Sunday, March 04, 2012

Totally Missing The Point

The nibbling at my nose is gentle but insistent.

I flick at it, and realise that I'm asleep; the poorly aimed slap opens my eyes to the darkness of my bedroom.

And I see what awoke me.

In front of my bleary eyes, gold on black, a perfectly-illuminated fish hangs in mid air. A slow trail of tiny bubbles work their way towards the ceiling.

Indigo Roth and the impossible goldfish
My waking mind misses the point of the scene and tries to identify the fish's species. Some kind of comet? An oranda, maybe? My gaze seems to be making it wary, whatever it is, and its fins flutter it backward. It stays close though, and as my eyes flick upward to seek its light source, the fish darts in again and continues its attentions.

My second swipe is more accurate and I have the satisfaction seeing the fishy phantom flash through the open bedroom door and down the stairs.

This is stupid; I'm clearly dreaming.

Rolling away from the door to face the window, I close my eyes, ignoring the rogue male shark cruising past in the moonlight; if the goldfish gets the front door open, I hope it eludes him.

I yawn and resist any urge to go and investigate this fantasy; on any other day, this would be the beginning of a grand adventure. But tonight, I'm tired and achey and more than a little annoyed at being 'woken'.

It's been a long week.

As I drift off, I make a mental note to buy tuna.

And I dream of zebras.


Indigo

This blog entry is protected by copyright © Indigo Roth, 2012

Sunday, February 26, 2012

A Faint Smell Of Custard

When you set your mind to it, you can find anything.

This is particularly true of the internet, where you can find anything you can think of. If you're not careful.

But today I'm in search of simple answers.

I'm not very good with noise. Anything repetitive drives me to distraction: a dripping tap, a bouncing ball, a badger with hiccups. A noise has been bugging me lately, and I'd finally like to work out what it is. More to the point, I want it stopped.

So I've come to see the smartest guy I know.

So, can you hear it right now? asks my best friend and confidant, Dr. Max Tunguska. It's early on a Sunday morning, and we're sitting at the kitchen table. The pleasure of a hearty breakfast is behind us. Just outside the window in the bright morning sun, the young badgers Hoth and Sollust are chopping logs with an unwieldy axe. Half of me is trying not to watch, while the other is wondering where the first-aid kit is. In the distance, there's the buzz of a half dozen lawnmowers.

Yes. I don't mention that it's more of a sensation than a sound. Besides, there's a lot of background noise today. I should get a better listen to it in a moment, though; Dr. Tunguska has been busy, and apparently he now has the tools to get the job done.

Max reaches over to the first device from the table – a simple white cone - and switches it on. A blue light blinks on it, slowly at first, and then more rapidly. As it speeds up, the sounds in the room retreat and vanish; I'd not honestly registered the humming of the fridge, the low drone of the fluorescent bulb, or the dripping tap. But now they're gone, I'm acutely aware of their absence.

That's a nice effect. Some kind of noise cancellation? My friend nods as he adjusts the next doohicky – a bronze sphere covered in springs - with a screwdriver.

Yep. Kind of like you get on headphones. Short range, which is why the noise from outside is making it through. I realise he's right. I can't see or hear Hoth and Sollust at the moment, but I'm still aware of the neighbours' lawnmowers. I lean back in my chair, looking round the window.

Are those two still chopping wood?

On cue, the youngsters reappear with a shiny, red chainsaw that dwarfs the pair of them; it's the one we trim the hedges with, but we've also earmarked it for the Aardvark Apocalypse. *

Indigo Roth's Aardvark Apocalypse[* Anything this cute has to be up to something.]

The badgers try to fire the chainsaw up, with Hoth holding it and Sollust straining at the starter cable; those black-and-white lads are strong for their size. On the third pull it catches, and the hungry roar fills the kitchen.

Can you still hear it? shouts the doctor through the mechanical racket. I can't even hear him properly, and it seems crazy that I can still hear the noise that's dogging me, but I can. Somewhere in my gut; a slow, repeating vibration.

I nod and bellow in the affirmative. Max responds by flicking the switch on the second device. A huge, soapy-green bubble briefly appears around us, and abruptly all sound ceases. Everything. No manic badgers, no grass trimming, not even the traffic from the main road.

The silence is remarkable, unnatural. I've never not heard anything like it.

But I notice that it's punctuated by a single, faint noise. It's the source of my annoyance, and for the first time, I can hear it properly; an ethereal, high-pitched squeaking.

Max pats the sphere gently, proudly. This thing reflects all the remaining soundwaves, so we don’t hear them. He cocks his head. Dammit, now I can hear it! he looks about, trying to get a bearing. It’s like a rusty wheel on a supermarket trolley. I can't put my finger on it either. It seems to be everywhere.

How is it defying your devices? I whisper, as if we might frighten it off by speaking too loud. Instinctively, I know the answer.

Well, it's not coming from this set of immediate dimensions, confirms the arch-genius in an equally-hushed tone, so it's a good job I brought this with me. He indicates the final device on the table.

I can't describe it adequately, but if I say it's a like an four-sided, gunmetal man-trap with a spinning core of molten custard, you’d be most of the way there.

I'm afraid to ask, I mutter with little certainty.

Well, it's quite simple, really. He waves a hand vaguely around the room. We're going to collapse the immediate four dimensions.

And he reaches for the switch.

Waitaminute! He pauses as I scrabble around for a suitable reason. What will happen to, well, everything?

Max chuckles and shakes his head. Fear not, old son. We're going to fold them up neatly. Including Time, so it'll all be nice and tidy. And then, we'll see what's left. He sees I still look uncertain, and nods towards the window. Don’t worry, those lads outside, and everyone else, will be fine.

Silently, the indicated window shatters. Thousands of tiny jagged fragments burst into the room, and then fall to the floor; it's like watching TV with the sound off. A roughly cut log lands on the carpet and rolls gently to a stop. Ten second later, two apprehensive badger faces and a spinning chainsaw blade rise up slowly and scan the room. I give them a deflated look; that's two broken windows in as many months.

If they don’t kill us all with that chainsaw first, of course.

The pair bolt off up the garden as Max flicks the switch.

The triangular edges of the man-trap start to fold upwards. And the world goes with them. It's a peculiar effect; In my vision, the picture skews and rises. Perspective ceases to exist, and I see furniture, glass, wallpaper and sky all corrugate and collapse. Above the core of the device, four brilliant lines rise and converge until there is a single, dazzling vertical line of white reality atop a metal pyramid.

The world is gone. We're in limbo. There's a faint smell of custard.

I have neither the science nor the words to describe our location.

But next to us, hanging freely in what would be mid-air (if there were any dimensions), is a spinning mechanical bearing, two metal rings separated by an orbit of tiny metal balls. It's perhaps the size of a bagel; my stomach rumbles.

As the bearing completes each revolution, it emits a slow, grinding squeak.

And without all of our dimensions in the way, it's rather loud.

Good grief, what is it?

Max shrugs. I've no idea. Something fundamental, I guess. A forgotten component? The heart of the universe? Maybe it's just a metaphor. He reaches into his jacket pocket and pulls out a small blue-and-yellow spray-can of mechanical lubricant with a grin.

So. Shall we fix it?

Five minutes later, we're enjoying a cup of tea in the front room. There's noise everywhere, but not that one. Underneath the noise of the world there is glorious silence. I chuckle as I sip my Darjeeling.

When you set your mind to it, you can find anything.

But sometimes, even when the answers are simple, you have to dig deep.

And carry some oil.


Indigo

This blog entry is protected by copyright © Indigo Roth, 2012

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Not Ready To Tell The Tale

Spring is here.

The weather has seemed somewhat confused on the point lately, but as I sit in the park with my best friend, pink blossom touching the trees and snowdrops yawning their way clear of the grass, it seems pretty conclusive.

Indigo Roth and the Deadly SnowdropsIt's a beautiful Sunday morning, bright and crisp. Our bench isn’t the most comfortable, but it offers the best vantage point of this morning's proceedings; a small-but-enthusiastic group are running laps round the lake.

Mind you, in their position, I’d be enthusiastic too…

Dr. Max Tunguska de-rails my thought as he offers me a cup of tea from his flask. My best friend cuts a striking figure, with short-cropped hair and a dark, white-streaked beard that makes him look like he's constantly trying to swallow a badger.

You know Max, I reflect as I accept the cup with a nod, I really should get around to writing down the tale of how you changed your name.

The tea is strong, hot, sweet and milky. Perfect.

How you say I changed my name, the arch-genius-formerly-known-as-iDifficult corrects me quietly, as picks up the binoculars. Besides are you ready to tell that particular tale yet?

Am I? It's been a couple of months, and I've still not made sense of it all. Those damned cuttlefish.

The doctor coughs, correctly interpreting my silence as an answer. They're coming round again.

I raise the stopwatch and click as the group thunders past fifty yards away in a flash of black, white and gold. Wow, that's fast! I flash the stopwatch display toward my friend, who nods appreciatively. How far round the lake is it?

Half a mile, grunts Max, looking every bit the guy I've known since we attended Saint Mungo's Boarding School back in the Seventies. Which he is, in a way. Apart from the beard. Good week? He glances my way as he dunks a biscuit.

Had my annual medical, I sniff, trying to sound casual as I fish in a pocket, and retrieve an envelope. I hand it over as I sip at my tea, the very picture of nonchalance. Max finesses the papers from the manilla, and flips through the pages of results.

Not bad, not bad, he muses. All looks pretty normal. He checks the summary page. Though clearly this guy was a quack. Yes, very unprofessional! he concludes darkly.

How do you mean? I say, a tiny spike of panic in my voice.

Well, you’d think he'd make you put your heavy shopping down before he weighed you. His poe-face cracks into a grin.

I chuckle and pat my stomach affectionately. Yeah, apparently this fella needs to go. Diet and exercise. It's a good time of year to start though, I wave expansively, when all this change is in the air.

Silence joins us as we mull that thought over. We ignore him happily.

The runners dash past again, a black-and-white crowd followed by a single golden pursuer. I click the stopwatch. Still damned quick.

Well, wouldn’t you be? Dr. Tunguska tips the dregs of his tea into the grass. Hey look, I think the pacemaker is pulling out.

A lone figure separates from the action and slows to an amble. He heads our way across the dew-flecked grass, sweat glistening on his face and staining the armpits of his black and white all-in-one. He removes the horse-head from his costume as he approaches.

Morning! he gasps cheerily, still looking for breath.

That's quite a pace you set! my friend beams, to the runner's delight.

Thank you! That's the way Mr. King likes it! he inhales hugely another couple of times and adds, He's looking to find the fittest runner this morning. I must say it's rather exhilarating being chased by him!

You'll get no arguments from us! With a shiver, I remember the time we went to that fancy dress party at the embassy, dressed as a gazelle.

I'm aware of the approaching thundering of hooves. We all look round.

They’re really throwing up some dust now! It’s the final lap!

I pick up the binoculars and take in the details.

Three panicked zebras, sweating and spittling, are each trying to put themselves into the lead. Sleek muscular flanks gyrate and jostle, and a dozen legs pound the ground in a frenzy of adrenaline. The black-and-white collage finally fills my view, and I shift focus just as a familiar golden-maned figure emerges triumphantly from the dust cloud.

It's King. The house's resident lion, the lodger from the spare room. A magnificent male from the Savannah, and an ambassador of his homeland. His four legs are a blur of muscle and sinew, his mighty paws pounding the ground, his tail twitching playfully. Clearly he's not at full tilt, but is putting these stripey lads through their paces.

Unexpectedly, the lion roars and swings left, overtaking his two slowest quarry, and then suddenly swings right to barrel into the lead zebra in a blur of teeth and claws.

I lower the binoculars. Nature is wonderful, but I don’t always want to watch it.

Why did he take the leader? Lions usually pick off the slowest and weakest. puzzles Max, scratching his cranial stubble. Maybe it's like pursuit cycling? I never did understand pursuit cycling.

Our faux-zebra companion laughs.

No! Mr. King was only interested in the fastest! The leanest!

I nod, wondering if King had attended his own medical evaluation this week; I'll be looking for a few leans cuts myself in the months to come. Though after I inevitably discover a half-eaten zebra in the bathroom in the morning, I'll probably be off red meat for a month.

Rising from the bench, Max and I turn our back on the carnage and head home, treading carefully between the spring flowers.

I'm not thrilled by the idea of diet and exercise, but it'll be good for me.

It may be the Season of Change, and change I must.

But some things never change.


Indigo

This blog entry is protected by copyright © Indigo Roth, 2012

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Getting It Out In The Open

February 14th is not my favourite day of the year.

I just wanted to say that, to get it out in the open.

But for everyone searching for love today - male, female, young, old, tall and short - this is for you.

Indigo Roth rose for valentine's day
You're fabulous.

Never let anyone tell you that you're not.


Indigo

This blog entry is protected by copyright © Indigo Roth, 2012

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Tea And A Slice Of Nostalgia

I'm a curious fella. Ask anyone.

Thankfully, my curiosity is not limited to nosiness. I like to think that when a question is vexing me, I have the skills to find the answer.

It's last Sunday. I'm laying in bed, trying to remember something from my youth. I don't like to think at bedtime; that's what dreams are for. But this is tantalising, and skipping round the perimeter of my recall. Something I once read when I was maybe ten years old? Something about an obscure movie about a burning city.

Sleep is forming around the edges of my mind as I drift towards the memory...

It's 1979. I'm at school, flipping through a magazine I've just bought. At sixty pence, it was pretty steep, but it's a science fiction publication, and therefore essential. It's mostly printed on coarse paper in black and white, but it has a glossy colour double-page in the middle, which I've never seen before.

I'm reading - thrilling - over the photos from cool movies that I'll not legally be able to watch for a few years; ALIEN, SATURN 3 and METEOR. But besides this, there's a lot of text to wade through, interviews and articles. And right at this moment, I'm slack-jawed about an movie that is being made where they actually found a town that was prepared to be burned down!

Back on Sunday night, the memory bubble bursts, and I start awake.

Dammit, I almost had it. What was that movie called? It was a low-budget flick about a city that was on fire. In fact, the budget was so low, the producers advertised for a town who'd do the honours. And, unbelievably, they had several takers, and chose to film using one in Canada.

But what was the name of the film? INFERNO? No, I'm thinking of THE TOWERING INFERNO. Hmmm. I try to recall who the stars were; that's often an easy way to find obscure films using one of the online movie databases. Trouble is, it was low-budget, so probably no-one of note was in it.

My thoughts drift back to the name. What's a cool title for a film about a city on fire? I sigh, and roll over, frustrated; it's too late for internal wordplay. I fumble for my phone, find the start button on the third attempt, and and squint uncomfortably at the brilliance of the screen. My hands are still dozy, but I finally fumble up Thesaurus.com to search for other words for FIRE. Hmmm. FLAMES? How about CONFLAGRATION? BURNING? Nope, no bells being rung there.

I try a few more ways to find it using a search engine, questions and keyword searches. Nada.

Straightening out the tormented duvet, and trying not to notice the clock, I focus on the magazine that I read about it in. Oh hell. Now, what was that called? STARLOG? No, that's a posh American one, and mine was English. But it was something like that. SUPERNOVA? No wait, STARBURST! Yes, STARBURST! Finally, a thread I can follow. I remember it had a white cover, and photos from STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE and SATURN 3 on the cover.

Search for OLD STARBURST COVERS seems a good place to start, and after a few variants on the wording I find the issue I owned! That's it! A creamy white, but with just the photos I remember! Good grief, volume 2, Issue 7. But 1979, just as I thought. The picture of the cover makes me smile as I start to drift back to 1979 again.

Fatigue rushes alongside me, and tries to overtake.

I shake my head clear, else I'll be asleep and the question will go unanswered. There's no summary of the issue or its online articles, but there's a link to someone who's selling the very issue I'm after.

After a few taps and a PayPal password, I've bought the old magazine and resigned myself to answers in a few days time. And then, without ever having stepped from my bed to find those answers, the evening ends happily with the welcome embrace of sleep.

It's Saturday. I'm drawn away from my breakfast by the sound of the mail arriving. I step excitedly through to the hallway as a padded envelope drops through my letterbox. Smiling, I know what it contains; not only nostalgia, but answers. Pleased with my ingenuity and tenacity, I return to the kitchen, tearing open the well-wrapped package with some difficulty.

Indigo Roth immerses in nostalgia as he buys Starburst issue 19 from 1979Oh yeah.

I grin my cheesiest grin. And, retrieving my tea and toast, I wander through to settle into the comfiest armchair in the warm lounge.

Now this is a lovely moment.

I flip through the magazine, searching for the article. Wow, I remember all this, but I don't immediately see anything about a movie with a city on fire. My brain is still trying to provide the title of the film even as I turn the pages, keen to deliver an answer before the magazine does; I'm competitive that way.

And here it is! Buried in an interview with low-budget producing maestro Sandy Howard! Who? I shake my head; I don't recognise his name, and would never have remembered it. But what was his infernal movie called?! Wait, here it is! The 1979 flick about a city on fire is titled...

Oh. (with added colour for clarity)

Indigo Roth discovers City On Fire, the movie that defies deconstructionYep. CITY ON FIRE! Genius. They must have stayed up all night to think of that one; a rare movie title that defies deconstruction, but adds an exclamation mark to promise an extra helping of excitement.

Of course, had I remembered that Henry Fonda had played a late-career bit-part in it, that would have ended the search in minutes. Or Ava Gardner, Leslie Neilsen or Shelley Winters!

Feel somewhat deflated, I nevertheless enjoy the rest of the magazine with my breakfast; I'm rather partial to a slice of nostalgia with my tea.

I'm a curious fella. With more than a dash of ingenuity. And a downright dogged tenacity when it suits me.

But sometimes, in the pursuit of answers, my memory drops its loose change and hurries past the obvious.


Indigo

This blog entry is protected by copyright © Indigo Roth, 2012

Sunday, February 05, 2012

Even Presidents Wipe Out

It is a well known fact that when you take a questionable action, consequences will follow.

Never is this less true than in the field of time travel.

For example, the following were printed in 1903 by the U.S. Postal Service.

Series 1902 No Presidents Roth Difficult Eolist Pearl(Click on it, there's lots of detail)

The 1-cent stamp features my favourite arch-genius and bestest friend before he changed his name. Printed with ebony ink, it proved virtually impossible to locate one of these in a dark room, and many were lost. This hard-to-find philatelic legend will forever be known among hardcore stamp enthusiasts as the Very Black.

The 2-cent stamp bears an unusually-decaffeinated Eolist Petite. Initially these were printed with the blood of her husband, but this practice was short-lived as he kept waking up. Beloved of collectors as the first stamp to ever feature a woman (they didn't get out much), this gem is known fondly as the Tiny Red.

The 5-cent stamp displays the mug of yours truly, just after a bad haircut. A large batch was accidentally printed on sandpaper, giving it the nickname of the Rough Roth. Despite its value being common for long-distance mail, it proved unpopular as nobody wanted to lick it. Still, the colour's nice.

The 9-cent stamp is an unconventional offering, just like its subject, the Minneapolis blogger, Pearl. The multicoloured sheen was a printing error; three-parts ink to one-part gin. This limited the print run of this rarity to a single sheet, most of which were enjoyed with ice and lemon. The Pearly Wonder remains highly sought after and priceless.

How did this happen? It's a long tale, but let's just say that President Teddy Roosevelt was a better president than he was gambler. Or skateboarder.


Indigo

The original 1903 Ulysses Grant 4c stamp can be viewed here
This blog entry is protected by copyright © Indigo Roth, 2012

Monday, January 23, 2012

Heisenberg Brings The Ketchup

One of the nice things about having cool, smart friends staying over is that you're never short of good conversation and laughs over breakfast.

And another is that, when your fridge is empty on a Sunday morning, your best friend the arch-genius has invented a machine that can conjure that very breakfast out of thin air.

And breakfast has gone deliciously digital.

Binary breakfast, a la Max Tunguska
Ones and zeroes, quantum proteins, fried attractors, Heisenberg ketchup.

Don't ask how he does it, it misses the point. He just can.

And don't ask why he has a new name. Just accept it.

Besides, that story's a whole other adventure.


Indigo

This blog entry is protected by copyright © Indigo Roth, 2012