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Truth hurts

by Arian 

Posted: 15 October 2009
Word Count: 597
Summary: For this week's Taken-In challenge.


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“You lied to me," I said. “Over all those years. Why?”
She said nothing, concentrating on the work in hand. I could see why: cats can be tricky customers when they’re annoyed, and they’re seldom more annoyed than when they’re being de-flead. Hers was making a determined and squirmy bid for freedom. Still, cat or no cat, I wanted an answer. I waited.
“Well?” I said, after an interval. But still no reply: only the silence of focus. I persisted. “You could – should - have told me the truth a long time ago,” I said. “Years. Decades. Why didn’t you? What did you gain by keeping it from me?“
Suddenly she pounced, like a hunter spearing a fish, and another tiny victim of the genus Ctenocephalides felis re-joined its maker. At last, she looked up.
“I had no choice,” she said simply, a shrug in her voice. “The truth would have hurt you too much.” She applied some powder to her feline captive’s tail. It smelled like something you could use in trench warfare.
“That’s not the point,” I said. “At least I’d have known. Instead, I spent all those years deluding myself, hoping, wondering - and I find out only now. Now! When I’m in my 40s? Don’t you think that that hurts, too? To learn something like this after so long? Jesus! You’re supposed to be my friend!”
“Friend?” She said, and I thought I could hear a sneer in her voice. “You want to know what a friend is? A friend is someone who stabs you from the front. Wilde. His point was that, either way, you get stabbed. You’ve just been stabbed.”
It was my turn to be quiet for a moment. I watched, as she extended her scorched-earth policy to the cat’s belly.
“Look,” I said, finally. I felt tired. Tired of all the lies. “I didn’t come here to listen to a treatise on bloody ethical relativism. Just to know why you hid something so…so fundamental from me for so long. How you could be so cruel. You must have known I’d learn the truth one day.”
At last, she released her bundle of now flealess furriness. “The truth is a fruit which can only be picked when it is very ripe.“ she said, with a sort of gnomic finality.
Suddenly, I knew I was beaten. This would get us nowhere. I knew I’d have to let the matter rest: leave it behind me. I’d just have to hope that time would dull the pain; mend the hole punched in my heart by the cruise missile of Truth. And it wasn’t just the pain, the almost crippling sense of loss, that time would have to heal: it was the overwhelming feeling of waste, too - senseless waste, year in, year out. Christ! All that care, all that worry about doing the right thing for Him. All pointless. But I had to let it go.
Yet a couple of things still puzzled me.
“So,” I said, as she stood, post cat-release, picking clementine-coloured hairs from her pinny. “Who did eat all the milk and cookies we left by the tree, then?”
“Your father,” she said. “Who else?”
She was right. Who else? Everything’s obvious, when you know.
“And the stockings? I suppose it was you who filled them.” It was a guess, but – I suspected - an accurate one.
She said nothing. But her smile was confirmation enough.
“Thanks,” I said, though my tone was bitter.
“A pleasure, dear” she said, heading kettlewards. “After all, what are mothers for? Tea?”








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Comments by other Members



Prospero at 18:54 on 15 October 2009  Report this post
Hi Pete

To me, at least, this came over as a bit of a Shaggy Dog story. A lot of largely irrelevant detail, in the sense that it didn't advance the narrative, but rather just filled in the space between the beginning and the end. The premise was good, the writing of itself was fine, if rather 'purple', but the story was a bit of a damp squib.

Now that, I reiterate, is just my opinion, and others may see it differently.

Best

Prosp

tusker at 06:39 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
Are we talking Father Xmas, Pete?

If so, I'm unable to comprehend how a guy reaches his 40's and still thinks the magical man exists.

If he knows the Latin terms, then surely he'd know Father Xmas is a myth.

Good dialogue but a bit wordy and I'm unable to like MC as he comes over as a spoilt teenager not a man heading for middle-age.

Jennifer

V`yonne at 09:13 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
I found the Wilde and
another tiny victim of the genus Ctenocephalides felis re-joined its maker
a bit forced and you used the word suddenly twice - unlike you... So I don't think you've quite got this one togehter in your head.

In fact I think it may be a melange of two quite disparate ideas - the flea bag philosophy and the Santa one.

I think the Santa story could work if you make the man backward in some way but in this he's using language as the narrator which undermines our ability to swallow that he could have believed in Santa into his forties. (Even a Down's Syndrome man would question before that age in my experience - might get ot about 18/20 but once they discover breasts that's pretty much it!)

I think the flea bag philosphy belongs in a different tale. I really like the warfare analogies, though.

V`yonne at 09:14 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
I found the Wilde and
another tiny victim of the genus Ctenocephalides felis re-joined its maker
a bit forced and you used the word suddenly twice. So I don't think you've quite got this one togehter in your head.

In fact I think it may be a melange of two quite disparate ideas - the flea bag philosophy and the Santa one.

I think the Santa story could work if you make the man backward in some way but in this he's using language as the narrator which undermines our ability to swallow that he could have believed in Santa into his forties. (Even a Down's Syndrome man would question before that age in my experience - might get ot about 18/20 but once they discover breasts that's pretty much it!)

I think the flea bag philosphy belongs in a different tale. I really like the warfare analogies, though.

<Added>

Oh dear, I pressed twice did I? Sorry!

Arian at 10:44 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
Many thanks all.

Er...yes, I know: in reality, you wouldn't get to 40 and not know about Santa. That was the (obviously weak!) joke: an extreme case of being taken in. There was another point, connected to taking the reader in...but I won't labour that aspect. I can see it hasn't worked. But I'll face my failure like a man. Maybe ask Santa for a new brain at Christmas.

Much appreciate the comments, though - many thanks.
peter

tusker at 11:38 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
Hi Peter,

Couldn't you make him around 10 years of age?

He might still not be that clued up but kids are these days, and he would be told by a friend, been laughed at etc.

Obviously, you'd have to edit out the Latin term and make his angst more juvenile.

Just a thought.

Jennifer

Bunbry at 12:36 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
Hi Peter, seems like you have waved the white flag with this one! Not to worry, this is how we learn.

Can't wait to see your next contribution.

Nick

Arian at 19:45 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
Jennifer, Nick...

Many thanks for your comments.

All the best
peter

V`yonne at 20:15 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
I still think you can make two stories out of it. No writing is ever a failure! Everything we write is useful - it's the process that counts and in this case you'll be able to recycle this quite easily. Never say die. Trip to Tangier took me over a year to rewrite!

<Added>

If Santa is bringing you a new brain do you think you could order a job lot and we'll buy them from you? In my case quality isn't an issue...

Jumbo at 22:17 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
Hi, Peter...

Yup, I think it's all been said... and I'm certain that those fleas had more than a passing part to play in all of this. But for the life of me, i can't work out what!

Anyway, thanks for the read, and I'll be interested to see where you take this.

Regards

john

Arian at 22:26 on 16 October 2009  Report this post
Thanks John.

Santa says there's no brains left, Oonah. Stephen Fry's using them all.

cheers
peter

choille at 11:17 on 17 October 2009  Report this post
Hi Peter - very funny really with the punch line, but have to agree with them up above me in a way.

It's a good end scene with the reveal it is his Mother & not a lover.

All the best
Caroline.

V`yonne at 12:40 on 17 October 2009  Report this post
Aw! I knew it would all be Stephen Fry's fault really! I mean, it's obvious he took more than his fair share!

Findy at 06:52 on 18 October 2009  Report this post
Hi Peter

I really liked the ending, very unexpected. I agree with all the feedback given by others - would like to see a revised version, I agree with Oonah

Everything we write is useful - it's the process that counts and in this case you'll be able to recycle this quite easily.


findy

debac at 12:06 on 18 October 2009  Report this post
I actually don't agree with most of the criticisms. I felt it worked really well. I read it in the spirit I suspect you intended, Peter - that it was basically a joke, upholstered beautifully to take us in a completely different direction. The narrator was 'taken in', but so were we, until the end! Nice.

When it was revealed that the woman was his mother, not his wife, and what the secret had been, I laughed out loud several times in delight. I thought it was very cleverly done.

There is only one change I would suggest... don't mention his age. It doesn't need to be said, and for the reasons others have given it does slightly detract that we have to struggle with the idea that an intelligent 40 yr old man didn't know (it didn't spoil it for me, but I can see how it might). If you simply cut those few words "When I'm in my 40s?", and maybe remove 'decades' to leave just 'all these years' (kids see 2 or 3 years as 'all these years' so IMO that's fine), then I think you'd avoid the accusations that it's so unbelievable.

IMO it's fine to be a little bit unbelievable because it's a joke! It's the incongruity which makes us laugh!

I could see him as a precocious 12 yr old (or so) who knows big words cos his parents are quite intellectual but somehow has managed to be blind to the fact that Santa isn't real. I can imagine that. People can be very bright in some ways and lack common sense in other ways. But I don't think you need to state the age - that can be left to the reader's imagination.

So... I loved it. Thanks for the read.

Deb

Arian at 17:18 on 18 October 2009  Report this post
Caroline, findy – many thanks for taking the time to read it and comment. Glad you liked the ending, even though the rest is flawed.

Deb – many thanks, I’m pleased you connected with it. And, yes, you’re right: that’s precisely the spirit in which I intended it: as just a joke. The narrative element is deliberately played down – it was intended, really, as a “situation piece”, an exercise in freezing time (hence the fillers, those damn fleas, to add colour while we’re marking time) in an attempt to raise the reader’s beliefs/expectations in a particular direction, then deliver a slightly bathetic and, I’d hoped, surprising, resolution. I was aiming at, as you say, the “double take-in”.

Still, I fully accept that, for many, my execution might seem weak, and I respect the opinions above, for which I’m grateful.

Thanks all.



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