IT’S A SMALL WORLD AFTER ALL
Silence and weightlessness with nothing to be seen but a soft white light which seemed to surround, bathe and penetrate Smeg’s very being. He felt warmed and comforted by the light, any fears or doubt ebbed from his mind and released him from feelings of angst and despair that the physical world places on one’s soul.
He knew he was dead, how could he not be after being blown out into the vacuum of space? But if this was death he welcomed it, for never before had he felt such peace and tranquillity. He simply floated there unaware that he was devoid of physical form, but being more of an unencumbered consciousness basking in the white light of the afterlife. Eventually Smeg noticed something. It was fleeting at first, a red light in the distance seen from the edge of his vision. There was no concept of direction here so it was a little while before he found it again, but there it was. Was it something far away, or was it simply a tiny speck of red light? Smeg willed himself closer to it, and as he approached it gradually became clear that the red light was indeed a number. Number 451 to be exact. Smeg’s mind bobbed about in front of it for a while, he had no idea what this could mean. Suddenly there was a soft chime and a brown wooden door faded into existence below the number, and having no better idea Smeg willed the golden doorknob to turn, opening to reveal a black void. Obviously he was a little hesitant to enter, going from such serenity into the unknown. Yet there seemed nowhere else to go, and reluctantly Smeg entered.
Finding himself back in his human body was a bit of a surprise, but then so was finding himself sitting in an ugly, green plastic chair in an old teacher’s office. Of course it didn’t have to be a teacher’s office but that is how it appeared. The wallpaper that peeled in places from the redbrick walls tried valiantly to look like classy cedar, and rows of outdated encyclopaedias adorned the wall behind the large peeling vinyl chair that in turn lurked behind a scratched and stained pine office desk. Sitting on it were piles of papers, several empty coffee cups, an overcrowded ashtray, and a name plaque that read Mr BOJANGLES.
Up on the wall was a faded portrait of the Queen Mother, aged 17, and a street scene painting that was in such bad condition that it could have either been Ireland or Pakistan. There were no windows, only a green door with rusty hinges behind where Smeg sat, and an old clock above its with innumerable arms ticking away quietly in different directions and speeds.
Smeg sat uncomfortably like a pupil in a Principal’s office not knowing who or what he was waiting for. Abruptly the clock stopped ticking and the rusted doorhandle turned. The door creaked open and Smeg jumped up in surprise. A foul wind preceded a mangy one-legged dog, which flopped into the doorway and coughed spasmodically. It crawled along the floor and around behind the pine desk, where it heaved itself up onto the large chair. Opening a desk draw and taking out a cigarette, the dog lit it with much difficulty then coughed and hacked some more.
Smeg could not believe what he was seeing. He was more used to seeing this very dog being run over by busses outside the Chicken and Fanbelt, not smoking a cigarette in its own office. He stood there and gaped at it.
‘Sit down number 451.’ croaked the rotten old dog as it began rummaging through some papers.
Smeg sat down and prepared to say something, but the dog wasted no time in getting to the point.
‘So you’ve died and want a refund, correct?’ it said in its sandpaper-like voice.
‘Erm, yes.’ replied Smeg.
‘Right’, rasped the dog without looking up from the papers, ‘it appears we don’t give refunds without a receipt. Good day.’
This was the moment Smeg had been waiting for. Taking the crumpled scrap of paper from his pocket he triumphantly slapped it down on the desk under the dog’s nose. With its one eye the dog looked at it for a while, then slowly, ever so slowly, up at Smeg.
‘And what is this…thing?’ it asked sternly.
‘Oh…sorry.’ said Smeg, and triumphantly slapped the life receipt down over the penis cartoon that Papa Tex had drawn and slipped in his pocket to be discovered later. ‘My receipt. One refund please!’
The dog regarded the receipt with its crusty yellow eye, the leaned back in its chair and took a deep drag of its cigarette. For a while it simply stared at the dangly things that hung from the filthy ceiling.
‘Now listen up to me number 451,’ it finally said, ‘you expect to receive a refund of your life as a human, correct?’
‘Yes.’
‘And by all intents and purposes you are deceased right now, correct?’
‘Erm, apparently yes.’
The dog leaned forward and stared hard at Smeg. ‘Refund for a life which you have already completed, however unsatisfactory.’
‘Well I wouldn’t say completed,’ replied Smeg, ‘I was killed before I could finish my quest, which was to get a refund.’
‘You were killed, then your life as a human is over, correct?’
‘Yes, but…’
‘You effectively completed your life, so you don’t get a refund. Do you go back to the Chinese shop with a full meal in your belly and ask for your money back? I think not.’
‘But…but…’ stammered Smeg.
The dog picked up a sheet of paper and tossed it across at Smeg.
‘Paragraph six, A REFUND MAY ONLY BE ACCEPTED WHEN UNDER 60% OF THE CUSTOMER’S PRESENT EXISTENCE IS RETURNED ACCOMPANIED BY A RECEIPT. It doesn’t get any clearer than that, 451, and I believe that is your signature at the bottom of the page, is it not?’
Smeg nodded in defeat and slumped back into his chair. The wretched dog hacked some more and snatched away the paper, tossing him another.
‘Which brings us to another point.’ said the old dog sternly. ‘As you can see in you hands I have issued you a list of names of all my staff that you murdered while they were on assignment on Earth.’
Smeg glanced down in shock and confusion at the list on the paper. Sure enough he recognised them as being the regular old drunks that practically lived at the Chicken and Fanbelt. There was Slim Tim McGinn, Bushy Bill, Gordon Morey, Danny Dringo, and so on. How could they be anyone’s staff? They were the most useless bags of shit ever to breathe everyone else’s oxygen.
‘They were Angels.’ the dog growled. ‘My Angels.’
‘What do you mean your Angels?’ asked Smeg. ‘They were human surplus, garbage, a huge waste in resources. They were nobody’s angels, they wouldn’t even be able to staff a toaster.’
The dog’s few remaining hackles along its back stood on end.
‘They were my Angels doing my work on my Earth!’ it snarled. ‘And you killed the lot of them!’
‘Wait a minute. Your Angels?’ exclaimed Smeg. ‘They were your Angels? Therefore are you saying that you are God?’ Smeg’s face went white.
‘A god, not the God.’ said the dog. ‘There is no one god as such; the hierarchy goes way further than that. If you lick the right arses then you may get yourself a little planet to play with like I did with this little mud ball Earth, think of a child with a new train set and you get the idea what it’s like to be god.’
‘Well if they were your Angels,’ said Smeg holding up the sheet of paper and shaking it a bit, ‘then they weren’t exactly working very hard, were they. It’s no wonder the Earth is in such bad shape if those who were supposed to be looking after it were constantly on the piss and doing nothing besides. I mean they had to be real buddies of yours to get the top jobs then get away with doing nothing at all. Friends and relatives, were they?’
‘Well…yes,’ croaked the dog, ‘that’s how I designed my world to work. And if you don’t like it then you can take it up with my secretary, Merve the Perve.’
With his only paw, Mr Bojangles pressed the intercom button. There was a harsh beep followed by a crackly voice from the speaker.
‘Oh Lord,’ it grovelled, ‘how mayest I bequeath thine divine words thou hath spake?’
‘Do you have any idea what you just said?’ asked Mr Bojangles.
‘Well, no,’ came the voice from the other end, ‘my heavenly banter is a bit rusty. May I try another?’
‘No,’ said the dog impatiently, ‘I want you to organise a declaration of resurrection for number…’
‘Oh Lord thou art mighty and smitey! Fire and brimstone and that…sorry.’
‘…451 immediately for reinstatement on Earth. Spiritual level six.’
‘Hoo hoo!’ came the voice from the intercom. ‘Been a naughty one have we? Not enough Hail Mary’s eh? Too little “I’m not worthy’s” what? Been skimping on the self-flagellation I’ll wager… Uh Oh.’
‘What “uh oh”’. said Mr Bojangles.
Through the little speaker came the sound of rustling papers and desk drawers opening and closing, followed by more sorting of papers. Eventually the voice came again.
‘Spiritual level six, which is the Tickle Chin Garden Iguana.’
Yes, I know that.’ said the old dog. ‘So what’s the problem?’
‘It became extinct yesterday. The last one was hunted for its tail skin, which makes a pretty good exfoliating scrub.’
Mr Bojangles thumped his paw down on the desk. ‘Bollocks!’ he yelled. ‘What about level five then?’
‘One minute.’ Answered the voice over the intercom, followed by more sorting of papers. Smeg sat nervously in his plastic chair while god and his secretary decided his fate. Soon the tinny voice from the speaker cleared its throat and Mr Bojangles glared menacingly at Smeg.
‘Spiritual level five, the Lactobacillus Horribilius disease has been…cured my Lord.’
‘Level four then!’ bellowed the wretched dog.
‘Sunbeam toaster model E109 was recalled due to a faulty spring mechanism.’ answered the secretary.
‘Level three!’ roared god.
‘The last street mime was destroyed along with the Clownskull hunting reserve.’ came the reply.
‘Level two!’ screamed our heavenly father.
‘Um, all the tent peg positions have been reserved for Andrew Lloyd Webber.’
‘What, all of them?’
‘Well yes, after all I’m sure there’s a lot of people out there who want to beat him into the ground after he deliberately and maliciously made that Masquerade song at us. And in a few months they’ll have their chance.’
God picked up his coffee cup and threw it against the door behind Smeg in frustration, the ceramic mug shattering to pieces. Smeg flinched before god’s almighty wrath.
‘LEVEL ONE!’ he screamed. ‘Make him the lowliest form of life in the universe! I want him to suffer for what he is!’
‘But Sir!’ came the voice. ‘You can’t! That’s too horrible! Please have mercy upon the poor soul before condemning him! Don’t make him a dog poo! Hang on, that’s level twelve. Oh dear. Level one is a parking attendant. Um, Lord?’
‘Yes?’
‘Tragically the very last parking attendant died in captivity after being set upon by some wild fluorine. Sorry Lord, they’re all gone forever.’
The vile canine slumped back into its chair and lit another cigarette. There it smoked and regarded Smeg for a long time, its yellow eye staring in deep thought. Finally it stubbed the butt into the mountainous ashtray and took a deep, rasping breath.
‘Well. It seems like we may have a little problem, 451. Normally I would simply send you to Hell but in this day and age we don’t really do that anymore since you lot invented Unions. Just a thuggish bunch of power hungry, toothless truck drivers pretending to be a legitimate organisation in my opinion, but nevertheless you seem to have provided me with a bit of a predicament.’
Smeg leaned back in his chair and smugly put his hands behind his head.
‘Well’, said Smeg, ‘I guess you’re simply going to have to break me out of the reincarnation cycle and grant me god status, don’t you think?’
Something resembling a mocking grin spread itself over Mr Bojangles’ face followed by a gurgling sound, which was most probably a laugh.
‘Oh no,’ he chuckled, ‘I still have a little something I can do to you. It isn’t exactly conventional and it certainly isn’t on the reincarnation species list, but I think we can bend the rules just this once.’ Our divine maker pressed the intercom button again.
‘Yup?’ came the reply through the little speaker.
‘Merve, bring me the affidavit for unusual reincarnation punishment Omega B thank you.’
There came a snigger over the intercom. ‘Righto Lordie!’
The one legged dog looked at the intercom. ‘Getting stranger, that individual.’ he said. ‘Now, number 451, you shall soon see that even here in this office where I govern mankind’s ultimate fate I do not take your blasphemous ways on Earth lightly. You shall be returned to that wretched little planet in a new body, and this time you most certainly do not get a receipt. Have you anything you wish to say before you go?’
‘Yes. I just have one question. Who exactly will the meek be when they inherit the Earth?
‘Inuit.’
‘Oh. Okay.’
Smeg’s eyes adjusted slowly, his vision gradually becoming focused. He found that he couldn’t move no matter how hard he tried, it was as though he had no arms or legs to move in the first place, and he wasn’t standing but merely propped up against something. He saw that he was in the corner of some kind of huge temple, the white walls rising up on all four sides to the ceiling high above where a single glowing orb illuminated the cavernous room. A brown tiled floor stretched out before him and around the colossal marble throne positioned against the wall he was standing next to. Resting upon this throne was a sculptured statue so life-like that Smeg could have sworn he saw it move. Hold on, it did move! It was standing! Smeg couldn’t believe it, for he recognised the enormous figure as none other than Papa Tex Jaffar. The giant parody of his lanky former crewman turned and looked down upon his throne.
‘Whoa,’ he said to himself reaching down for Smeg, ‘that’s gonna need breaking up before it goes anywhere.’
Smeg felt the giant hand wrap around his thin plastic body, then lift him up into the air before turning his brush-like head down toward the throne. With a sickening feeling Smeg realised what he had become, and as he descended head first into the cavernous interior of the giant’s throne only one word did come to his mind to summarise his thoughts and situation. He had been reincarnated as a toilet brush.
‘Shit!’
The End
Thank fucking christ
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