An epiphany
struck Vaughn Plibersek during his morning ritual of Turkish coffee and camel
cigarette: he was finally over Rebecca. He smiled down from his balcony to the
women on the suburban Doha street, found that niqaabs left a bit too much to
the imagination and furthermore, shit,
aren't they the girls going to the school down the road? Oooh fuuuck, Vaughn,
they'd be 14 or something, don't be a fucking creep. It was time to return
to Columbus. Vaughn chained a second smoke and, watching it wisp, a second
epiphany: it had been the past two years where he developed this addiction. The
prospect of a long flight home, now with cravings, made his balls tighten.
An esotericist,
Vaughn counted amongst Qatar's large expatriate workforce, albeit from the
smaller pool of specialised workers recruited from around the globe. He pitched
the Qatar Airways Quick Pass to his employer. Clutching this proposed artefact
and reciting the correct Arabic incantation would induce a brief blackout in
the Qatar Airways passenger, similar to a videogame 'fast travel'. The
passenger would not experience their
flight and, after what felt like two minutes, regain full consciousness in the
smoking area of their airport of arrival, with a half-memory of Nasser Goes To Space.
Vaughn's
employers had been sceptical: 'Why should we entrust you with the team and resources to develop this product?'
Vaughn bared his
soul: 'I remember little of the nightly arguments that were the last four
months of my marriage, because of my nightly drinking. That's why I moved here,
for more conservative morrows. That's why I am uniquely suited to understanding
Mahra Bani Tanim.'
Bkaluryws Dayima, an
autobiographical epic poem written by Bani Tanim between 1903 and 1910, is key.
Bkaluryws Dayimaopens with the sun peeking over sand dunes and the rogue
Bedouin listing his organs - stomach, spleen, lungs - as they start to
function. Then the poem becomes blippy, like a boozy precursor to Burroughs'
cut-out technique, as Bani Tanim goes about his day: chatting up girls in
speakeasies, vaulting fences with goat underarm, engaging hippopotamus in
unarmed combat and theological debate, with no explanation of how he got from
point A to point B, aside from stanzas of the protagonist swaying wildly on
camel's back with bottle of saké in hand.
The Quick Pass' development hit a three-month road block until the team
of six, sitting around the break room table with mouths agape, realised that Bkaluryws Dayima synced perfectly with Tij, by Battles. Aside from (Mette) Kristen having to take two
weeks off due to existential panic ('How is the song in the heart of a
last-century Bedouin from two-thousand-and-fucking-seven?'), the Quick Pass'
development became a simple matter of transferring the collective break-room
epiphany into a product more suited to modern tastes.
The prototype Qatar
Airways Quick Pass is a 10 by 25 cm card with brand font and colours offering
to 'get (you) where you want faster' which, technically, false advertising. The
Quick Pass has been tested on a passenger flying from Qatar to Australia and seems
to have worked too well - the
passenger, in their fast-travel black-out, has left the Quick Pass behind, long
forgotten as they explain their interpretation of Nasser Goes to Space to Roland the Driver. Luke, one of the
cleaning team contracted to clean the plane, finds the Quick Pass whilst
removing rubbish from between a business
class seat and the adjoining storage console.
Luke does not realise
the worth of what he holds but, with a slight wriggling in his kidneys that he
does not recognise as mythic resonance, he pockets the Quick Pass. This
breaches quarantine law and legally constitutes theft, but norms similar to
'finders keepers' interpretations of adventurae
maris salvage law exists amongst these cleaners: items of value such as
wallets, phones or jewellery are handed to lost-and-found, whereas items
unlikely to be claimed such as small change, fancy pens or cigarettes are
taken. What's the deal with airline food? Some of it is pretty good and it is
just going to get thrown out anyway. Except the popcorn. The popcorn is shit.
The Emirates Airline
plane landing has been significantly delayed and so the cleaners return to
base, a warehouse outside the airport, for a half-hour unpaid break. Luke
microwaves coffee and rolls a cigarette of tobacco and catnip - drugs screens
do not detect nepetalactone. He heads outside to his clique but Chelsea
quietens to a whisper and slightly hunches over.
Luke: 'Private women's
talk?'
Luna giggles: 'Yes.'
In Yvette's eyes: Todd is pulling a Mahmud.
Pulling a Mahmud n. -v.t. To become utterly and obviously infatuated with
Chelsea.
Partial list of
Mahmuds Pulled, in chronological order:
·
Mahmud, the
namesake, who ran a commentary on how Chelsea was looking nice or working hard
on any given day. Three months.
·
On his first
week, Lombard had requested of all female co-workers younger than 40 to be 'set
up with a sister' but it was clear who his favourite was. Complaints were
slipped to management. Two weeks.
·
Jeremy
interjected 'You're funny, Chelsea' at most opportunities and, more often, at
inopportune moments. Lasted eight months before finding his true love:
cosplaying as Spiderman.
Luke knew of
this trend when he started to notice that Chelsea's
quite pretty today, and friendly, and smart, and nice and ooh shit, I've taken
the baton. I'm Pulling a Mahmud. Luke suspected that one reason why Chelsea
had started hanging with his clique was that she appreciated the novelty of a
male co-worker not showing her special attention and so, wanting to maintain
his status as the workplace Quiet Guy, vented his feelings with nightly
drinking.
Luke's kidneys
gave an exhausted cheer when, two months later, Todd began chattily following
Chelsea like a lost puppy somehow tasked with vacuuming a Jetstar. Then Luke
felt smug superiority, watching Todd embarrass himself with his unrequited
adoration, female co-workers trying to interject themselves between Chelsea and
he in order to alleviate the awkward experience. In later weeks, however, with
Todd's infatuation not letting up, Luke began to feel sorry, for both Chelsea
and Todd. This is in the back of Luke's mind as he smokes his catnip next to
the ashtray of the Department of Biosecurity car park, watching a distant fox
be chased under fence by a cat.
Break finished,
back on the tools, seventeen fluoro-yellow shirted cleaners carry equipment in
a single file down the aerobridge to an Emirates Airlines Boeing 777. Heading
down the plane, Luke throws a glance over shoulder and meets Chelsea's discrete
gave, pointed upwards from a privately
annoyed frown downcast to seats she tidies - Todd has finagled his way into
working next to her and is already pestering vis-à-vis her drink of choice. Luke sees the answer in her eyes: one not with you, thanks but no thanks,
currently working, as you should be.
Luke climbs up
to crew rest, a squat corridor of ten alcoved beds. He works - removing
rubbish, replacing blankets, redressing (visibly used) pillows - alone in the enclosed
quarters. In the pocket of the third right-hand bed, Luke finds a half full
packet of cigarettes branded with the Java program logo. He makes to pocket
them when he notices an air hostie at crew rest's entry, smiling at him. She
lifts the left hem of her cream skirt and Luke's eyes instinctively follow the
long leg up to a thigh-holstered handgun.
Julielle, the
air hostie: 'Gimme my fuckin Ghost Tobacco.'
Luke has
questions but, priorities and all, instead slides the smokes down the corridor
to Julielle, who sighs grateful: 'Sorry I threatened to shoot you in the
prostate. It's that CatScript is tight at the moment.'
Luke has more
questions and this time he picks one: 'Why are you still holding up your
skirt?'
Julielle shrugs:
'You're not my type.'
One more: 'Huh?'
Julielle is
wearing Semblance, by Branlette, an eau
de parfum made by Carmichael St Carmichael, the resident Nez of that time. The product brief, the
perfume's original inspiration, had been a two metre line of cocaine.
Carmichael had sourced an ingredient from every continent (Q: Antarctica? A:
Penguin shit dropped in the summer night and bleached by the winter's day.) and
Branlette released a limited batch of 100 bottles of Semblance. This perfume
has since acquired a cult following due to magical properties: Semblance
attaches itself to and sharply alters a woman's pheromones. When a woman,
wearing Semblance, is attracted to a man, the perfume works on an airborne
chemical level to make said woman sharply more attractive to said man.
Conversely, when a woman is not interested, Semblance dulls the pheromones and,
therefore, that man's interest. This, not the gun, is why Luke, who understands
on an objective level that Julielle is an attractive and glamorous woman, is
not getting a loin rush.
Another
question: 'So it's a creep repellent?'
'Noooo. It is
not a deus ex machina for stopping
unwanted attention.' Julielle lowers her skirt, softening. 'It does provide
some social ease with incompatible men.'
Luke's face
tightens and Julielle groks with a gossipy smile: 'The cute blonde? The tall
guy?'
Head back and
loudly relieved: 'It's obvious. Everyone knows. Everyone knows that everyone
knows, except for him.'
Julielle groks
harder, inspiration behind her eyes: 'Do you have the Qatar Airways Quick
Pass?'
Semblance has
helped Julielle find the type of man she is most attracted to or, rather, be
chased by that type of man which, quite the surprise at first, is ghosts. She
once tried to drunkenly explain the appeal of ghost-sex to a close friend:
'You know how a
ghost, like, can pass through you? Imagine, like, imagine a man being inside
you, while he's inside you.'
A shared cigarette of Ghost Tobacco is an apt
post-coital ritual, giving Julielle's ephemeral lays some mass, form, to allow
for pillow talk and spooning. Air hostie work has Julielle travelling widely
and often, allowing her to meet lots of spunky ghosts, which means she has been
smoking more and an addiction has crept up on her. On a Dubai hotel balcony,
before working the flight to Australia, she itched for nicotine and so opened a
Catnip Page, smoking the complimentary catnip and tobacco. She half-mindedly perused
the single-page catalogue of magic items on the black market and the Quick
Pass, going for ₵$845, caught her attention. The appeal is obvious - being able
to fast-travel through a flight is more useful to someone who flies often and
who works throughout their flying. The Quick Pass offers Julielle the ability
to 'Skip. Through. Work.'
Julielle is
willing to exchange her bottle of Semblance, two thirds full, for the Quick
Pass. She has a ghost in every port and knows how to find them.
A deal is
struck. Luke gives the QAQP to Julielle, who leaves crew rest to find Chelsea
with a coy 'Hiii there. You know what would smell real nice on you?' Luke finishes his work
in another ten minutes and, with the plane clean on time, the team files back
onto the aerobridge.
Todd stands next
to Luke: 'You played any good video games lately?'
Chelsea is last
off the plane and Luke notices that her hair looks good when it's down, wavey,
has an effect of framing the face that makes her quite doe eyed, her eyes are
quite beautiful actually. And her boobs! Oooooh
shit. I need a beer. A lot, a lot, of beer.
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