I'm
standing on someone's lawn, talking to a girl through her bedroom window. She's
telling me to go away or she'll call the cops but I don't understand why. For
some reason, I feel like I know her, as if we're dating or something. I ask why
she's yelling at me and telling me to go away. She yells back "you know
what you did!" and points to the grass I'm standing on.
Next to
my foot is a woman's decapitated head. I cover my mouth for fear of vomiting.
Her eyes are blue, she has brown hair and orange lipstick: her facial
expression is utterly mortifying. I nudge the head with my foot and then look
back up at the girl in the window.
"What's
that got to do with me?"
"What
are you talking about? You killed her, you sicko!"
"What?
I didn't kill anybody!"
"How
do you explain him then?"
She
points towards the bins (one black, one blue for recycling and one brown for
compost): there's a bald man's decapitated head lying there. I didn't bother to
look at his features this time: I simply picked up his head like a bowling
ball, with two fingers in his eye sockets and one in his nostril and threw it
in the brown bin.
The girl
starts retching and pulls the curtains closed. I stand there, protesting my
innocence loudly, yelling "I didn't do this!" over and over again,
hoping she'd come back and open the curtains. When she didn't, I decided to
give up yelling.
I looked
down at the other head. It was disgusting and I couldn't stand to look at it
anymore. I pulled down the sleeves of my jumper and picked it up, also throwing
it into the recycling bin. I realised that even if I hadn't put my hands on
that head, I had put it on the other.
The police would be able to trace it back to me, even though I was sure I
didn't kill them. Then again, I couldn't remember
if I'd killed them: I might have done it earlier and not realised.
I go
through the girl's front door and into a hotel corridor, all white, reminiscent
of the ones from The Matrix. I look down to see I'm holding a key card: it's a
white rectangle with a thick, black stripe on it. I'm not sure which door this
key is for but, coincidentally, it opened the first one I tried it on.
Inside,
Lili and my film teacher (Ian) were packing a large, navy suitcase with
clothes. I ask them what they're doing and they give me a confused look. Lili
explains that Ian is taking us to a talk in a bookshop where they're discussing
the representation of capitalism in movies. I don’t remember agreeing to it but
I decide it's best to just go with them and see what it's like.
Cut to a
corner shop. We're all sitting cross-legged on the floor (about 14 of us) in
front of the front desk of a corner shop. I turn to Lili and ask what happened
to going to the bookshop. Lili turns to me, confused, pointing out that this was the bookshop. I didn't argue.
The
speaker came out from the backroom: she was a small woman who wore an ugly,
yellow dress with a lavender print on it over a long sleeved, khaki top. I
remember thinking how horrendous her fashion sense was. She started the talk by
describing the film 'They Live' (1988) and I nodded in agreement. I zoned out
for most of the talk until I heard her say "Jesus", which is when I
decided to listen again.
I noticed
that Ian was suddenly standing and looking at her angrily. I turned to Lili but
she'd disappeared. Ian was yelling at the woman, telling her that the inclusion
of Christianity in the talk was unnecessary and to "stop forcing your
stupid religious propaganda down everyone's throats". The woman told him
he'd burn in hell and that Jesus is the light of the world, so she only listens
to him. I remember standing up and agreeing with Ian, saying religion wasn't
relevant to the discussion. I also chastised her for arranging it in a corner
shop and not a bookshop.
The woman
started to argue that religion is always relevant, especially in film, and that
was when I recognised her as Mrs. Carmody from the film 'The Mist' (2007), the
fanatic Christian nut-job. I nudged Ian and told him to drop it: we weren't
going to get anywhere with her.
As he
gave up, Billy Ray Cyrus walked into the shop. Carmody became flustered and
started fawning over him, saying she was a big fan and asked if she could get
him anything.
"I'll
just get a pack of smokes."
"Of course, Billy!"
"It's Mr. Billy Ray, actually."
"Of course, Billy!"
"It's Mr. Billy Ray, actually."
"Oh,
sorry, Mr. Cyrus."
"No, it's Mr. Billy Ray. Cyrus is my daughter's name."
"Sorry, Mr. Billy."
"No, it's Mr. Billy Ray. Cyrus is my daughter's name."
"Sorry, Mr. Billy."
"What?
No! If it's Billy, it's just Billy, but I like to be addressed as Mr. Billy
Ray."
This back
and forth went on for a few minutes until the woman became so irritated and
confused that she pulled a hunting knife from out of her dress and held it to
his throat.
"I'm
sorry I keep getting your name wrong! Lord knows I tried. But you are
insufferable, Mr. Billy Ray Cyrus. The Lord bids me to rid you from his
sight."
"Hey,
you got the name right!"
With
that, she sliced his head clean off and it tumbled to the ground. She pointed
the knife at me and asked me to pick it up. I said no and she looked confused.
She told me that I hadn't had a problem "picking up the other two". I
yelled at her, asking how she knew about that. She told me I was the one who
kept killing people and she was covering it up. Then I woke up.