It was gold, ancient and dusty, the frame a convoluted Baroque intestine, the leaf peeling from the timber. The subject matter itself was obscure through years of neglect and accumulated grime, but as I stared an image gradually emerged of a cat entering a partially open door. Glancing around, I realised the painting was a representation of the very door opposite, which was now standing ajar too, just wide enough for a thin black cat to creep through. Of the room beyond all I could see were swaying shadows cast in a dim, amber light.
Someone groaned and I moved closer. As I reached for the knob the door slammed shut, cutting off the strained sound. I glanced back at the picture but could no longer make out the detail. I watched as the image grew darker and darker, until it was completely blacked-out. Or was I just closing my eyes?
I blinked and saw a woman in a diaphanous white gown and a flood of pale hair - a Botticelli Venus - standing at the next painting along. She turned towards me with a wan smile and slowly shook her head. "I'm afraid it's locked from the inside," she said with an air of genuine regret. And then - so sadly - "Is this your idea of love?
Love? Well, that hopeful notion was nailed to the masthead ages ago. Jesus had more catchy proverbs than sense.
When I was a kid, belief in God - the vigilant Good Guy Up There that looked like a mix of Charlton Heston and Charles Manson - was as instinctive as farting in bed. These things are atavistic, I guess, like fear of the dark, picking scabs and melting toy soldiers with matches.
I wasn't a dumb kid, just naive. I really thought there was Someone "out there", some blithe guardian angel taking an interest, looking after me despite the apparent chaos (better put that in capitals too, especially these days: Chaos); Someone who had the map and knew what all the squiggles and tiny numerals meant. By my late-teens I realised what an utterly malicious old fraud God really was.
Turns out its a joke map, with joke points of interest and joke directions. A scavenger hunt. Scenic Lookout? A stinking garbage dump. Picnic Area? A bleak greasy carpark. Next stop: another famine, eco-disaster, another dirty war and other, more commonplace horrors. Factory farms, factory jails. I could never see where love fitted in. God's will? God swill!
And God's the bloody cartographer!
It was obvious the Kingdom of Heaven was just a scam, a Baroque/Fascist dictatorship in the sky, religion just another popular franchise, and Christ (a little glitter here, please) was a dupe, a stooge perhaps, or perhaps worse: the fat, well-fed goat who led dumb sheep to slaughter. And then I met Karen and knew just how much of a vicious prick God really was. Some divine sense of humour. Down comes the emotional nuke. Drop the s and slaughter is laughter.
Old horrors stalk the new millennium. New mass graves, new mass perdition. There is no redemption only remorse. I hope there's no afterlife because that would be the final obscenity.
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Comments (3)

Chato
said:
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Truly, life can be a fucking miserable business! What decent being can have any time for a creepy God that can allow his son to be nailed to a stick, so that maniacs can parade around with images of this poor dead bastard nailed to a stick. "You killed God's son!" they rave at you. "So you must do as we say!" A loony old guy called the bloody Pope waves a black old stick, with a black old image of a dead guy hanging off it. The most grotesque thing since Rod Quantock waved a rubber chook on a stick, leading his followers on mad adventures. |
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