Four Or Five Guy© expramtraveller [SWELL TRADING CARD AT LEFT - Ed.] demonstrates why size does matter in this epic tale.
A FELLOW CREATURE
Worm lay still as he woke in his lair. The
damp soil surrounding him was pressing in on him, and he may have felt
snug, for he lay a few seconds basking in its envelopment, but it was to
gather strength, before he stretched out, right to his final segment,
and set out, as was his custom each and every morning after his slumber,
on his slow trajectory upward, to attend to his needs and satisfy his
craving.
Worm’s habitual activities were mostly unremarkable. They
consisted chiefly in moving earth by way of eating his way through it.
Worm inhabited a lump of earth that measured a little over a square
meter and whose shape resembled that of gold nuggets or of asteroids
orbiting in space. It was, in fact, so eerily similar to 25143 Itokawa
that the latter could easily have been mistaken for its model. Worm was
not aware of this. But Worm might have observed that, over the course of
his eleven years of existence, and apart from the grit and the stray
sucking stone, most of the matter contained in his lump must at one
point have passed his gut. By this token, Worm had intimate knowledge of
his habitat. But since Worm was born without a brain, he was incapable
of making the observation. Which is not to say that he was devoid of
sense or lived entirely on his instincts. For Worm had a long spinal
nerve running the length of his body, which had reached an impressive
thirteen centimeters by this late stage of his life, and numerous
smaller nerves branched out from the central one and connected to his
upper lip, more properly called his prostomium, the muscles of his skin,
his bristles, and, most significantly, to his gut. To top it all off,
Worm possessed a number of ganglia, some of them so sophisticated they
were termed Brain Ganglia, others less evolved, but still quite
impressive for a base creature such as Worm. Harnessed to its purposes,
his nervous system, no matter how rudimentary it might appear to the
uneducated eye, was capable of powerful computing and allowed Worm to
make perfectly informed decisions automatically, with no conscious
intellectual effort whatsoever.
Central to all this was Worm’s gut.
For the inside of this organ was lined with innumerable receptors which
registered the chemical make-up of all that passed through him. And it
was probably due to the chemo-electrical interaction between his gut and
his nervous system that Worm actually remembered his chemical
impressions, to the point of supplying him with an accurate topography
of his surroundings and an extensive system of warnings and
encouragements intimately linked to the perceived chemicals and the
adventures and misadventures associated with them. In other words,
Worm’s sense of his world was acutely immediate. And it was thus that
Worm knew how to avoid Glut, which was important, since Glut devoured
large quantities of worm. Glut had a sphere around him within which it
was unsafe for a worm to stray. But being both sight- and mindless,
worms kept ending up within it, with fatal consequences in the vast
majority of cases. Worm had made his acquaintance with Glut early in
life, and it had cost him three of his tail segments. But Worm was lucky
to have survived at all and his rear end had regenerated
satisfactorily.
This is what made Worm unique and what caused his longevity, for no
other worm had anything approaching his quick chemo-electricology, and
it earned Worm the Capital, since his fellow worms lacked individuality
and, excepting length, there was little to discern one from the other.
Besides, with all of his experience based in chemicals, Worm was a
highly sensitive creature, capable of emotions alien to other species,
but emotions all the same, summoned up by the substances he perceived,
much in the way scents may trigger emotions in certain of the higher
species. Perhaps Worm’s unique constitution and abundant emotionality
represented some freak evolutionary leap which had yet to prove
advantageous to his species. But Worm did little to propagate his
remarkable traits.
Worm was a strictly hermaphroditic creature, and
note should be taken that use of the masculine does not imply bias or
prejudice toward either of Worm’s sexes, whatever their shape and
function. Hermaphrodism as such is an attractive proposition, since it
allows for double orgasms, at least in theory. For the double orgasm is a
rare occurrence even among the most experienced of worms. Still, if the
female organ proves to be barren, there is yet a good chance of success
at the masculine end of a worm. But he’d have to pick a partner for
that. And Worm, perhaps on account of his being so different to them,
was indifferent to his brethren and lived a solitary life. He had tried
self-insemination during adolescence, but he never even came close to an
orgasm, male or female, and nothing came of it, since reproduction of
this kind proved biologically impossible in the first place, so Worm
gave up on it altogether.
As with so many occurrences in life, the
root of his problem lay in his youth. For in that carefree era, Worm
used to cavort in the soft top layer that blanketed his lump. It was on
one of these romps that an unexpected event caused him to be exposed to
the searing white heat of the sun. It was a boy disturbing the mulch,
mudding the shiny new soccer cleats he had been awarded for his seventh
birthday. Worm was startled at first and he did not yet have the acumen
at that tender age to retreat into the mulch forthwith, and this is how
he came to discover the thrill of drying in. For as the slime on his
skin dehydrated, his segments started to rub against one another
unlubricated, and this made him experience an exhilarant tingle that
carried itself across the length of his body in waves of sheer bliss.
But it was bliss followed by a burning sensation like herpes, which made
it less sheer than initially postulated. And Worm knew there and then
that he had to burrow back under. Now, this occurrence alone would not
have sufficed to hook Worm as irrevocably as it did, but his body
started to produce quantities of vitamin D as soon as it was touched by
the sun, and for a creature of keen chemical sensitivity such as Worm,
this spelled disaster. In the early stages of his addiction, it sufficed
for Worm to surface once every day after his slumber to have his
instant in the sun, for it could never last more than an instant lest he
dry out completely. But now in old age, he had to perform his
peregrinations much more often than was healthy for him and they had
started to exhaust him and kept him from pursuing his more typically
lumbrical preoccupations.
It was in this condition that Worm started the upward trek upon which he
was observed to commence this morning. And it wasn’t long before he
sensed that his energy was fast depleting, and knowing from experience
that it was going to be a long and tortuous haul before he would finally
surface, and no matter how urgent his craving, Worm decided to take the
long route past the stray sucking stone, whose smooth coolness had
proven to have an invigorating effect on him on previous occasions. It
had dropped from the pocket of a greatcoat many years ago and had lodged
itself here some twenty inches underground. Worm’s route had the added
benefit of giving Glut a wide berth. But Glut had not been a factor in
Worm’s deliberations, for Worm knew exactly where Glut was situated and
he could have steered much closer to his lair, since Glut’s was a fixed
abode and Glut himself a perfectly stationary presence, never noticeably
stirring more than a microinch. And yet one had to avoid straying into
his sphere. This was strange and contradictory. Glut remained a deeply
troubling entity and much about him was mysterious and unknown, such as
for instance his method of hunting. He might have possessed a fast
prehensile ejector, an organ that drew worm matter in, some form of
animal magnetism perhaps. And yet even more baffling than this, Glut
never grew, the huge amounts of worm he ingested notwithstanding.
As
Worm approached the stray sucking stone, he had no idea of the
seemingly endless permutations the object had suffered at the hands of
its master, in its day and age, years before Worm was born, making the
rounds of the pockets of his trousers and greatcoat, and being sucked in
between. For Worm, the stone was just an item to wriggle along and curl
his body all over, which he did once he arrived. This soon had the
desired effect, and Worm, fully restored, left the stone to its own
devices, stuck as it was in its lodge, and took off.
Feeling greatly
rejuvenated, Worm’s further progress was brisk, and before long he felt
the soil warming, from which he inferred he was about to surface. But
he sensed that all was perhaps not as it should be as soon as he poked
his prostomium through the mulch. Worm was unaware of it, but he had
woken from his slumber much later than he used to, and to make matters
worse, the longer route upward had added to his delay. It was about an
hour after noon and high summer, a time-slot he had always managed to
avoid, even now in old age, when his need impelled him to surface much
more often. But Worm being an addict, he couldn’t help himself and he
carried on regardless.
What happened next, was a surprise to Worm. For although the white heat
was much more searing than any of the doses he had exposed himself to
over his long years of enslavement, and there was no denying the danger
to him, it also produced a powerful flash, one that kept repeating
itself time and again and that sent spasms of lust through his body. And
Worm started to squirm and contort in ways that had previously proved
impossible to achieve, until his reproductive openings met, and Worm,
before his mind’s eye, for Worm had no eyesight, saw sparks and
fireballs and great gooey masses of exploding matter, and this was how
Worm accomplished the elusive double orgasm.
Worm was lucky enough
in his convulsions to end up in a shady spot under a discarded Beatles
White Album cover. It still held the two platters, but they were warped,
and Worm, oblivious of the vitriol that had been poured on the album
lately, couldn’t have cared less, for it was the shade that was
important to him. But hardly had he embarked on his slumber, when he
woke with a start, for a burning sensation like herpes gripped him, and
it was as if the searing white heat had transferred itself to his gut
and from there had started to radiate outward. Worm had great capacity
for suffering, and whatever the nature of his emotions, it was clear he
was suffering. So he frantically started to burrow, but his efforts were
vain, for there was damage already at his 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 8th,
13th, 21st, 34th, 55th, 89th and 144th segment, which hindered the
smoothness of movement required for such an operation. And Worm was in
such pains that he coiled up tightly, and forcing his inner loops upward
forming a cone, Worm started to glow, and he remained aglow for a
while, until the glow receded into the heart of his cone, and Worm had
finally carbonized. And the careful observer might have perceived a
little could rising over Worm’s cone and hover there for an instant
before his charred remains fell apart.
"and Worm, oblivious of the vitriol that had been poured on the album lately, couldn’t have cared less" LOL! Classic. But, I have no fucking clue what I just read, yet I was oddly absorbed by it.
ReplyDeleteA little warm death followed too soon by the big bang of spontaneous annelidic combustion. White light, white heat, White Album.
ReplyDeleteEvery junkie's like a setting sun, and Worm was a sun addict.
A well told tale of a nematode. Woe is Worm!
That was sublime, expramtraveller.
ReplyDeleteHopefully, there will be more!
Well done! I laughed; I cried; I gnashed my teeth in envy
ReplyDeleteat the writer's achievement; I thought of a line from
After Hours: "I just wanted to leave my apartment, maybe
meet a nice girl, and now I've got to die for it!"
I'm surprised that there are only four comments ... surely it didn't take the other guys so long to read (too few pictures huh?)
ReplyDeleteAn enjoyably absorbing read - I tried to find allegories as I went through but never came to a conclusion on any
Or was it just a tale intended to keep us reading wriggling, waiting on the punchline?
I take it that the worm was a bookworm due to the erudition of the vocabulary
The whole thing got lost in the (always expected) misspelling of the word CLOUD in the very last sentence. Possibly the rewrite of the story of Rocky Cocoon.
ReplyDeleteThat was my initial reaction too, Dave, but then I decided that
ReplyDelete"could" (as in "the little worm that could") was just the right
concept after all.
@Crab Devil...
ReplyDeleteWell, I guess I could see a king sized picture of that!
However, since worm castings are not anything like role playing,
I think that the poster and photos were missing from the white album!
Dammit, you're right -- they're missing! Come to think of
ReplyDeleteit, though, so's Rocky Cocoon. (I might have caught that
even sooner, were I more familiar with whatever it was
the Beatles did after "Cry For A Shade-O." )
Pre-Reeperbahn...
DeleteDingo was the drummer for The Beagles!
Thanks for your comments guys.
ReplyDeleteSorry I didn't get back to you earlier. I had my first visitors in over two months yesterday, real live individuals on the premises. We even went to see a movie in thoroughly distanced and disinfected circumstances.
As to the story: this was really just a little lockdown excercise for me, not to be taken seriously. No plot, hidden messages, allegories or whatever. Nor is it a rewrite: just some disparate elements flung together.
And the cursed COULD typo, was just that, a typo, tripping me up just before the finishing line. Farq warned me I had to do my own editing!
(I had to look up "the little worm that could", and I am still not sure what it refers to exactly.)
I was sleepless last night, and I suddenly realised something about Grub, which I was only vaguely aware of while I was making him up: Grub is a black wormhole.
Thanks for the swell trading card, Farq. I'll keep it for when the going gets really rough.
Your description of Worm's sense of kinesthesia was masterful writing.
DeleteThere's an ancient joke in the Art World regarding the Hellenistic aesthetic: Let Sleeping Hermaphrodites lie.
Enjoyed the piece, expram. Was def unusual, but extremely engaging.
Delete"Grub is a black wormhole"!!!!!
ReplyDeleteA beautiful piece of writing. I hope the 4/5 guys keep it coming - there hasn't been a bad or even mediocre piece yet. Great reading - thank you all.
Splendid read, I laughed out loud at the Beatles White album mention, thank you.
ReplyDeleteWell done! In a clever appropriation and subversion of the "throwing shade" trope, Expramtraveller presents a compelling and provocative treatise on why Beatles are better than Byrds (sic) ... at least from a worm's perspective.
ReplyDelete