Authors: Matt Haig
So I nodded, and I walked over and sat on that purple sofa. I felt sober now, and fully conscious of my pain.
‘You are right,’ I said. ‘You are right. And I want to help you.’
‘I know you are right,’ I told him for the seventeenth time, looking straight into his eyes, ‘but I have been weak. I admit it to you now. I was and remain
unable to harm any more humans, especially those ones I have lived with. But what you have said to me has reminded me of my original purpose. I am not able to fulfil that purpose and no longer have
the gifts to do so, but equally I realise it has to be fulfilled, and so in a way I’m thankful you are here. I’ve been stupid. I’ve tried and I have failed.’
Jonathan sat back on the sofa and studied me. He stared at my bruises and sniffed the air between us. ‘You have been drinking alcohol.’
‘Yes. I have been corrupted. It is very easy, I find, when you live like a human, to develop some of their bad habits. I have drunk alcohol. I have had sex. I have smoked cigarettes. I
have eaten peanut butter sandwiches and listened to their simple music. I have felt many of the crude pleasures that they can feel, as well as physical and emotional pain. But still, despite my
corruption, there remains enough of me left, enough of my clear rational self, to know what has to be done.’
He watched me. He believed me, because every word I was speaking was the truth. ‘I am comforted to hear this.’
I didn’t waste a moment. ‘Now listen to me. Gulliver will return home soon. He won’t be on a car or a bike. He’ll be walking. He likes to walk. We will hear his feet on
the gravel, and then we will hear his key in the door. Normally, he heads straight into the kitchen to get himself a drink or a bowl of cereal. He eats around three bowls of cereal a day. Anyway,
that is irrelevant. What is relevant is that he will most likely enter the kitchen first.’
Jonathan was paying close attention to everything I was telling him. It felt strange, terrible even, giving him this information, but I really couldn’t think of any other way.
‘You want to act fast,’ I said, ‘as his mother will be home soon. Also, there’s a chance he may be surprised to see you. You see, his mother has thrown me out of the
house because I was unfaithful to her. Or rather the faith I had wasn’t the right kind. Given the absence of mind-reading technology, humans believe monogamy is possible. Another fact to
consider is that Gulliver has, quite independently, attempted to take his own life before. So, I suggest that however you choose to kill him it would be a good idea to make it look like suicide.
Maybe after his heart has stopped, you could slice one of his wrists, cutting through the veins. That way, less suspicion will be aroused.’
Jonathan nodded, then looked around the room. At the television, the history books, the armchair, the framed art prints on the wall, the telephone in its cradle.
‘It will be a good idea to have the television on,’ I told him, ‘even if you are not in this room. Because I always watch the news and leave it on.’
He switched on the television.
We sat and watched footage of war in the Middle East, without saying a word. But then he heard something that I couldn’t, his senses being so much sharper.
‘Footsteps,’ he said. ‘On the gravel.’
‘He’s here,’ I said. ‘Go to the kitchen. I’ll hide.’
I waited in the sitting room. The door was closed. There would be no reason for Gulliver to enter here. Unlike the living room he hardly ever came into this room. I don’t
think I’d ever heard him do so.
So I stayed there, still and quiet, as the front door opened, then closed. He was unmoving, in the hallway. No footsteps.
‘Hello?’
Then a response. My voice but not my voice, coming from the kitchen. ‘Hello, Gulliver.’
‘What are you doing here? Mum said you’d gone. She phoned me, said you’d had an argument.’
I heard him – me, Andrew,
Jonathan
– respond in measured words. ‘That is right. We did. We had an argument. Don’t worry, it wasn’t too serious.’
‘Oh yeah? Sounded pretty serious from Mum’s side of things.’ Gulliver paused. ‘Whose are those clothes you’re wearing?’
‘Oh, these, they’re just old ones I didn’t know I had.’
‘I’ve never seen them before. And your face, it’s totally healed. You look completely better.’
‘Well, there you go.’
‘Right, anyway, I might go upstairs. I’ll get some food later.’
‘No. No. You will stay right here.’ The mind patterning was beginning. His words were shepherds ushering away conscious thought. ‘You will stay here and you will take a knife
– a sharp knife, the sharpest there is in this room—’
It was about to happen. I could feel it, so I did what I had planned to do. I went over to the bookcase and picked up the clockwork radio, turned the power dial through a full 360-degree
rotation and pressed the button with the little green circle.
On.
The small display became illuminated: 90.2 MHz.
Classical music blared out at almost full volume as I carried the radio back along the hallway. Unless I was very much mistaken it was Debussy.
‘You will now press that knife into your wrist and press it hard enough to cut through every vein.’
‘What’s that noise?’ Gulliver asked, his head clearing. I still couldn’t see him. I still wasn’t quite at the kitchen doorway.
‘Just do it. End your life, Gulliver.’
I entered the kitchen and saw my doppelgänger facing away from me as he pressed his hand on to Gulliver’s head. The knife fell to the floor. It was like looking at a strange kind of
human baptism. I knew that what he was doing was right, and logical, from his perspective, but perspective was a funny thing.
Gulliver collapsed; his whole body was convulsing. I placed the radio down on the unit. The kitchen had its own radio. I switched that on, too. The TV was still on in the other room, as I had
intended it to be. A cacophony of classical music and newsreaders and rock music filled the air as I reached Jonathan and pulled his arm so he now had no contact with Gulliver.
He turned, held me by the throat, pressing me back against the refrigerator.
‘You have made a mistake,’ he said.
Gulliver’s convulsions stopped and he looked around, confused. He saw two men, both identical, like his father, pressing into each other’s necks with equivalent force.
I knew that, whatever else happened, I had to keep Jonathan in the kitchen. If he stayed in the kitchen, with the radios on and the TV in the next room, we would be equally matched.
‘Gulliver,’ I said. ‘Gulliver, give me the knife. Any knife. That knife. Give me that knife.’
‘Dad? Are you my Dad?’
‘Yes, I am. Now give me the knife.’
‘Ignore him, Gulliver,’ Jonathan said. ‘He’s not your father. I am. He’s an imposter. He’s not what he looks like. He’s a monster. An alien. We have to
destroy him.’
As we carried on, locked in our mutually futile combative pose, matching strength with strength, I saw Gulliver’s eyes fill with doubt.
He looked at me.
It was time for the truth.
‘I’m not your father. And neither is he. Your dad is dead, Gulliver. He died on Saturday, the seventeenth of April. He was taken by the . . .’ I thought of a way of putting it
that he would understand. ‘. . . by the people we work for. They extracted information from him, and then they killed him. And they sent me here, as him, to kill you. And kill your mother.
And anyone who knew about what he had achieved that day, but I couldn’t do it. I couldn’t do it because I started, I started to feel something that was meant to be impossible . . . I
empathised with you. Grew to like you. Worry about you. Love you both. And I gave everything up . . . I have no power, no strength.’
‘Don’t listen to him, son,’ Jonathan said. And then he realised something. ‘Turn off the radios. Listen to me, turn off the radios now.’
I stared at Gulliver with pleading eyes. ‘Whatever you do, don’t turn them off. The signal interferes with the technology. It’s his left hand. His left hand. Everything is in
his left hand . . .’
Gulliver was clambering upright. He looked numb. His face was unreadable.
I thought hard.
‘The leaf!’ I yelled. ‘Gulliver, you were right. The leaf, remember, the leaf! And think of—’
It was then that the other version of myself smashed his head into my nose, with swift and brutal force. My head rebounded against the fridge door and everything dissolved. Colours faded, and
the noise of the radios and the faraway newsreader swam into each other. A swirling audio soup.
It was over.
‘Gulli—’
The other me switched one of the radios off. Debussy disappeared. But at the moment the music went away I heard a scream. It sounded like Gulliver. And it was, but it wasn’t a scream of
pain. It was a scream of determination. A primal roar of rage, giving him the courage he needed to stab the knife that had been about to cut his own wrists into the back of a man who looked every
inch his own father.
And the knife went deep.
With that roar, and that sight, the room sharpened into focus. I could get to my feet before Jonathan’s finger reached the second radio. I yanked him back by the hair. I saw his face. The
pain clearly articulated in the way only human faces can manage. The eyes, shocked yet pleading. The mouth seeming to melt away.
Melt away. Melt away. Melt away.
I would not look at his face again. He could not die while that technology remained inside him. I dragged him over to the Aga.
‘Lift it up,’ I ordered Gulliver. ‘Lift up the cover.’
‘Cover?’
‘The hot plate.’
He did it. He lifted the circular steel ring up and let it fall back, and he did so without a single question in his eyes.
‘Help me,’ I said. ‘He’s fighting. Help me with his arm.’
Together we had enough force to press his palm down to the burning metal. The scream, as we kept him there, was horrendous. Knowing what it was I was doing, it truly sounded like the end of the
universe.
I was committing the ultimate crime. I was destroying gifts, and killing one of my kind.
‘We’ve got to keep it there,’ I shouted to Gulliver. ‘We’ve got to keep it there! Hold! Hold! Hold!’
And then I switched my attention to Jonathan.
‘Tell them it is over,’ I whispered. ‘Tell them you have completed your mission. Tell them there has been a problem with the gifts and that you will not be able to return. Tell
them, and I will stop the pain.’
A lie. And a gamble that they were tuned to him and not to me. But a necessary one. He told them, yet his pain continued.
How long were we like this? Seconds? Minutes? It was like Einstein’s conundrum. The hot stove versus the pretty girl. Towards the end of it, Jonathan was on his knees, losing
consciousness.
Tears streamed down my face as I finally pulled that sticky mess of a hand away. I checked his pulse. He was gone. The knife pierced through his chest as he fell back. I looked at the hand, and
this face, and it was clear. He was disconnected, not just from the hosts, but from life.
The reason it was clear was that he was becoming himself – the cellular reconfiguration that automatically followed death. The whole shape of him was changing, curling in, his face
flattening, his skull lengthening, his skin mottled shades of purple and violet. Only the knife in his back stayed. It was strange. Within the context of that Earth kitchen this creature,
structured precisely as I had been, seemed entirely alien to me.
A monster. A beast. Something other.
Gulliver stared, but said nothing. The shock was so profound it was a challenge to breathe, let alone speak.
I did not want to speak either, but for more practical reasons. Indeed, I worried that I may already have said too much. Maybe the hosts had heard everything I had said in that kitchen. I
didn’t know. What I did know was that I had one more thing to do.
They took your powers away, but they didn’t take theirs.
But before I could do anything a car pulled up outside. Isobel was home.
‘Gulliver, it’s your mother. Keep her away. Warn her.’
He left the room. I turned back to the heat of that hot plate and positioned my hand next to where his had been, where pieces of his flesh still fizzed. And I pressed down, and felt a pure and
total pain which took away space and time and guilt.
Civilised life, you know, is based on a huge number of illusions in which we all collaborate willingly. The trouble is we forget after a while that they are illusions and we
are deeply shocked when reality is torn down around us.
– J.G. Ballard
What was reality?
An objective truth? A collective illusion? A majority opinion? The product of historical understanding? A dream? A dream. Well, yes, maybe. But if this had been a dream then it was one from
which I hadn’t yet woken.
But once humans really study things in depth – whether in the artificially divided fields of quantum physics or biology or neuroscience or mathematics or love – they come closer and
closer to nonsense, irrationality and anarchy. Everything they know is disproved, over and over again. The Earth is not flat; leeches have no medicinal value; there is no God; progress is a myth;
the present is all they have.
And this doesn’t just happen on the big scale. It happens to each individual human too.
In every life there is a moment. A crisis. One that says: what I believe is wrong. It happens to everyone, the only difference is how that knowledge changes them. In most cases, it is simply a
case of burying that knowledge and pretending it isn’t there. That is how humans grow old. That is ultimately what creases their faces and curves their backs and shrinks their mouths and
ambitions. The weight of that denial. The stress of it. This is not unique to humans. The single biggest act of bravery or madness anyone can do is the act of change.
I was something. And now I am something else.