Mr Morrow Becomes Acquainted with
the Delicate Art of Squid Keeping
Geoffrey Maloney
1.
The Invitation
Mr Victor Morrow receives an invitation to a soiree—He wrestles with a
social dilemma—and reveals a thwarted desire to be El Coco at the Danse
Macabre.
Victor Morrow, senior civil servant and regular man-about-town,
received Madame Florabette Brackensfield’s letter in his morning mail.
Inside the cream envelope was a pretty lilac card, printed with gold
lettering, inviting him to a soiree on the seventeenth of the month, for an
evening of “scientific experimentation and enlightenment”. If what he had
heard were true, this would be one of Madame Brackensfield’s most
extraordinary and recondite “squidder” parties.
But, alas, the seventeenth was the night of the full moon, and
he had planned to attend the Danse Macabre at Toowong Cemetery. He
had already arranged for the preparation of his costume, that of El Coco—the
Colombian bogeyman who frightened children with his scary coconut head. It
was an original choice, he believed; surely, the ladies would not be able to
resist the charms of the legendary El Coco.
But yet, to decline Madame Brackensfield’s invitation was to
risk irreparable damage to his reputation. After all, her late husband,
known to all as the Admiral, was one of the heroes of the Kraken
Wars. Morrow decided there was nothing for it but to accept.
2.
The Baffling Baffalator
Mr Morrow investigates Madame Brackensfield’s drawing room—Professor
Andrew Jefferys introduces his pipe and attempts some bafflement—and the
Major introduces Miss Twickenham and her delightfully pointy nose.
Madame Brackensfield’s was one of those wonderful old wooden
mansions on the north bank of the river—two storeys tall, with marvellous
cooling verandahs all around, and fans and vents built into the roof to ease
the high heat of the Brisbane summer.
The place seemed to positively hum, as Morrow climbed the garden
path leading from Madame’s private wharf. The jacarandas had begun their
fall, and Morrow found his dainty Italian boots squelching through a thick
carpet of lilac blossoms. Further up the hill, from the tops of the tall gum
trees he could hear the koalas calling to each other in their guttural
voices. It was, he thought sadly, an absolutely splendid night for the
Danse Macabre.
At the door, Madame’s maid, a dark-skinned native of Pago Pago,
where the final battle against the Kraken had been fought, took his hat and
coat and showed him into the drawing room. Madame, she advised, would be
down shortly. Morrow, assuming he was the first guest to arrive, idled away
his time inspecting the room’s elegant features—a little peccadillo of his.
A drawing room, which after all was the most public room in a house,
revealed much about how a host or hostess wished to present his or herself
to the world.
Madame Brackensfield’s drawing room was splendid; there was
nothing in it which was not both practical and beautiful. Many of her chairs
and sofas were decorated in marvellous floral patterns, and the sideboards,
occasional table, etcetera, were constructed of highly polished native
woods, richly carved with images of sea serpents and other exotic animals
from some fabulous bestiary. The one exception to the uniform balance was a
collection of odd-looking scientific instruments prominently displayed upon
the mantelpiece.
Morrow was studying one of these, a long tube positioned on a
geared and levered tripod above a perfectly cut crystal mirror, when he
heard a voice behind him: “Kraken artefacts. That one is the Baffalator.
Perhaps you would care to hazard a guess as to its purpose.”
That was an instruction, not a question, Morrow thought, turning
to find Professor Andrew Jefferys, a prominent biologist at the University
of Brisbane. He was a tall gaunt fellow, with a deeply tanned complexion
that showed he had spent much of his academic career in the field. He wore a
pair of pince-nez clamped upon his nose in limpet-like fashion and a long
thick beard that would have done a bushranger proud. Morrow had met him on
several occasions when he had undertaken an environmental impact study on
the city swamplands for the government.
They shook hands in the overly friendly manner that business
acquaintances do.
“The Baffalator, eh? A curious name,” Morrow said, studying the
device now with a show of greater interest. He had once seen the stuffed
body of a Kraken in the Natural History Museum, and it had profoundly
disgusted him—the lifeless creature had looked as threatening and evil as he
imagined it had in real life. It was like a cross between a pig and human,
so much so the newspapers had nicknamed the Kraken the “Pigmen” during the
war. “It appears to be a microscope of some sort, or possibly a small
telescope, although the lens is in the oddest position and there is nowhere
to mount a slide.”
“Quite so,” Professor Jefferys said, pulling his pipe and
tobacco pouch from the pocket of his baggy linen jacket. “And not a
scientist in the land has been able to discover what use it was ever put to
by the Kraken. Its sole purpose appears to be no more than to baffle us
humans. Hence its name.”
Just then Major Pankhurst entered the room from the verandah.
With him were his wife, Lady Amberly, and a young woman whose handsome face
was familiar, but for the moment Morrow could not put a name to it.
“Victor, how nice to see you,” the Major said, ever his affable
self. “Jefferys is baffling you with the Baffalator, is he?”
The Major—retired—had served with Madame’s husband. He was said
to have been “the military mind” behind the destruction of the Kraken’s base
on the dark side of the moon. Morrow doubted the veracity of that particular
rumour. The Major was one of his father’s golfing foursome, and Morrow
regarded him as an amiable old duffer with a huge amount of luck on his
side. He had bumbled his way through his military career and had now bumbled
his way into a successful second marriage. Lady Amberly was a lady of rank
in the Old Country who, after the death of her first husband had come out to
the Antipodes to make a new life, met the Major, and fallen in love.
Morrow shook the Major’s hand robustly, as he was expected to,
then bowed to Lady Amberly as he took her hand and raised it to his lips.
She may have been in her late fifties, but Morrow was pleased to find she
giggled like a schoolgirl as he did so.
“And you know Miss Twickenham, of course,” the Major said.
Of course. Morrow now realised where he’d seen her before. Lucy
Twickenham, an up-and-coming Shakespearian actress who trod the boards at La
Boite. Last summer she had played Portia in The Merchant of Venice.
Her interpretation had been a little on the light side for his tastes but
professional nonetheless. “Of course,” Morrow said, bowing. “‘The quality of
mercy is not strained. It dropeth as a gentle rain from heaven.’ Your
performance was most delightful, Miss Twickenham. Victor Morrow, at your
service.”
Miss Twickenham blushed in a deliberate and fashionable manner.
“So you’re a theatre-goer, then, Mr Morrow?”
“Infrequently, I’m afraid. My work often keeps me too busy for
so many of life’s pleasures.” He smiled warmly as he studied her features.
There was something about her pointy nose he found altogether delightful.
“Still flogging off that swampland for the government, are you?”
Professor Jefferys asked. “Haven’t you made your fortune yet?”
“If it’s a fortune I’m making, then as a humble servant of the
public, it’s most certainly a fortune for the government.” Morrow smiled
once more at Miss Twickenham. He was just about to think up something
incredibly witty to say—he’d learnt that wit impresses a young lady no
end—when Professor Jefferys grabbed his elbow.
“Allow me to show you the tanks, dear fellow.”
“The tanks?”
“Where Madame keeps her squid.” Professor Jefferys winked at the
others and steered Morrow towards the French doors that led onto the
verandah. Morrow smiled his most polite smile, although the professor’s grip
on his elbow was just a little too strong.
3.
A Damn Fine Pipe
Mr Morrow makes the acquaintance of the squid—Professor Jefferys fails
to provide enlightenment—Mr Morrow discovers the professor has a splendid
tobacconist.
On the verandah, Morrow found there were two tanks, six feet
long by three high, with galvanised metal frames. The night air had grown
increasingly humid, and it now carried the smell of burning coal from the
new electricity works further up river.
Morrow walked to the nearest tank, crouched down, and peered
through the glass. At first he thought it was empty, apart from the ridge of
jagged grey rocks that ran through the middle. But then, as he studied the
white sands that lay across the bottom, he detected three sets of dark and
shiny eyes watching him closely. He could only just discern the outlines of
their bodies, which blended almost perfectly with the cream-coloured sand.
Morrow tapped his knuckle against the glass. One of the squid
shot up from the sand in a burst of bubbles, its body changing from cream to
mauve to deep royal purple as it did so. It was perhaps no more than four
inches long, and Morrow was mesmerised by the way its body changed colour so
rapidly. Here was a living creature with its very own fireworks display. Now
its body flashed a pleasant green, and it seemed to be just as curious about
Morrow as he was of it. There was, most certainly, he decided, a certain
arrogance and nobility about its manner.
He turned back to the professor. “Such remarkable creatures. The
way their colours change is extraordinary.”
The professor had finally put his pipe in his mouth and was
puffing merrily upon it, exhaling streams of bluish smoke through his
nostrils. Morrow sniffed, drawing the fragrance in. It was rather sweet,
reminiscent of cinnamon.
“Admiral Brackensfield brought them back after the war,”
Professor Jefferys said. “They were found aboard the Kraken submersibles in
rather odd globular flasks. We surmise they kept them either as pets or as a
food source, or....” The professor hesitated, puffing furiously upon his
pipe.
“Or?” Morrow prompted.
“The Kraken may have kept them for ritual purposes, at one
stage, but that evolved over time....”
“Ritual, as in religion?” Morrow had had more than his share of
the new spiritualism that was sweeping the country, and the charlatans that
accompanied it. Of course, he was never critical of those practices in
public; too many prominent people were believers in such things, but he
wondered what he was in for tonight.
“Merely a supposition on my part,” the professor said. “I
believe, however, that as the Kraken developed their civilization, the
ritual purpose evolved into a scientific one. That is what we shall be
investigating this evening.”
For Morrow this was hardly an illuminating explanation, but
before he could ask a more pointed question, the professor continued.
“Most certainly they are remarkable creatures. But look at them,
they’re virtually prisoners in those tanks. I bet they’re just dying to get
out, and they will soon enough. Gentleman are required to choose the males;
the ladies the females. It’s an experience, most certainly it is.” The
professor winked at Morrow and blew more smoke from his nostrils.
Like the devil himself, Morrow thought, and found a creeping
nervousness coming over him. “Out of their tanks?”
He imagined his voice must have betrayed his emotions, for
Professor Jefferys took a bright yellow handkerchief from his pocket and
wiped the stem of his pipe. In a show of smoker’s etiquette, he handed it to
Morrow. “Here, have a smoke. It’s a relaxing blend, tinctured with laudanum.
You will need to be relaxed for what comes next.”
Morrow took the pipe and sucked upon it greedily. The tobacco
was as rich and pleasant as it smelt, and taste of the laudanum was readily
detectable. It was a damn fine pipe indeed. He wandered back and forth
between the two tanks as he smoked, studying the squid, thinking what
delightful creatures they were. The way their tentacles furled out from
their mouths like big floppy moustaches.
“So what does come next?” he asked the professor.
4.
The Capture and the Swallowing
Mr Morrow finds himself somewhat befuddled—Madame Brackensfield descends
from her boudoir with a splendid beehive hairdo—The Major demonstrates the
fine art of squid catching.
Morrow could not recall the professor having answered his
question. The next thing he remembered was sitting in a wicker chair with a
fish net in his hand.
Madame Brackensfield herself had now descended from her boudoir
and taken charge of the party. She was dressed in an elegant grey silk frock
that was rather frilly in places, with puffy sleeves and a low cut bodice
that revealed a generous helping of her ample and splendid bosom. Her dark
hair, just beginning to show with some savage streaks of grey, was swept
atop her head in an elaborate conical beehive, creating the impression that
she was much taller than she was.
Now she was providing her expert advice to Morrow and Miss
Twickenham. “You need a firm grip, but not a harsh one, and the action is to
slide the net into the water so it causes the least disturbance. This allows
the net to billow out and trail.”
Morrow practised with his net, slicing and scooping it through
the air to the amusement of the others.
“Oh, he is a born squidder,” Lady Amberley cried, and the other
guests chuckled.
Morrow was not adverse to playing the clown when it allowed him to be the
centre of attention, but he suspected he was acting a little foolishly and
had become somewhat befuddled by Professor Jefferys’s pipe; it was as if his
head was caught in a fog and he was viewing the world through a dirty pair
of spectacles.
Now the Major rose from his chair, and with his net poised in
his right hand strode arrogantly towards the tank that held the male squid.
His breathing was relaxed, but there was an intense expression on his face.
As his shadow fell upon the small watery world, the squid dived, seeking
refuge among their rocks. The Major waited. No-one spoke. Finally, one squid
swam out from a behind a rock in a taunting playful manner, waving its
tentacles all about and flashing its colours. The Major plunged his net in
and pulled it out quickly. It was empty.
“He teases you, Major,” Madame Brackensfield said. “Perhaps your
approach was somewhat intimidating.”
“I am merely playing his game to gain his confidence.” The Major
licked his moustache and placed his net in the water once more. This time he
allowed the squid to make several passes, allowed it to grow a little more
daring. The Major’s net flashed and broke the surface with the flapping
creature captured within.
The Major walked to the centre of the verandah. He held his net
forth so it could be verified by all that he had indeed captured a squid.
Then, without a word of explanation or any other warning, he reached into
the net, plucked the squid out, and held it perched above his open lips.
He couldn’t be serious, Morrow thought, could not possibly
be...but then the Major allowed the squid to slip from his fingers and into
his mouth.
Miss Twickenham stifled a horrified gasp. Morrow’s heart
quickened its beating. Surely, there had been some sleight of hand in the
Major’s actions. What he had witnessed was impossible, and he wondered just
how strongly the professor’s tobacco had been tinctured with laudanum.
The Major’s face contorted in a ghastly fashion. His eyes grew
round and wide as if they were about to burst from their sockets. A bluish
tinge came upon his lips, and his throat bulged horribly as if he had
suddenly contracted a goitre of astounding proportions.
A shuddering wave of contractions swept through his body,
starting in his legs, then passing up his portly belly to his chest and down
the length of his arms. Morrow was almost convinced the Major was about to
die a horrid death right before his eyes, but then the crisis—if indeed this
was not just some skilful theatrical performance—was over. The Major
breathed easily and a silly smile formed upon his lips. Morrow joined in the
round of applause as the Major returned to his wicker chair. It was a hoax,
of course. It had to be. A rather admirable party trick and nothing more.
Madame Brackensfield herself was the next to venture to the
tanks. Altogether her graceful manner seemed entirely at odds with the
strange practice they were engaged in. As she approached the tank, Morrow
stood from his chair and moved forward to gain a better vantage point. If
there was trickery involved, and he was sure there was, he wished to be
close enough to observe it.
Madame Brackensfield employed a rather different style to the
Major, altogether more genteel and ladylike. She simply took her net and
slipped it into the water in one corner of the tank as she hovered above and
cooed softly.
After a few moments had passed, one of the squid detached itself
from its fellows and approached the net with a quick blast of its siphon and
a flash of its tentacles. Amidst a flurry of bubbles it swam into the net,
giving itself up freely. Whereupon Madame pulled the net up and eased the
creature out of the water. Then in an instant the squid was in the air,
above her mouth, and down her throat.
This time the facial contortions were of a lesser degree. Madame
appeared for a moment to have merely swallowed an overly large plum plucked
whole from a Christmas pudding. Either that or she was having some
difficulty in passing wind.
But so quickly had it happened, Morrow, despite his proximity,
could not pinpoint where the sleight of hand lay. Perhaps there had not even
been a squid in Madame Brackensfield’s net, but they had seen one because
they wished to believe there was. Or perhaps the squid—they were not very
large after all—had simply slipped down the front of Madame’s dress and now
lay quivering in the abundant cleavage of her smooth white bosom.
In the next moment Professor Jefferys came forward and took
Morrow by the elbow. Once more Morrow believed his grip a little more
forceful than the occasion warranted. “Our two novitiates next,” the
professor said. “Come, Mr Morrow, Miss Twickenham, you shall perform a
little duet. Myself and Lady Amberly will assist.”
Miss Twickenham was looking decidedly green. Morrow experienced
a momentary twinge of fear. He felt even more light-headed than before, as
if he’d had one glass of absinthe too many at the Tweeters Club. He quelled
his fear by assuring himself that, if he were mistaken and it were not a
hoax, then the practice, albeit a decidedly unpleasant one, was quite
harmless: Madame Brackensfield and the Major sat peacefully in their chairs
with radiant smiles upon their faces.
“Now,” Professor Jefferys began, “the object is to be both quick
and careful. Fortunately for Miss Twickenham, the female of the species is
noted for its good manners and will gladly accept your invitation, as Madame
Brackensfield so artfully demonstrated. Whereas the males, Mr Morrow, enjoy
a challenge. They won’t go down without a fight. They must be captured and
subdued.”
“What exactly...,” Morrow began, but Professor Jefferys raised a
finger to his lips. “Miss Twickenham, are you ready? Mr Morrow?”
Lady Amberly came forward to assist Miss Twickenham, who seemed
to hesitate for a moment but then allowed herself to be led to the tank
containing the two remaining female specimens. Her hand shook a little as
she dipped her net into the water. “Yes, nice and gentle,” Lady Amberly
whispered and began to coo above the tank as Madame B. had done.
Not to be outdone, Morrow made a great show of studying the tank
before him. He was hoping the squid he’d made the acquaintance of earlier
would somehow decide to volunteer, that was, if it wasn’t already sitting in
the Major’s stomach. But the two remaining squid had buried themselves in
their sandpits, not moving at all.
“Oh, well done, Lucy,” Lady Amberly cried, and from the corner
of his eye Morrow saw Miss Twickenham’s net being lifted from the water.
“It’s now or never, dear chap,” Professor Jefferys whispered.
“You can’t let the lads down.”
Morrow took one more look at where the squid were hiding,
plunged his net in, scooped and pulled it out. Surprisingly, there was a
squid within it.
“Did you see that?” Professor Jefferys cried, and laughed a
little. “Oh, did you see that!”
“Beginner’s luck,” the Major said from his wicker chair.
“Rather, I’d say a natural aquarist,” Madame Brackensfield
responded.
“Quickly now,” the professor said, “down the hatch it goes. They
don’t like to be in the air for too long, and whatever you do, don’t chew,
simply swallow.”
Morrow raised the quivering net above his mouth, thinking this
was the point where someone, either the Major or Madame B., would step
forward and cry, “Stop!” and then everyone would burst into laughter and all
agree what a grand joke it was and retire inside for dinner. But that
command never came, and Morrow was left with little choice but to place the
squid in his mouth.
It tasted of salty water and was somewhat metallic into the
bargain. It was, to be more precise, like having a large live and angry
oyster in his mouth.
“Swallow,” the professor said in his ear.
He did what the professor suggested, but the squid caught in his
throat. It was fighting the descent. Morrow found he could not breathe. He
felt his throat tighten and begin to bulge. All he needed to do, his body
was telling him, was to bend forward and cough to expel the beast. But just
when he felt he had used the last of his breath, his throat suddenly opened
and squid slid into his stomach.
Morrow shook his head, surprised at what he had just done. He
heard the sound of clapping and looked up to find Miss Twickenham regarding
him. The smile on her pretty face matched his own. It was a spontaneous
gesture; they walked towards each, saying, “Well done,” and exchanged kisses
on each cheek in the European fashion.
Lady Amberly and Professor Jefferys guided them to their chairs.
Madame Brackensfield leaned towards them, “That was simply
wonderful for first-timers. You and Miss Twickenham obviously have an
affinity with the creatures. I’ve seen people take the squid and shoot it
straight out of their mouths. It is no good for the squid and no good for
the person either.”
Morrow nodded good-naturedly. He was feeling rather pleased with
himself, and pleasantly full in his stomach as if he had just eaten a
splendid dinner. Yes, he decided, he was feeling very pleasant indeed.
Perhaps it was a mild euphoria from having successfully met the challenge to
swallow a live squid, which he now imagined he was digesting. It was bound
to be good for him too. Lots of protein, vitamins and minerals; a very pure
and natural meat.
5.
The Ingestion
The professor continues his bafflement—The Major reveals the name of his
pet rabbit—Mr Morrow has an unusual experience.
“Now we shall begin,” the professor said. “For the benefit of Mr
Morrow and Miss Twickenham, our novitiate investigators into the unknown, let me
explain the procedure.
“I want you to think of something that is known only to you. Do
not tell me what it is, for I am about to demonstrate that with the squid
in gastro I am able to read the minds of each and everyone of you, and
indeed, as the evening progresses we shall find we will shortly be
communicating with our minds only. It is my belief, you see, that the Kraken
used the squid to communicate between their ships by thought alone, as they
travelled the dark reaches of space. You will appreciate, of course, the
possibilities this opens up for us when we ourselves begin to reach for the
stars.”
“Very well,” the Major said. “I have a thought which is unknown
to anyone else in this room, even my good lady wife.”
“Would you care to write that thought down for Miss Twickenham
and Mr Morrow?” The professor pulled a notebook and a pencil from his
pocket.
“Certainly.” The Major scrawled something quickly, tore off the
page, and handed it to Morrow. Miss Twickenham leant close to him as they
read it. Morrow could feel her warm breath caressing his cheek.
I once had a pet rabbit called Mr Tootsie.
Morrow chuckled. The tip of Miss Twickenham’s tongue
touched his earlobe. He could not believe she had just done that. Surely, he
had imagined it. He looked into her eyes. Some golden light seemed to be
dancing in her pupils, and he realised for the very first time that Miss
Twickenham was not just another person, but she was as alive and as real as
he was. It was all very strange.
“Now,” the professor said, “the Major was thinking about a pet
rabbit he once had called Mr Tootsie. Is that correct, Miss Twickenham, Mr
Morrow?”
Morrow turned back to Professor Jefferys, about to protest that
this was no demonstration of thought power at all but simply a parlour trick
which had been pre-arranged. Instead he gasped and completely forgot what he
was about to say.
He looked at the Major, Madame Brackensfield, and then Lady
Amberly, and felt his grip on reality slipping. Instead of their faces,
instead of their heads, a live squid now perched upon their necks. From the
shoulders down they were the very same people—he could tell this from their
clothes—but their heads had been completely replaced by the body of the
squid they had swallowed. They waved their tentacles merrily at Morrow. Dear
God, the horror of it! He turned to Miss Twickenham, for reassurance he was
not going mad, but, alas, she bore a squid head too.
Morrow screamed, leapt from his chair, and rushed from the
verandah.
6.
Such a Lovely Squid Head
Mr Morrow becomes acquainted with his own squid head—Miss Twickenham
reveals something of her nature—It takes two to tango.
Squid heads, squid heads,
Lovely, lovely, squid heads
Squid heads, squid heads
Eat them up... Yum!
Morrow’s head spun. A half-remembered nursery rhyme echoed in
his ears. Inside the house, he rushed about looking for his hat and coat,
then stopped suddenly as he caught a glimpse of himself in the hallway
mirror. With his mouth dry, he turned slowly to face his image. His head, as
those of others, was no longer his own. Now a pair of golden squid eyes
stared back at him, and where his mouth should have been there was an
assemblage of tentacles waving in the air. It was as if his moustache had
come to life.
Morrow staggered back from his reflection into the drawing room,
felt for a chair behind him and fell into it a shaken heap. Most certainly,
he was not the man he used to be. His hands were trembling, as if he were in
dire need of a drink.
He reassured himself that calm and careful reasoning was called
for in a moment such as this. The squid he had swallowed was obviously
releasing some sort of toxin into his bloodstream, that when mixed with the
ingredients of Professor Jefferys’s pipe had become a powerful hallucinogen.
That was it; there could be no other answer. In a moment or two it would
pass. He was sure of it.
When he felt a little calmer, he rose from the chair and went to
the mirror once more. His squid head was still there. But now that he knew
it to be nothing more than an illusion, panic did not rise to engulf him. If
anything he was feeling quite relaxed and found some of his earlier euphoria
returning.
He began to wonder where his brain was. It seemed entirely
incomprehensible he should still be able to think, if his entire head had
been replaced with the body of a squid. Ridiculous! But that, of course,
proved what he already believed. How silly he was to let his mind wander
like this. He did not have a squid head! And none of the others did either.
It was nothing more than a toxin-induced illusion.
Morrow raised his hand and watched as it rose in the mirror
before him, thinking what a strange pink appendage a hand was. It hovered
before his squid face. Touch it, he told himself, touch your face, feel your
lips, your moustache, your nose...his fingers began to wave in time with the
tentacles. How similar these things called fingers were to the squid’s
tentacles, he thought, but still he did not touch his face. He did not dare.
But as he studied his reflected image further, he decided that
if he had to have a squid head then most certainly it was a handsome one:
those lovely golden eyes. Those tentacles with their changing array of
colours. The way they waved all about. It was the most attractive he had
looked in his whole life. What a thing it would have been to turn up to the
Danse Macabre with a live squid head and not some silly cardboard
costume El Coco head.
“Victor.” The sound of his name came straight into his head.
He turned away from the mirror.
The image that confronted him was at once bizarre and erotic,
and more beautiful even then his own squid head. There stood Miss Twickenham
with her squid head a’quivering, its tentacles flashing all manner of
colours, and her long black skirts hoisted up to reveal a neatly trimmed
Mound of Venus. It seemed, like many a young woman in Brisbane, she had
forsaken the wearing of undergarments—which was entirely sensible given the
tropical nature of the city’s climate.
That would have been enough to excite the lust of any young man,
but there, sitting upon her neck, so delightfully slimy and shiny, was the
most lovely squid head Morrow had seen in his whole life. Its eyes held a
dancing green fire and its tentacles waved in a most sensuous fashion.
“Would you care to tango?” Morrow asked, apropos of nothing but
the sudden passion that swirled within him.
“I would,” Miss Twickenham replied, offering her hand.
They drew close. Their tentacles caressed. They embraced and
danced a passionate tango up and down Madame’s hallway. Morrow felt his
likely lad shooting to attention. The buttons of his fly were positively
bursting. Miss Twickenham pressed her body against his, bit his earlobe and
whispered, “The glistening girl is open to invitation.”
“Is she now,” Morrow murmured.
Their dance climaxed with the infamous step known as El Rondo
de Azul. Archbishop Frobisher, the guardian of all that was good and
proper in Brisbane, had described it as beyond all “moral decency and decent
morality”. Morrow was pleased to find that the Archbishop had not been
exaggerating. Thus the likely lad met the glistening girl in what could only
be described as a lustful embrace, wherein all sense of decorum and modesty
was lost in the heat of the moment.
7.
The Life Squidotic
Mr Morrow goes for a pleasant swim—Professor Jefferys longs for his
pipe—The Baffalator revealed!
Morrow returned to the verandah while Miss Twickenham adjourned
to the water closet to “rearrange her clothes”. Things had taken a splendid
turn, and he was now thinking what a delight it was to have swallowed a
squid. It led to such spontaneous encounters.
“I appear to have a squid head,” he said, only to find the
manifestation of squid heads upon Madame and her other guests had entirely
disappeared, and Morrow was left feeling he had imagined the whole thing.
However, before anyone could respond to his presence, the Major
leapt to his feet and rushed to one of the tanks. He stood over it, gasping
and heaving, until finally the squid he had ingested shot from his mouth and
into the water. When he turned from the tank, the features of his face were
entirely blank and his eyes exceedingly dull. He walked to his chair on
shaky legs, as if the ordeal had sucked half the life out of him.
That looked just a trifle unpleasant, Morrow thought, feeling a
sudden nausea rising in his stomach.
Now Madame Brackensfield was up from her chair. Her hand went to
her mouth as if she was attempting to suppress a rising belch. After a few
steps she broke into a quick trot and reached the tank just in time to
disgorge. Next, Miss Twickenham came rushing out of the house, straight from
the water closet to the tank. Her countenance was a ghastly green and, when
she heaved, Morrow felt his own stomach rise in deepest sympathy.
In a flash, he too was grasping the metal frame of the tank, his
mouth wide open above the water, waiting and hoping it would be fast, as it
had been for the others. He imagined he could feel the creature climbing up
from his stomach, its slimy suckered tentacles creeping inch by inch along
his oesophagus. Then he felt its grip upon the bottom of his throat. He
gagged. The slippery beast rose into his mouth, but as he expelled it, he
felt himself, his whole conscious being, drawn along with it, and then he
was flying out of his own mouth, and through the air...
...and suddenly found himself swimming effortlessly and enjoying
the delightful freedom of water all over his body. Morrow darted from one
end of the tank to the other, fascinated by how quickly he could move and
turn. He ducked towards the craggy rocks at the centre of the tank, thinking
here comes instant death for fearless flying Victor Morrow, but with
a quick tilt of his lateral flaps and a burst from his siphon, he manoeuvred
over them at the very last minute. Next he buried himself in a sandpit so
only his eyes were visible. No one can see me, no one; I’m perfectly
camouflaged. It was sublime. It was beautiful. It was ridiculous. But
above all it was exhilarating. Hello, everybody, he wished to cry,
I am the invisible squid. You can’t see me. No, you can’t.
It took some moments for that thought to sink in: I’m
a squid.... Good God, I am a squid! A squid trapped in a tank
three feet by six. Don’t worry, don’t worry, he told himself, there was a
rational explanation for everything. The hallucination continued, perhaps.
But his memory told him that he really had danced that tango with Miss
Twickenham. It was still fresh in his mind. They may have been intoxicated
in some way, but it certainly had been no hallucination. Ta-da-da-dah!
Ta-ta-ta-te-da-da-dah! Why, they had even....
“What a lovely shade of magenta you’ve just turned, Victor.”
Another squid swam down and made a sandpit next to Morrow. “It’s not all
bad, you know. We were in worse situations in the Kraken War.”
“Major?”
“At your service.” Just then the tank shook. “Ah, if I’m not
mistaken, this shall be the professor now. I’m sure he’ll have a solution to
our predicament.”
Morrow blew the sand away and swam up to the glass. Undoubtedly
those were Professor Jefferys’s trousers on the other side; he recognised
the checked material. The tank shook once more and, in the next moment, the
professor came tumbling through the water in a fury of exploding bubbles.
When he came to a stop on the bottom of the tank, he sunk himself in a
sandpit and pulsed with colour, changing from an angry purple to a soothing
cream. Morrow swam down to greet him.
The professor cocked a black and gold eye at him. “This is most
unusual,” he muttered.
“Indeed it is,” the Major said.
With a growing uncertainty, Morrow asked, “What happens next?”
There was a long moment where neither of his companions replied.
What could be seen of their creamy-hued bodies beneath the sand became
spotted with splashes of tangerine. If he were outside the tank looking in,
Morrow knew he would have thought how lovely they looked. But now trapped
inside a squid body, he instinctively knew those tangerine spots where
representative of a certain apprehension.
“You tell him,” the Major said.
“Well, it seems,” the professor began, “that we have never been
in this situation before. Um, most certainly something will happen next, but
as to what that something might be, well, now would the perfect time to
postulate a new hypothesis.”
“The Major said you would have a solution to our predicament,”
Morrow said.
“Did he now?” the professor said, pulsing red.
Morrow was feeling quite angry about the whole thing. He
imagined that he would be trapped in the tank for the rest of his life,
while that impostor out there walked around in his body, living his life for
him.
“No need to turn purple on us, young lad,” the Major said. “I’m
sure it will turn out all right, and if it doesn’t then we’ll just need to
implement a strategy to resolve the matter.”
“Indeed,” the professor said. “Let’s think of it as just another
part of the wonderful scientific experiment we are engaged in. This an
excellent opportunity to truly experience life as a squid.”
“A captured squid,” Morrow reminded him. “In a glass tank that
is a mere three feet by six. Prisoners of our own folly!”
“I’m glad,” the Major said grumpily, “that we didn’t have more
of your kind around during the Kraken war.”
“More of my kind? What exactly do you mean by that?”
“Pessimists!” the Major retorted.
“Well, one thing is for certain,” the professor said. “We now
know the squid communicate telepathically, and by temporarily ingesting them
their powers are passed to us, as they were to the Kraken.”
“I don’t quite follow the logic of that,” Morrow said. “I mean
the fact that you knew about the Major’s rabbit, Footsie—”
“Mr Tootsie,” the Major said, “and he was a dear little thing.
The cutest rabbit you’ve ever seen. Unfortunately, he came to a very sad
end. The—”
“—doesn’t prove,” Morrow continued, “that you didn’t know about
Mr Tootsie beforehand.”
“I couldn’t agree more, Morrow. You are absolutely correct. That
little example was merely a starting point for further experimentation.
However, you will agree that we appear to be communicating very effectively
now? Without the aid of lips, tongue or voice box, and underwater. Hence I
conclude we are using the natural functions of the squid’s nervous system to
communicate telepathically. There is simply no other hypothesis to explain
it.”
“By jove,” Morrow cried, “of course. I just assumed, you see...I
mean if you hadn’t pointed it out I would have accepted it as perfectly
natural, as if we were simply speaking...but, of course—”
“The cook unfortunately bought a gamy rabbit for the Easter
stew,” the Major continued. “We always had rabbit at Easter. It was a family
tradition. So as not to spoil Easter dinner, the cook put Mr Tootsie into
the pot.”
“How did he taste?” Professor Jefferys asked.
“Remarkably good. Everybody said it was the best Easter stew
we’d ever had, but, of course, we didn’t know at the time that we’d eaten Mr
Tootsie.”
“I’m sure Mr Tootsie was a wonderful rabbit,” Morrow said,
“however, I doubt a discussion of...hang on a minute, what are you up to
professor?”
“Wishing I had my pipe. I always think better when I have my
pipe. But I realise that’s a silly wish. It would be impossible to ignite
the tobacco underwater.”
“In our present condition, I imagine you would be unable to draw
upon your pipe as well.”
“Quite so,” the professor said wistfully, “quite so.”
“However, I was actually referring to the you out there.” Morrow
studied the professor’s human form through the glass. It was arranging some
sort of apparatus upon the table, and all the other stolen bodies were
standing around paying close attention, as if Professor Squid was offering
them detailed instruction upon some matter of the utmost importance.
The professor joined Morrow at the front of the tank. His squid
body was radiating lines of inquisitive bright green. “It appears I’ve taken
the Baffalator from the drawing room,” he said.
“But whatever for?” the Major cried. “It’s a useless piece of
junk.”
“My mind, Major, is fast forming a theory. I do believe we are
about to find out precisely what the Baffalator is capable of.”
Morrow saw his own human form move away from the others, and
soon the gaslights inside the house and those upon the verandah were
extinguished one by one. The waters of the tank became a murky grey stew.
“What happens next?” Morrow wondered, and believed they were soon to find
out.
Barely a minute later, a wonderful luminescent glow began to
creep across the verandah.
“Ah, the moon, it rises,” Professor Jefferys said. “What’s the
date?”
“The seventeenth. It’s a full moon tonight,” Morrow said, and
thought once more of the Danse Macabre. Right then, despite the
passionate tango he had performed with Miss Twickenham, he thoroughly
regretted his decision to accept Madame Brackensfield’s invitation. He was
already bored with his life as a squid, nothing but four glass walls to look
at, separated from female companionship, and only the Major and the
professor for company. He could not have imagined things turning out any
worse.
“A beautiful light,” the Major said, and Morrow thought he heard
those thoughts echoed by the ladies in their tank.
Morrow watched as moonbeams crept across the verandah, and for a
moment there was a rather intense and thoughtful tableau laid out before
him. There was the eminent Professor Jefferys, hands outstretched as he
explained the infernal workings of the Baffalator. Standing next to him was
the Major, with a look of profound befuddlement. Lady Amberly bent forward
eagerly, clutching the Major’s arm. Miss Twickenham, on the other side of
the table, clasped Madame Brackensfield’s hand. There was a look of amazing
hope in their eyes. And Morrow, himself, was there with his hand upon
Professor Jefferys’s shoulder as if assuring him all his calculations were
correct.
Who were these people, Morrow mused, who had taken their bodies?
They were not merely squid, not merely Madame’s esoteric pets that could
convey telepathic powers. These were intelligent and dynamic beings whose
hopes and fears showed upon their stolen faces.
Now the moon’s beam hit the luminous crystal mirror that sat
beneath the Baffalator’s scope. For a moment, nothing happened. It was if
the crystal was absorbing the moon’s energy. Then, as if it had reached its
threshold, the crystal burst into brilliance, reflecting a beam of glowing
energy up the Baffalator. It emerged from the other end as a solid ray of
golden light; its trajectory, the moon.
8.
Le Baffalator, La Guillotine
The squid heads return—the Baffalator does its business—and it’s off with
their heads!
In the next instance the nets were upon them. Morrow saw his
body stride towards the tank and the net slide into the water. What the
hell, Morrow thought. It appeared to be his only chance of escape. He
swam into the net, and in a sudden rush he was in the air. The thick night
sucked at his delicate squid skin. He knew what was about to happen.
His intellect told him not to fight it. Here was the chance to
return to his human form; he would no longer be trapped within the tank. But
still his physical reaction was to resist as he entered his own mouth and
found himself sliding down his own throat, towards his stomach.
Everything went dark, terribly dark, then Morrow opened his eyes
and they were all squid heads once more. There was Miss Twickenham with that
pretty lady squid upon her neck and, no doubt, the delightful girl still
glistening between her legs. He went to go to her, and that was when he
found he had no control over his body. The squid was his master now.
In a familiar sequence, the Major was the first to rise from his
chair. He walked towards the Baffalator’s beam, struggling with every step,
his body all wooden and jerky as he fought to gain control of it once more.
But there was nothing he could do. The squid that rode him carried him
straight into the beam, which very neatly sliced his squid head off.
Morrow watched in awe as the squid head bounced around inside
the beam for several moments, then vanished in a shiny burst and was gone.
The Major’s headless body crumpled to the floor without a drop of blood, and
nothing to be seen where the gaping wound should have been but a soft
ghostly haze puffed in a cloud the shape of a mushroom.
Madame Brackensfield was the next to be decapitated, then Miss
Twickenham. Ah, poor Lucy. Morrow’s heart went out to her. Such a terrible
death for one so young and beautiful. But off came her squid head, and now
it was Morrow’s turn. There was no point in fighting it. He had already
decided that. Better to die a noble and gallant death than to spend your
last moments as a staggering puppet. “It is a far, far better thing I do,”
Morrow thought as he allowed the squid to take him into the beam.
There was no pain. He did not lose consciousness. He simply fell
to the floor headless, as the others had, and wondered once more, as he lay
there, where his brain had gotten to and why he could still think without
it.
Most certainly, it was a damn fine pipe that Professor Jefferys
had given him, a damn fine pipe indeed. And Miss Twickenham’s glistening
girl had fitted the likely lad like the most gorgeous kid glove. Now there
was a lady he needed to pay more attention to, and that silly beehive on
Madame B.’s head, whatever was she thinking, really it was just a trifle too
gauche...and he had swum, yes, he had swum like a squid, and the Kraken were
defeated for once and for all, and he had to go to work on Monday and flog
off more of that bloody swampland to developers; he had missed the Danse
Macabre and wanted so much to be El Coco—he had planned it for
months...but the Kraken for all their faults were a intelligent enemy and
he’d helped the last of them go home. It was a noble and decent thing to
do....
9.
The Danse Macabre
Mr Morrow regains his head and drinks a gin and tonic—Madame B. reveals
that the Admiral loved calamari—Professor Jefferys expounds on the true
nature of the Kraken—and Mr Morrow and the delightfully scrumptious Miss
Twickenham dance through jacaranda blossoms on their way to the Danse
Macabre.
The next thing Morrow knew, he was sitting in a comfortable
wicker chair with a gin and tonic in his hand. He looked around at the
others. They were all pale and shaken. Miss Twickenham looked absolutely
beautiful, but it was the beauty of a feverish consumptive shortly before
death. There was a tremor in her hands as she raised her glass to her sweet
lips. Morrow winked at her and he was delighted when she winked back. His
hand went up to his face. “I seem to have my own head back now,” he said.
At those words, Madame Brackensfield burst into tears, sobbing
into her handkerchief. “I’m so sorry, so sorry. Nothing like this has ever
happened before. To think what may have become of us. To think my dear
husband’s pets were the Kraken in disguise. He brought the squid back after
the war, intending to breed and harvest them for our kitchen. He was
exceedingly fond of calamari, and the fresher the squid the better the
calamari is.
“So there we were one evening, having just eaten a delightful
calamari entrée from our own tanks, and we suddenly found ourselves getting
light-headed, and in the next moment we realised we were conversing with
each other without our lips moving. This went on for sometime, until we both
suffered an incredible nausea and were forced to retreat to the water
closest in the direst need. We both slept with a bucket next to our beds
that night. The experience was frightful and we never ate the squid again.
Professor Jefferys has been most helpful in solving the mystery. I am so
sorry for the danger I have put you all in.” And with that she began to sob
once more.
“Sorry?” Professor Jefferys said. “I think not, Madame. You have
nothing to be sorry for. Tonight has indeed been a most fortunate and
revealing experiment. Now at last we know the true nature of our enemy and
have unlocked the secrets to one of their confounded machines. It is
undoubtedly an advanced transportation device that has returned them to
their base on the moon.”
“To the moon?” Lady Amberly cast a glance towards the Major.
“You told me their moon base was destroyed during the war and that you
yourself had a hand in it. It was in all the newspapers at the time.”
The Major cleared his throat and looked at the professor, then
at the faces of the others. “Oh, dear,” he said, “it seems I need to make a
clean breast of it. The rocket that was meant to destroy the Kraken base on
the moon never left the Earth. It exploded when it was launched. It was an
unmitigated disaster, but the situation at the time required us to announce
the mission a resounding success.”
“So the Kraken threat is still with us,” Madame Brackensfield
said. “The Admiral never knew. He went to his grave believing he could rest
in peace.” Her hand went to her throat. She was so pale it appeared that any
moment she would fall into a swoon.
“Fear not,” the professor said, “we will be prepared for them
when they next attack. And, forgive me, Madame, but your supposition the
squid were the Kraken in disguise is ill-founded. It is my belief the Kraken
were the very squid you have looked after in your tanks for so many
years. They are parasites, and the Pigmen, whom we believed to be the
Kraken, were merely their hosts. You can imagine what future they had
planned for humanity had they won the war....”
Professor Jefferys droned on, extrapolating his theories. Morrow
checked his pocket watch and rose from his chair. He said to Miss
Twickenham: “The Danse Macabre is being performed at Toowong Cemetery
this evening. I would be honoured if you would accompany me. If we leave
now, we’ll be in time for the ferry.”
Miss Twickenham smiled. “I would be delighted.”
“The delight is mine.” Morrow bowed to the rest of the company,
thanked Madame Brackensfield for an interesting evening, then offered his
arm to Miss Twickenham.
The Major escorted them to the door. “The Kraken will rise
again,” he said as he shook hands with Morrow. “The government will need to
take action immediately. The world needs to be told of what we have
discovered tonight.”
Morrow sighed. “Professor Jefferys will no doubt write up his
theory and it will become accepted as fact, if he has any luck. If
not, he will risk his career to no avail, and make a fool of himself.
“Nobody witnessed this but the six of us. And it remains
uncertain precisely what these strange events truly mean. It may have well
been nothing more than a grand illusion brought on by the toxins we ingested
as we digested the squid, and they have not returned to their base on the
moon but are now part of our very own bodies, in the way that all the food
we eat becomes part of us. In any case, the government will wish to believe,
and the people will believe, the Kraken are those stuffed Pigmen in
the museum. They were the enemy we defeated once and for all.”
The Major seemed about to say something but became lost for
words. He smiled warmly like the affable old gentleman he was and closed the
door. Morrow knew he was thinking he was a silly young fool.
Miss Twickenham said as they walked down to the wharf: “They
were the defeated enemy. Prisoners of war. She told me, my squid. We helped
them go home, didn’t we?”
Morrow took her hand. “I believe we did. Imagine being
intelligent creatures and trapped in those tanks for your whole life,
swimming up and down, up and down all the time, the males segregated from
the females.”
“I would go mad,” Miss Twickenham said.
“And at the Danse Macabre you shall have your chance to
be as mad as you wish.”
Morrow twirled her around on the garden path and they danced
gaily through the jacaranda blossoms towards the wharf. For a split second
only, Morrow thought of his El Coco head sitting on his dressing
table at home, and decided for once that he was more than happy to simply be
himself.
Copyright © 2011 by Geoffrey Maloney