Home > The Ocean at the End of the Lane(15)

The Ocean at the End of the Lane(15)
Author: Neil Gaiman

    I held my tweezers, and I watched. Nothing      happened. Nothing changed.

    I put the forefinger of my left hand over the hole,      gently, blocking the light. Then I put the tip of the tweezers beside the hole      and I waited. I counted to a hundred—inspired, perhaps, by my sister’s      hair-brushing. Then I pulled my finger away and stabbed in with the      tweezers.

    I caught the head of the worm, if that was what it      was, by the tip, between the metal prongs, and I squeezed it, and I pulled.

    Have you ever tried to pull a worm from a hole? You      know how hard they can hold on? The way they use their whole bodies to grip the      sides of the hole? I pulled perhaps an inch of this worm—pink and gray,      streaked, like something infected—out of the hole in my foot, and then felt it      stop. I could feel it, inside my flesh, making itself rigid, unpullable. I was      not scared by this. It was obviously just something that happened to people,      like when the neighbor’s cat, Misty, had worms. I had a worm in my foot, and I      was removing the worm.

    I twisted the tweezers, thinking, I suspect, of      spaghetti on a fork, winding the worm around the tweezers. It tried to pull      back, but I turned it, a little at a time, until I could definitely pull no      further.

    I could feel, inside me, the sticky plastic way      that it tried to hold on, like a strip of pure muscle. I leaned over, as far as      I could, reached out my left hand and turned on the bath’s hot-water tap, the      one with the red dot in the center, and I let it run. The water ran for three,      four minutes out of the tap and down the plug hole before it began to steam.

    When the water was steaming, I extended my foot and      my right arm, maintaining pressure on the tweezers and on the inch of the      creature that I had wound out of my body. Then I put the place where the      tweezers were under the hot tap. The water splashed my foot, but my soles were      barefoot-hardened, and I scarcely minded. The water that touched my fingers      scalded them, but I was prepared for the heat. The worm wasn’t. I felt it flex      inside me, trying to pull back from the scalding water, felt it loosen its grip      on the inside of my foot. I turned the tweezers, triumphantly, like picking the      best scab in the world, as the creature began to come out of me, putting up less      and less resistance.

    I pulled at it, steadily, and as it went under the      hot water it slackened, until the end. It was almost all out of me—I could feel      it—but I was too confident, too triumphant, and impatient, and I tugged too      quickly, too hard, and the worm came off in my hand. The end of it that came out      of me was oozing and broken, as if it had snapped off.

    Still, if the creature had left anything behind in      my foot, it was tiny.

    I examined the worm. It was dark gray and light      gray, streaked with pink, and segmented, like a normal earthworm. Now it was out      of the hot water, it seemed to be recovering. It wriggled, and the body that had      been wrapped around the tweezers now dangled, writhing, although it hung from      the head (Was it its head? How could I tell?) where I had pinched it.

    I did not want to kill it—I did not kill animals,      not if I could help it—but I had to get rid of it. It was dangerous. I had no      doubt of that.

    I held the worm above the bath’s plug hole, where      it wriggled, under the scalding water. Then I let it go, and watched it vanish      down the drain. I let the water run for a while, and I washed off the tweezers.      Finally I put a small sticking plaster over the hole in the sole of my foot, and      put the plug in the bath, to prevent the worm from climbing back up the open      plug hole, before I turned off the tap. I did not know if it was dead, but I did      not think you came back from the drain.

    I put the tweezers back where I had got them from,      behind the bathroom mirror, then I closed the mirror and stared at myself.

    I wondered, as I wondered so often when I was that      age, who I was, and what exactly was looking at the face in the mirror. If the      face I was looking at wasn’t me, and I knew it wasn’t, because I would still be      me whatever happened to my face, then what was me? And what was watching?

    I went back to the bedroom. It was my night to have      the door to the hallway open, and I waited until my sister was asleep, and      wouldn’t tell on me, and then, in the dim light from the hall, I read a Secret      Seven mystery until I fell asleep.

 

 

VI.

    An      admission about myself: as a very small boy, perhaps three or four years old, I      could be a monster. “You were a little momzer,” several aunts told me, on      different occasions, once I had safely reached adulthood and my dreadful infant      deeds could be recalled with wry amusement. But I do not actually remember being      a monster. I just remember wanting my own way.

    Small children believe themselves to be gods, or      some of them do, and they can only be satisfied when the rest of the world goes      along with their way of seeing things.

    But I was no longer a small boy. I was seven. I had      been fearless, but now I was such a frightened child.

    The incident of the worm in my foot did not scare      me. I did not talk about it. I wondered, though, the next day, whether people      often got foot-worms, or whether it was something that had only ever happened to      me, in the orange-sky place on the edge of the Hempstocks’ farm.

    I peeled off the plaster on the sole of my foot      when I awoke, and was relieved to see that the hole had begun to close up. There      was a pink place where it had been, like a blood blister, but nothing more.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)