Barnacle
Bay
By
Dani Brown
Peacocks
screamed at the night. Their hens roosted in stunted trees growing
out of broken concrete. Ice cold fog kissed their tail feathers
and licked deformed leaves from the trees.
Orange
lights danced in the darkness, twisting and swaying over old bricks,
broken concrete and parting fog. One lingered over a shattered baby
doll rejected by the elements.
Before
Jessica could take out her phone, the light zoomed off. She used the
torch to find the broken baby doll. Its eyelids, the ones that close
when the child holds the doll flat, were missing.
“I
had one of these,” she whispered into the wind.
The
peacocks screamed back. The wind twisted through deflated
balloons caught in the stripping branches. A shrill cry sounded out
in the air to compete with peacock screams.
She
held the doll to her chest. Wind pulled her hair and kissed the
back of her neck. Something sharp scraped her palm. It was all the
confirmation she needed that she should go home and get a real job.
“Fuck,”
but she said it under her breath quiet enough so the wind couldn’t
carry it to Michael.
Naked
branches scraped against concrete. Deflated balloons caught the wind,
only to let it out in a series of shrill sounds. The peacocks
objected to the noise with a series of screams. The wind came by to
see if there were any more deformed leaves.
Michael
turned the headlights up bathing Jessica in brilliant white. The
lingering orange orbs scattered.
Jessica
turned to him and held her palm up. Blood dripped down her wrist. She
didn’t put down the doll but flipped it over and examined it in the
high beams. Michael turned the engine off.
“Hey,
leave the lights on a minute,” she regretted the words as soon as
she said them.
“But,
honey, it’ll kill the battery.”
His
voice had a particular whine to it that said the unsaid, I’m the
man and I know better than you. I’m middle class and you have a
trust fund. I know the struggle is real. You are a sheltered Princess
outside of her castle.
“Just
for a minute,” she replied, trying to keep her voice calm, “I’ve
cut my hand.”
“Well,
if you listened to me, you wouldn’t have cut your hand.”
Jessica
thought better of responding to that.
“Honey,
can I please have the first aid kit?”
Mama.
The wind twisted through those balloons again, but the shrill
sound-off couldn’t drown out a second Mama. This one louder
than the first.
“What
was that,” Michael asked.
“A
doll I found.”
Her
hand throbbed. A red ball rolled into the path of the high beams with
a blinding shine. Waves crashed on the shore below.
“Bullshit.
Everything out here is broken and old. Don’t lie to me woman.”
Jessica
cringed at his anger. It was always there, bubbling below the
surface. The ball hit her ankle and proved that his point was nothing
more than lies.
Mama.
Jessica
flipped the doll back over. It wasn’t one of those speaking dolls
and even if it was, it had been left to the elements for too long.
The
shadows shifted as Michael stepped out of the driver’s seat and
slammed the car door shut.
Mama.
Empty unblinking eyes stared at her. Mama. The soft bits of
doll’s body leaked decades of grubby moisture down her wrist.
Jessica
turned to watch him. He stepped closer to her with his (her)
camera held out. His persona changed while the camera rolled to the
point he was almost pleasant to be around.
“This
is interesting, we’re at the Barnacle Bay Lido where the teacher
drowned her entire class forty years ago and Jessica has found
something.”
He
paused his filming and snatched the doll. Barnacles strung themselves
along between Jessica’s hand and the doll’s underside. Each pull
from Michael brought a fresh wince that Jessica knew better than to
express.
“You
need to look scared, this is going to be our big break,” he told
her with a wink and gapped tooth smile.
He
held the doll over her head, not noticing the barnacles sucking salt
and moisture out of the air to reinflate. Mama. Mama. Mama.
Peacock
screams cut through the doll’s distorted voice. The ball shifted
away from her foot and hurled towards him.
“Goddamnit
Jessica, that should have been on film.”
He
stamped his feet. Maammaaa. The ball twisted around his
ankles. His foot came down and he fell backward.
Michael
regained his balance without falling on to the Lido’s debris.
“You’re
costing us money. We’re one week away from eviction.”
Orange
orbs reflected in the eyes of the peahens. The cocks weren’t happy
their wives were woken up and expressed this with a hiss. The wind
twisted around those deflated balloons again.
Michael
raised his hand.
“Look
scared, bitch.”
Jessica
briefly turned to look at him before turning back to the doll.
“The
viewers want authenticity. If they wanted to watch acting, they’d
see a film,” she tried to reason with him.
Every
podcast and video channel he dragged her along for the ride. Every
single one was another failure. Every new topic. Every week he had a
new obsession and another promise of a big break and he’d pay her
back. He didn’t understand that they needed to consistently stick
to the same topic and be authentic.
“Don’t
tell me what people want. I know these things. I’m very highly
educated.”
Jessica’s
fingers hovered over long dead barnacles. They had a fresh layer of
slime turning into glue. Penetrating outer shells pushed it into her
skin.
Orange
orbs accumulated around a statue and lit it up as bright as a
midsummer’s day. Long, white fingerbones held glowing orange
lanterns above barnacles.
Mama.
The wind looped around and stole the mechanical voice. Mama.
The replacement came back more human-like. Mama. The barnacles
breathed air and sucked in Jessica’s blood. Mama. That
wasn’t the sound a doll makes. Maa-Mmaa.
An
orange orb zoomed past Jessica with a frantic chill. A cold from some
unseen force squeezed grabbed her barnacle-free hand.
Michael
switched off the high beams, plunging the scene into darkness until
the orange orbs turned their lighting up. The wind and doll died down
for Jessica to listen to his angry growls.
“We
could be rich,” the wind carried his muttering with no need to
twist the words, “if it weren’t for that stupid trust-fund
bitch.”
Orange
orbs twisted around stunted trees. The cold unseen force pulled on
Jessica’s hand while the doll flipped over in Jessica’s other
hand.
The
barnacles cut deep. They fed. They breathed from the moisture and
salt swirling around in the air.
Cracking
noises from broken shells filled the air and stole all other sounds.
The barnacle-encrusted statue turned her head to Jessica and
screamed. Some unseen force pulled barnacles from Jessica’s wrist,
but they soon reattached and tried to eat her hand.
The
wind died down. Maaa-Mmmaaa. Children’s voices cried out
forgotten nursery rhymes catching the deflated balloons.
“Fuck,
stupid, bitch,” Michael fumbled with the camera from the car. “Give
me a chance to set up the audio recordings,” he said out loud as if
the spirits trapped in at the Barnacle Bay Lido would obey.
Fog
licked Jessica’s legs. The wind retrieved the ball. The noises of
tiny shells breaking cracked on the air as the statue raised its arm
and pointed at Jessica’s ankles. Vampire barnacles climbed up her
trainers before they attached themselves to bare skin.
Children’s
voices whispered from the fog. It's my mother. Fog shifted
into the shape of a little girl with pigtails. She floated over and
hugged the barnacle-encrusted statue.
A
peacock hopped off his perch. Mist cleared for him to put his tail on
display. The hens screamed objections at him. An orange orb circled
around to their stunted trees. The wind picked up and stole the bark,
leaving behind only deflated balloons for that extra-shrill
disorientating sound.
Voices
cried their forgotten nursery rhymes promising that when they woke,
the children would have all the pretty horses. Mummy.
Barnacles fell from the statue.
Maa-Maa.
The doll begged for Jessica’s attention. She tried to put it
down, but the barnacles dug deeper into her skin. You belong to us
now. They lapped at her ankles, suctioning her with their glue.
The
peacock turned showing off his feathers. My, my you are such a
pretty boy. The nursery rhymes fell silent. The wind died down.
Balloons deflated with a low-pitched final hiss.
“What,”
Michael asked.
“I
didn’t say anything,” Jessica winced.
Barnacles
climbed her leg and kissed her knee. Waves crashed on the shore
below.
The
doll cried out in malfunctioning gibberish. The high beams flickered.
Orange orbs retreated beyond the stunted trees.
“I’m
turning on my camera now, you need to play your part.”
He
seemed to have forgotten all about the high beams killing the
battery.
The
wind picked up the beer on his breath and held it there. Driving
while under an influence was an offence, but Jessica couldn’t tell
him that.
The
peacock’s feather eyes blinked. The high beams flickered and came
on with their full force. My, what a pretty boy.
Jessica
turned her face away from the camera. The lens picked up the blood
dripping from her hand. Michael jumped out of the car again, with the
handheld camera and zoomed in on her hand, ignoring the barnacles
climbing up her leg.
“Jessica
has just been attacked.”
The
wind wouldn’t let him say it in real time, kicking up a fuss with
those deflated balloons. Forgotten nursery rhymes climbed into
just-shy-of-fever-pitch. Dead barnacles cracked as the statue moved
her leg.
If
he voices it over, he’ll lose that supernatural sound. Michael
didn’t have the patience to lift those noises and put them back on
the footage.
The
other peacocks hopped off their roosts with their tail feathers on
display. What such pretty boys. Wind twisted and braided
Jessica’s limp blonde hair. It picked up the red ball and pitched
it at Michael’s head.
You
aren’t welcome here. The warning came as a hiss and pushed him
back. He fought and shoved the camera in her face. The real damage
could be found on her leg or hand (for those that preferred blood).
The
peacocks turned around. The high beams reflected the stunted trees.
Jessica screamed and took a step back, tripping over her own feet.
The barnacles dug themselves in and made her leg home.
The
statue took a step forward, shedding her outer shells along the way.
Mama. The doll cried out. The children forgot their nursery
rhymes.
Michael
stared at the trees. You still aren’t welcome here. The high
beams flickered. Turn around and go back.
Bones
caught the high beams. He pointed the handheld camera in their
general direction and pulled out the viewing screen. Old analogue
snow distorted the footage. Mama. Mama. Mama.
“Stop
making that sound,” Michael sneered.
His
voice travelled to Jessica’s ears as a faint whisper in the wind.
The children told her about all the pretty horses, or tried, they
were cut off after five words.
Strands
fell out of his hipster manbun. Mama. The doll screamed louder
than before. The barnacles breathed and attached themselves to
Jessica’s hand and the back of her knee.
The
statue took another step. The air filled with the sounds of dead
barnacles cracking open.
The
wind squealed through deflated balloons caught in children’s bones
that masqueraded as stunted trees growing out of the Lido’s
crumbling concrete.
“What
did you do to the camera, this is our big break, and you’re
sabotaging it.”
More
strands fell out of his hipster bun. The high beams caught his face.
His veins stood out. Jessica tried to move her foot, but the
barnacles grabbed her tight.
The
wind dropped off pieces of nursery rhymes and a chill. Orange orbs
surrounded Michael (those showed up on his footage).
A
peacock turned to him with a hiss. The eyes on its tailfeathers shut.
When they opened again, they were blood shot and red. It pecked a
barnacle off the broken concrete and chomped down, breaking its
shell.
The
peacock threw the discarded shell next to the ones shed by the
statue. It picked a barnacle from Jessica’s skin. Her scream cut
through the night air.
Another
peacock ran to Michael while he was distracted fumbling with the
camera and Jessica’s scream. The first peacock didn’t chomp down
until it was sure it had Michael’s undivided attention.
He
caught the entire thing on film. In the background of his shot,
Jessica was trapped with the throbbing barnacles growing along her
wrist and up her leg, looking to meet somewhere around her hips.
Michael’s
head fell back with his mouth open as the peacock discarded another
barnacle shell.
My,
my, you are such a pretty boy, too.
The
statue turned her head to watch the scene unfold. Dead barnacles
popped off her dead skin. Take him, he’s mean. The voice
came through as an old croak that hadn’t been heard in a decade or
more.
Waves
lapped at the shoreline below. Blood dripped from Jessica’s hand
and wrist.
Orange
orbs sped out of the waves. Please, Miss, don’t drown me.
The barnacles twisted around Jessica’s wrist and grew down her
pointing fingers. She tried to free herself with her other hand. They
latched onto that too.
A
wraith pulled on Michael’s hair. Her ghostly face pulled itself
into disgust. Milky orbs that served as eyes looked over at Jessica.
Bright
daylight threatened Jessica’s eyesight. She took a step forward –
her skin remembering the pull of vampire barnacles that existed in
air.
Children
jumped into the pool. They splashed with happy little screams. The
entire class. Teacher knew best. Miss paid for the trip out of her
own pocket.
An
ice cream van pulled up. One final treat for all of Miss’s
favourite little girls and boys.
Girls
clapped their hands together and sang nursery rhymes. A stray peacock
wandered the grounds displaying his tailfeathers for his hen. The
girls pointed and ooohhh, You are so pretty. The peacock
turned his back towards them and searched for his hen.
Children
lined up at the ice cream van’s window and held their hands out to
receive a Flake 99. Miss already paid.
The
girls paused their nursery rhymes and hand games. Creamy white
ice cream dripped onto the little hands. Miss watched from the pool
side.
The
peacocks gave up on wooing their hens. They put their tailfeathers
away and turned around, bringing with them the night.
The
wraith opened her mouth, dislocating her jaw. Children screamed at
Jessica. Don’t let Miss find you. The children pulled on her
hand, staying clear of the baby doll and barnacles.
Water
splashed on Jessica. Each droplet caught the summer sun and burst in
an orange eruption. Waves carried debris to the shore. Rats fought
over stray scrapes of skin clinging to bones.
The
wraith turned her face towards where Jessica stood only a second
before. The wind caught a hidden deflated balloon.
A
woman held a girl with blonde pigtails under the pool water. The
woman turned to look at Jessica, her mouth open ready to say
something.
The
wraith’s long tongue, ripe with decay, rolled out of her mouth and
licked Michael’s ear. This one is mine. The girl beneath the
water released air bubbles as her jaw unhinged and her eyes popped
out.
Jessica
screamed. Peacocks screamed back. The barnacles pulled on her skin
and found the fat beneath.
Barnacles
steamed under the bright summer sun. They didn’t like to be out of
the sea.
A
car pulled into the car park. A woman ran out of the passenger’s
side and didn’t bother to even slam the door. She screamed, “don’t
eat the fucking ice cream”.
The
statue stumbled in the glare of the high beams. Dead barnacles pulled
away from her grey and green skin as she fell.
Barnacles
pulled Jessica's arm to her side and tied it around her back. The
ones on her leg climbed further to caress her knee.
The
teacher turned to look at the woman. Only hatred existed beyond her
black eyes, but the woman didn’t cringe or back down.
“Your
children will never amount to anything,” Miss spat.
Ice
cream dripped from the children’s mouths. A little boy clutched his
stomach and puked down his bare chest. The air took on a chill.
Barnacles grabbed Jessica’s arm and leg.
A
child’s body washed up on the shore (covered in barnacles). A
police siren wailed. The man in the ice cream van smiled and handed
out a Flake 99. Threadworms waved in the brown chocolate.
Don’t
anger Miss. A little girl with blonde pigtails pulled on
Jessica’s arm. Barnacles came away with blood and a faint pop. A
peacock snatched them from the sun-drenched concrete.
A
body floated just beneath the surface of the lido; a little girl
with blonde pigtails. Her blue eyes stared blankly at the sun. Waves
crashed on the shore bringing with them salt-preserved decay.
The
peacocks ran circles around Jessica. Miss is really upset. The
girl pulled on Jessica’s hand with more urgency. Her sharp nails
dug into Jessica’s flesh bringing blood.
The
peacocks spat at Jessica and displayed their tailfeathers. You
must do what Miss says. Another child joined them. Yeah, no
matter how bad it is, you must do it. The peacock’s circle grew
tighter. Their tailfeathers weaved together. The eyes blinked.
Orange
orbs danced around the bones that masqueraded as trees. Jessica
caught glimpses between peacock tail feathers.
Please,
Jessica, set us free. Another voice joined the first. Help us,
Jessica. Her skin crawled with invisible insects. The
barnacles ate us too. Another voice chimed in, we were on a
school trip. The peacocks closed in.
A
beak pulled at the barnacles regenerating on Jessica’s hand and
wrist. Two peacocks fought over the barnacles even though there were
plenty to go around.
Jessica’s
blood hit a hole in the broken concrete. The earth lapped it up.
The
peacocks parted letting her watch Michael fell to the rubble. A
wraith stood over him.
Scarps
of pale skin hung from the white fingers held together with copper
wires that stroked his chin. The long tongue fell out of the wraith’s
mouth and licked his other ear. Imagine what else I can do with my
tongue.
The
bones pretending to be trees jangled. Deflated balloons blew in off
the sea and caught in toes and fingers fused to femurs. Mists
blew around until they formed the shape of primary school children.
The
statue shed the last of her barnacles. Peacocks picked up the empty
shells.
Michael
dropped Jessica’s camera. The wind died down and the peacocks
stopped their fight so Jessica heard it shatter. The wraith had her
tongue shoved down Michael’s throat when she looked over.
The
statue poked Jessica. You need to get out of here. Jessica
turned to look at her. The same woman who stormed up to the poolside
and watched the children succumb to vomiting sickness and float under
the water looked back. Only, her lips had rotted off and barnacles
ate through most of her flesh over the years.
Jessica
turned away to look at Michael. The wraith hovered over him. Her long
fingerbones held his hands down by his side. Flies fell out of her
mouth when she opened it for a kiss.
The
wind blew her scrapes over fabric around. Teasing and twisting her
form into something Michael desired.
You
need to leave this place. Go!
The
statue-woman rapidly pulled barnacles from Jessica’s skin, even
after Jessica turned away from her live-in partner and his new lover.
The
vague shape of men stood with the peacocks. They wanted to eat the
discarded barnacles as much as the birds. The hens had no interest.
Mists
seeped out of the broken concrete and formed into the shape of a man.
She did that to me last week.
The children’s nursery rhymes
spun around gaining speed and desperation. Save us Jessica.
The
statue pulled a handful of barnacles from Jessica’s skin as she
turned around to tell the children off. This trip is forever.
The wind carried any lingering traces of the nursery rhymes to the
deflated balloons. Go!
Jessica
ran towards the car with a final glance at Michael. The wind pulled
and pushed at the wraith. Orange lights hung over the scene. The last
she ever saw of him.
Children
lined the road along with peacocks and men as she backed out as fast
as she could. It was a bit too fast for safety. Go. Quicker. The
wraith is distracted.
Once
she reached the road, the radio turned on tuned to the station of
children’s nursery rhymes and peacock screams. A red ball bounced
across the road forcing Jessica to slam on her brakes.
An
orange light floated above the scene. She saw more orange lights
ahead. She pressed on the pedals and sped towards them and the sounds
of the motorway.
Mama.
Jessica glanced at the passenger seat. Barnacles spread from the
doll’s head. Will you be my Mama?
She
turned her attention back to the road and drove faster. The trees and
orange orbs became blurs next to her window.
The
barnacles died once she reached the motorway. The doll lost its
voice, but sat there, strapped in with eyes that couldn’t close.