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Steve Aylett - Bigot Hall

Here you can read online Steve Aylett - Bigot Hall full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2002, publisher: Serif Publishing, genre: Science fiction / Romance novel. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Steve Aylett Bigot Hall

Bigot Hall: summary, description and annotation

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Bigot Hall is the nightmare home of a family most people would rather forget. Uncle Bursts belief that his face is made of pasta is one of the milder notions with which he regales the family. Uncle Snapper is confined to a treehouse because of the uncontrollable urges he feels once is gun is loaded. Uncle Blute drowned in the lake at the wheel of his Morris Traveller, where he remains perfectly preserved. And Nanny Jack refuses all efforts to bury her and strikes terror into her relatives hearts as she abandons yet another final resting place. Throughout this happy breed strolls a nameless anti-hero, who, when not kidnapped by clowns or puzzling out the fossilised family tree, is passionately in love with his spaced-out sister, Adrienne

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Steve Aylett

Bigot Hall

On the contrary.

Heinrich Ibsens dying words, upon hearing his wife remark that he was looking better

BANISHMENT

Even in the slaughterhouse of boyhood I was dimly aware that I should have some jolly, wink-eyed uncle or gramp with whom to share private jokes and hatch terrorist outrages against the state. But all I recall is Uncle Snapper, who liked to go shooting in the woods and had a theory about squirrels. They always run round the other side of the tree from where I am, he declared one evening, at which I in my innocence said I wasnt surprised seeing as he went into the woods for the exclusive purpose of killing anything larger than his brain.

At this Uncle Snapper stood in a shuddering, grill-mouthed rage.

Dad! I shouted down the hallway. Uncle Snaps changing colour!

Right you are, called Father from his study, but did not emerge to look.

Snapper convulsed his stiffened arms.

Dad! I shouted down the hallway. Its a seizure grand mal or Im a rat!

Offer him water, called Father, preoccupied. He was by nature so calm he once sketched an oncoming bullet train before stepping unhurriedly aside. This despite his supposed descendence from an Irish berserker famous for having beaten off the rigid head of a goat. It was Snap who seemed determined to inherit the legends ancient umbrage and who wasted no time in breaking a bulls nose with his left fist. But it was a cause for the odd explosive guffaw that this had been the outer and extreme extent of his effect upon the animal kingdom.

Snapper bellowed suddenly, grabbed my neck and shook me like a bladder on a stick. Apparently the blur of my mouth and eyes resembled the slot and gauge of a parking meter. Youll help me kill those woodland rascals, laughing boy, he snarled, jowls quivering, or so help me Ill

The following day, Uncle Snapper stood in the leaf-blown forest with a sawn-off 20-bore and a pair of strange, inflatable dungarees. I stood by cheerlessly as he outlined the stalking plan in a guarded, barely articulate whisper. An animal, he stated, can only be in one place at a time.

One area, said I, thinking of the very long tail of the Portuguese man-of-war. Those beauties are only knapsacks filled with gas, but by god they can sting a man.

Snapper was furious, pounding me on the chops in time with his heartrate. He explained that if he and I stood on opposite sides of the tree, a trunkbound squirrel would have nowhere to hide. This is the sort of shite I had to listen to when I was a boy.

We set about executing Snappers plan of course the chosen squirrel couldnt care less and clung flat to my side of the trunk, regarding me with a beady eye. Whats it doing, shouted Snapper.

Hanging there, Uncle. And staring at me as if awaiting some grand finale.

Ill give it a finale, Snapper choked, and told me to scare it into his sights. The most scary thing I could think of was the fact that unstable statesmen are only deemed insane retrospectively. As Eisenhower said, Things are more like they are now than they ever were before if those arent the words of a florid psychopath Im all ears. Anyway I discussed migraine humour and other things which interested me at the time. But the squirrel just looked me in the face with all the self-possessed assurance of an elderly barber. Initially I couldnt assess how Snapper was reacting due to the interposing tree then there was an almighty blast and a scatter of lead which almost brought my life of abysmal horseplay to an end. He thundered into view, his bonce as red as a brick. By god youve done it now! he roared, and I was already running as fast as my arms and legs could take me.

Dad! I yelled, crashing into the study, Uncle Snaps having a funny turn from failing to shoot even one mammal!

Another fruitless siege, said Father in his deep voice, and looked pensively through the window at the largest tree. He turned from his drawing board, on which was set a convoluted architectural plan, and lay a hand on my head. Your uncle, he remarked, is a man for whom thought is an hourly ceremony.

A stranger to joy, I had eked out my only endorphin by feeding it through a mangle. Yet such a callow boy was I that I sought to dissolve Snappers woe by nailing a multitude of soft, polychrome effigies to the forestation. Some of these did not even represent squirrels but toads, and every one was made of brushed corduroy and wool. However, as I hammered them up in the dark I felt they could pass as almost anything. And best of all, not only were there dozens of the brutes but theyd never move a muscle. No running round the other side for this lot, said I proudly, driving the final nail.

But in the stark light of dawn Snapper stared in baffled indignation at a forest hung with boggle-eyed, multicoloured perversions of nature, as out of place as balloons in a hearse. No true animal was this densely packed with dried beans. Positioned near the tree-base, they were clearly the work of a small and immoral child.

Snap, who took a poor view of the fact that I had ever been born, entered my room in a broth of anger. I looked up from a join-the-dot picture of Trotskys abrupt demise. Where Snaps mouth should have been was merely a blinding explosion of profanity. Beanbag toads is it, he added, and began belting me with a violence over which I will draw a discrete veil.

That afternoon, I chanced upon a dead ladybird by the hothouse, and hurried to the drawing room. Heres something you can kill, Snapper, I said, swanning up with a matchbox. Pushing out the tray, I showed him the contents while tilting the box imperceptibly from side to side, so that the dead ladybird rolled apparently of its own accord.

A ladybird, stated Snapper, flushing purple. And dead.

Not dead, I countered with a nervous laugh. Not dead Uncle, rolling rolling for pleasure.

Rolling for pleasure eh, muttered Snapper, his eyes like the gun-slits of a tank. Do you expect me to believe this crudely-fashioned tale?

Well dont be offended Uncle but I dont prance through life planning my every move in anticipation of what youll subsequently believe.

I sniggered good-humouredly.

Uncle Snapper strove visibly to contain his impulses and gestured at the bug. What dyou think this microscopic trophy would look like on a wallmount?

A zit, I replied.

Oh Snapper, said Adrienne, my girlfriend and sister, as the family and lodgers sat identifying the evening meal. I was by now festooned with bandages. You must make a sincere effort to keep your more demented opinions to yourself.

I beg your pardon?

Adrienne repeated her statement, staring at him levelly. But Uncle Snapper believed he could release his prejudices only by expressing them, and would believe this until he was buried in worms and clay.

In a final attempt to relieve his torment, I tempted a squirrel to the woodside shed and patiently taught it to play dead at the sound of a gunshot. But hearing shots and my cry of Die!, passing villagers feared the worst and twenty-seven of them alerted the authorities. I had to relate my elaborate plans to the local constabulary who, despite the stark simplicity of my account, demanded a demonstration. I was fast learning that official bodies communicate by synchronised limitation. Snapper shot Camille as I had come to know the animal stone dead. For this Snap was lauded by the constabulary and was slapped on the back so often his spine appeared through the pulp. Snaps delighted surprise was as nothing to my shock on finding that Camille wasnt play-acting and that I was being detained for mayhem and for weaving a windtorn web of lies to the law.

Back at the Hall, Father explained his plans to Snapper a large, groaning treehouse rigged into the tallest garden oak. It was understood that Snapper would not only live there but become a figure of fear and superstition to the village children. This could easily be arranged it had happened to Nanny Jack without any arrangements being necessary.

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