, as I tidied the house, and I
felt the hairs on the back of my neck prickle up, and there he was when I
turned around, eyes following me across the living room.
I switched the television off and told myself I needed to rest. Nap when he
naps, everyone said. And Jack was napping.
So I lay on the sofa, closed my eyes, then immediately shimmied round onto my
side and pulled my phone from my pocket, and there in the stream of content
swam their faces.
(By the entrance to Prince Regent’s Swimming Pool. By the toilet in the
Basketmakers’ Arms. In the stairwell of our building. In the car park seen
from our window. On the beach down from the Bandstand, tended by the lapping
of the waves. In the grass at Devil’s Dyke. By the public toilet in Hove Park.
On the back seat of the top deck of the number 49 bus on Western Road. In one
corner of our bedroom, just beneath the ceiling. On top of one of the driers
in the laundrette. In the basket of a bicycle as someone cycled past me down
Trafalgar Street.)
Yesterday, bouncing Jack on my lap, enjoying the bright delightful whoop of
his laughter, I saw them reflected in his eyes. Behind me, behind the sofa,
against the living room wall. I turned at once, suddenly cold in my bones, in
my gut, but of course there was nothing there. There never is.
And Jack was still laughing. It’s the most joyous thing. I bounced him up
again, up again. You can get used to this, I told myself. You can get used to
anything.
Jack, happy and unknowing, continued to laugh.
Seán Padraic Birnie is a writer from Brighton. His debut collection,
I Would Haunt You If I Could, was published by Undertow Publications in
2021. His work has appeared in places such as
Interzone,
Remains,
Fictionable, and
Cōnfingō, and has been
reprinted in
Best British Short Stories,
The Year’s Best Dark Fantasy and Horror, and
The Year’s Best Weird Horror. He is on Bluesky and Instagram
@seanbirnie. For more information, see
seanbirnie.com.