The last episode pulled me into normalcy. Storytelling, that is. No sci-fi, no fantasy, no supernatural beings. Just a dude playing a piano. It was a good exercise to really find out what matters in a story without having to worry about all the world-building and set dressing.
Thanks for reading.
Artwork by Neil Ross
https://www.artstation.com/artwork/683wvW
DISCLAIMER: This work has not been edited beyond what was done in the video. The goal is to capture a story in a short amount of time and keep it as raw as possible.
The Story
Max clacked down the empty hall. He stopped, clacked again. Forward, then back. He wore a unique pair of sneakers, ones with hard soles. He’d found them discounted on some Chinese e-commerce site, forced to buy ten, because they only did pseudo wholesale. That was okay with him, because he loved the sound, a tempo prompt for what was to come.
His reflection in the mirror startled him. He’d gained weight. His mother would have said he’d gained soul, but he wasn’t interested in that. And there wasn’t a soul around. Just him, his shirt printed like an explosive finger-paint job, which complemented the broad spectrum of plastic, glass, and light of the Vista Mall concourse. Banners as still as the dead, hanging from the ceiling, dripping with wishful propaganda. Ghostly orbs refracting rainbows through polished-to-invisible glass walls, which accepted eyes and bodies alike, to peer or purchase, depending on the moods of the passers-by.
But, as Max noted, there wasn’t a soul here. However, everything was “on” to a noisy degree, hence the noise he wore to blend in, and hence noise he would soon make, soulful ass planted on a padded bench, which felt unpadded, fingers on ivory that wasn’t.
Vista Mall didn’t pay him much for his music, but it was enough to rent a studio apartment, stock his fridge with food that would sustain him, clearly, he noted again, passing a particularly reflective window through which an empty elevator sat. The mask he wore, Vista Mall policy, rubbed his nose and chin raw, especially when he had stubble, like today, and he breathed in the scent of the bacteria population furiously regrowing despite his nuclear mouthwash.
He pumped sanitizer onto his hands, even though he would shake none, sat down at the piano bench, and stared at the keys, wondering what they had to tell him today. He took out a sheet of music and placed it above the keys while they deliberated.
His surroundings screamed at him in sharps and flats, dischordant, empty but full. Maybe he should come later, when there were people here, blunt bodies to absorb the babel around him so he could concentrate. He shook his head no to that idea and regarded the sign beside him and the piano that stressed people remain apart for their safety. The six-foot spaces between the passers-by would only transform that babel into timed bursts. He preferred it in a flood.
Clean hands on clean keys, Max listened before responding. It was always important to listen first, understand what you were dealing with to help navigate the unknown. Today, the piano was feeling a bit down, smothered by the towering walls that had the worst acoustics imaginable.
“I understand,” Max said. And he did, shouldering the same burden, suddenly guilty for wearing the hideous shirt.
Max waded into the music, dipping his toes in first, then to his knees, where the chill manifested, growing more intense the deeper he went. He didn’t hold back, because he never held back. Soon he was swimming through the music like he was born in it. His mother always said he was, dancing in her belly to something as gentle as the tap of her finger on a tabletop or the rusted windchime that grated outside the kitchen window. But Max’s father insisted he’d always been driven to loud music, hence his name sake. No matter how much his father had begged his mother, “Maximum” was no name for a boy with any future.
Max rolled his fingers across the keys, careful to not let them fully spring back up. Things were getting more intimate, the conversation becoming less about the words and more about the sounds. Soon there were no words. He was water through a river, weaving around stones, churning only when he felt like it. Bubbles gurgled to the top and popped their secrets. Then he was airborne, playing the leaves and branches like windchimes to which the birds answered with accompaniment. Then he went even higher than birds could fly, where the air was too thin to breath. The atmosphere divided the earth and the infinite in beautiful curvature, and still, he went higher.
Stars twinkled, and all he could think of was what planets orbited them, full of rivers and trees and skies just like the one he’d left. He tumbled, head over toes, experiencing this music omnidirectionally, because he wasn’t limited to two ears anymore. It infused him, became his lifeblood. The keys told him the mysteries of the universe then, in so many tones and colors, some of the same ones that plastered Vista Mall, but in a harmonious fashion. He didn’t fully blame the Mall, though. It was built by organisms who were in their infancy, and plus, it paid the bills.
He shook those thoughts from his head, the ones pulling him back to the surface. They clung to him like cotton-candy cobwebs, never letting go, and soon those cobwebs birthed spiders that crawled over his skin. All he could do was shake them off, slap them from his skin. And he fell and fell and fell and–
“Woah there Maxi-man my music man.” It hit Max harder than solid earth.
He opened his eyes to a cage of industrialized tubing four stories above.
“You must have been in real deep.” It was Alfonso, the security guard.
Alfonso helped Max back upright and his hands slammed onto the keys to counter the shove. It sounded like a universe dying.
“Now that’s what I’m talking about,” Alfonso said. And he squeaked around the floor, hips swaying. “Like the shirt.”
Max looked at the keys, and they told him what he already knew. The first gaggle of patrons entered the mall, triggering the drone of Muzak. Alfonso urged him to continue the broken assault of what in no way was music.
Max did, blending in with the rest of the ugliness, counting down the hours until Vista Mall was empty again.