HOME | DD

MacDohertyArthur Nobody
Published: 2006-09-24 00:12:36 +0000 UTC; Views: 7946; Favourites: 136; Downloads: 45
Redirect to original
Description Arthur works the night shift at a generically scummy bar so that he can sit all day in a coffee shop and write like the bohemian he can’t really afford to be. This will not be a major contextual issue.
          He sits now as he does every day, abusing the good-natured “free refill” system, drinking enough caffeine to relieve the fact that he works all night and drinks (coffee) all day. Sleeping fits into the equation in patches without regularity. He sleeps when his body requires it, and his body sometimes requires it when he’s in the middle of doing something else. He sleeps when on the bus and misses his stop, or dozes as he is about to drain a cup of coffee, allowing him to roll his eyes at the irony when he jerks back to consciousness, because his is a life of mundanity where falling asleep in a wacky situation, for example, at the wheel of a car, is unlikely, not least because he can’t drive. Today, as ever, he has with him an elegant notebook, cast in leather with smooth champagne-coloured pages, untouched, full of potential and completely empty.
          He writes at the top of the page:
          This is a thought that I am having
          and then he stops. After a moment of silent contemplation, he adds a colon, and realises he has absolutely nothing beyond punctuation to add to the piece. He finishes his coffee in a deathly mood and gazes at nothing, but then he finishes a lot of drinks in deathly moods with alarming regularity these days. His eyes diverge from the world around him because he is working with two separate trains of thought and real life is getting in his way. The first concerns his aggressive attempts to force the creative cogs to turn in his head, but they are comfortably rusted and unmoving. His stack of unblemished journals and sleepless nights stand testament to his inability to write. He thinks perhaps in a related matter he is developing a stomach ulcer, but people like Arthur Finkle always make grand assumptions like that, maybe as a side effect of too much caffeine, or too little sleep, or having to grow up with a surname like Finkle.
          Arthur’s other train of thought is preoccupied with his coffee. Having drained his cup (getting to be a pastime, that), he ponders softly. The coffee is no more, and he likes coffee very, very much, therefore, a microcosm for the eternal aspirational pursuit of all mankind, Arthur would maybe like another cup. By now, well aware of his tendency to sit guilt-free for hours having paid for only one but consuming many, the waiters were instructed to ignore his polite, longing gestures for a refill. Today, he considers whether he should actively journey to the tills to request his top-up, and more significantly, what kind of reception he might receive. Arthur fears underpaid blonde girls who smell of the rich beans but lack the sweet relief.
          In his notebook, he writes:
          J  e  a  n                                     C  o  c  t  e  a  u
                                        *
          with a star placed between the two words just as he had seen in La Belle et le Bête last night. The images seared into his mind but failed to inspire him as he had hoped. He writes it because the empty page mocks him. As he has nothing to write, he covers the pages with marks and doodles, and curses himself as he does.

          A voice speaks softly into his ear. “Another coffee?” Arthur leaps hastily to cover the unproductive mess in his overpriced book.
          June leans over his shoulder and smiles sweetly at him. “I’m heading up to order anyway.”
          He watches her as she walks without fear. The waitress doesn’t scowl at her. June makes the sale and exchanges cash with ease, and what’s more, she even makes conversation with staff. June is the kind of person who continually stuns Arthur with her casual ability to survive the world. He is not certain that she is a real person; rather she may be some demon mocking him with her perfection. Having thought that, Arthur feels a wave of guilt lap gently at the passive-aggressive shores of his inner monologue. He doesn’t think June is a demon, nor that she is mocking him, not intentionally, anyway. In fact, Arthur likes June very, very much. Coffee-levels of affection. A fact that is obvious to anyone who would bother to take notice, which from Arthur’s nervous perspective is a thankfully small number.
          This number doesn’t include the admittedly quite gormless June, and not just because she has only just returned from the counter. She sits a black coffee before him, and leans back in her chair, arms folded, as she always does, watching him with a faint smirk on her face. Arthur amuses her, and she studies him like a caged monkey, although he is more sanitary, but equally angry. In fact, Arthur ups his levels of rage in her presence, in the hope that it makes him seem more edgy, like a modern day Byron in a Byron-esque sulk.
          “God, I hate the world,” he tells her. He isn’t very good at portraying anger without the use of grand sweeping statements.
           “You haven’t been writing?” she asks, in a tone of voice that to the casual observer would suggest that June has an instinctive understanding of Arthur’s tortured soul. This is not the case. Rather, it is the only conversation they ever seem to have.
          Arthur sighs dramatically and thinks of Coleridge, then wonders if it’s Coleridge who always seemed so angry, and if perhaps he has mixed him up with someone else, and oh dear, this pause has gone on too long. “It’s not that I can’t write, exactly, it’s just that I’ve stopped wanting to. Now that the real world has forced itself into my conscious, it seems pointless to write silly little stories about people who don’t exist and who don’t matter. And if I write the truth…it wouldn’t really be writing. It would be…it would be more like I was recording the world around me, documenting the lives of those I know. Transparently biographical. That’s not writing. I could write words in my usual style of my usual topics, and nobody could tell the difference, but it wouldn’t feel real, it would just be like…buying a cake and telling everyone that you baked it. You might get plaudits for it, but they would mean nothing because you would know that it was fake.”
          June looks sympathetic. She is much better at faking emotions than Arthur is. Not that she doesn’t feel concern, but she has heard this exact speech many times, and its themes and issues never change. It has even developed a stilted script and delivery, as though it is something that Arthur has memorised, or even written down and edited so that he could perfect the fluency and eloquence of the language.
          June is almost right. Arthur impressed her so much with it the first time they had this conversation that she mentioned something about how articulate he was, how beautifully he spoke, and that vague compliment rattles around his head every time he imagines kissing her. So he repeats his pretension-soaked love song ad nauseam, hoping for a similar reaction.
          It doesn’t work anymore. It didn’t really work the first time, but they didn’t know each other as well then and June was just trying to be nice. She leans into him and tries to be frank, like she thinks friends ought to.
          “Why don’t you just suck it up, though? Put pen to paper and keep writing and writing until something comes out that you want to keep, instead of mooching around here staring at empty pages?”
          Arthur ponders this, chewing his lip. “I don’t want to, I think. If I start writing for the sake of writing, it will make the times when I do write because I have to seem worthless.”
          They sit in awkward silence, trapped in Arthur’s self-made paradox. June doesn’t want to sympathise with stubbornness but she understands the emotion beneath his convoluted ideas, because she hasn’t written in nearly four years. June doesn’t have anything to say.
          They make little conversation about their lives, and neither really cares. He asks her what she is doing today, and she tells him she is waiting for Frank. Arthur bristles, as though bristling was an actual physical movement that a person could make when in a state of uncomfortable disgruntlement. Arthur bristles as though he is trying to raise spines upon his back like a hedgehog to protect him from Frank, for Frank is a very, very, very boring person.
          Not that Arthur is exactly Evel Knievel when it comes to lifestyle, but it is a universally acknowledged fact that Frank F Winston (the F stands for Frank) is a uniquely worthless individual: monotonous, arrogant, oblivious, stopping short only of collecting spades. Arthur bristles mainly because June is not boring and has no reason to spend time with the sucking void that is Frank F Winston, and when he ponders why she is going out with such a man, he can only conclude that they do not spend much time talking, if you catch my drift, nudge-nudge, wink-wink, say no more, and this is a possibility that Arthur does not want to consider in any detail because he likes June so very very much.
          June stops a waitress and asks for a cherry scone, and Arthur loves her a little bit more. He loves the smell of cherries, he loves that she loves cherries, that she will smell like cherries, that if he kisses her she might taste of cherries (although it is more likely that she will taste of barely chewed bread, according to her eating habits). As the cruelty of fate usually demands, Frank F Winston enters without fanfare, except for June glancing and waving him over. Arthur watches darkly, having fooled himself that she might smile for him alone. Just a big smiling whore, is June.
          Frank F Winston (the F stands for Facile) sits at the table and says, “Christ, I’m fagged.” Fagged is a word that Arthur knows to mean tired, but isn’t sure that Frank isn’t using it erroneously to make lewd implications about Arthur’s sexuality, but then he decides that it would be far too sophisticated a snub for Frank to make. He scowls anyway.
          June smiles tolerantly. Perhaps she makes the same connection as Arthur, but then she strokes Frank’s face with strange tenderness as he leans over and steals the end of her scone. “There’s a man with a ladder outside,” he tells them, and then finishes his anecdote. Arthur barely disguises his repulsed sigh. “Washing windows or something,” Frank adds.
“We’re talking about writing,” June tells him, and turns to Arthur. “It would be a shame if you never used up all those pretty books you buy,” and they laugh gently.
          Frank F Winston (the F stands for Frankly speaking, Arthur, I used to beat up boys like you at school) only smiles, pretending that he understands them. He probably would understand if he cared enough to listen, but he really doesn’t. Really, he wants to talk about a promotion he might get at work, it’s only a title really, a few extra pound home at the end of the month, but he wants to tell June, so that he might see that smile gloss over her perfect visage, a smile so wide that stories should be written about it, if Frank had a touch of artistic intent in his soul, which he doesn’t. He waits until Arthur and June have stopped talking (actually, Arthur is in the middle of an anecdote about his old English teacher and was pausing for breath before doing an impression when Frank cut in) and unleashes the beast.
          “Might be getting a promotion at work,” he says. Arthur looks at him with what Frank assumes is jealousy, and he’s right, in a sense. “Yeah…” he adds, stretching the word long enough for Arthur to get a quick eye-roll in before he continues, “nothing to go crazy about, mind, no new shoes dear, heh heh heh, just a bit of extra paper-shuffling. Bureaucracy, you know, but it’s all a step on the ladder. Have I told you about the ladder, Arthur? Not a real ladder, heh heh, the career ladder, as it were, you know what I mean.”
          Frank didn’t speak with questions or exclamations, or even statements or generalisations. He just talks, and it’s all Arthur can do not to pour his coffee all over himself in the hope that he will be mildly burnt to death.
          “Anyway, about this job, as you know, what I’m doing at the moment, it wouldn’t be that different, and I am one of the more senior members of staff, even at my age, it’s all these students coming out, too qualified for anything but scut work I always say, heh heh…” continued Frank F Winston (the F stands for Fucking hell will you stop going on about it) before June stops him.
          “We’d better be heading on, we’re off to see a flat,” she smiles at Arthur, and Arthur’s kidneys wrap themselves around his throat.
          “Oh. Getting serious, is it?” he asks before he can stop himself, and then he hopes that she doesn’t hear the disdain or revulsion or heart-breaking disappointment in his voice. Being June, she doesn’t, and being June, she only smiles in reply.
          The couple stand together and shake their goodbyes. June leans in, ready to offer Arthur a kiss on the cheek as she does for all her male friends, but he moves awkwardly so that she doesn’t reach. He can’t bear to be kissed by her, now that he might lose her completely to that beast.
          He watches them as they leave, June shimmying in a wool coat and scarf that betray the nip in the air behind the winter sun. Arthur’s knee shakes. He so desperately wants to be Frank F Winston’s (the F stands for Finally, the end) arm around her shoulders. Then he thinks he and June should never be together, because already it could not be the idyllic romance he has so feverishly dreamt of, his creative cogs bunged up with hours daydreaming and imagining her lips on his, her hands in his, resting heads on chests and scents mingling in the moonlight. He can’t think of anything else. Additionally, he can't remember her surname and they have been friends too long for him to ask her. No love affair could survive that.
          He looks down to the blank pages on the table before him. God, he doesn’t even want to fill them anymore.
Related content
Comments: 124

MacDoherty In reply to ??? [2009-01-14 20:04:17 +0000 UTC]

Firstly, thank you so much for your kind words and for taking the time to write such a considered comment, I really appreciate it. You raise some interesting points for me to think about, particularly about the over-long sentences, which are my worst habit. In terms of writing, I mean. My worst habit in real life is either my refusal to repeat myself more than three times, or my chronic oversharing of useless information. Thank you again.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

SkysongMA In reply to MacDoherty [2009-01-14 22:17:48 +0000 UTC]

Try reading your pieces aloud. Odds are, you will pause where there ought to be some sort of punctuation, and if you get out of breath while reading a sentence, that probably means you need to shorten it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Dya-mond-ay [2008-12-27 18:59:08 +0000 UTC]

This is very, very well written =]
Kudos.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to Dya-mond-ay [2009-01-14 19:54:39 +0000 UTC]

Thank you, I appreciate it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Cyanseagull [2008-12-27 18:23:05 +0000 UTC]

This is awesome, but really sad! anyway your craftsman ship is great, you have a gift for matching diction with characters which strengthens both them and the story. Really invoving which is seriously importnat in a short. Have you read any Mark Haddon? could be that you might like his stuff.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to Cyanseagull [2009-01-14 19:54:28 +0000 UTC]

Oh, thank you so much, that's such a kind thing to say. I really appreciate it. I've never read any Haddon, but I must check him out, he looks interesting. Thank you for reading.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Cyanseagull In reply to MacDoherty [2009-01-14 20:04:17 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for writing good work! particularly his book a spot of bother. it put me in mind of this, not that I have read very much of it...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

ugly-side [2008-12-27 15:54:13 +0000 UTC]

wow....

just wow.


do you read chuck palahniuk at all, i ask because i find this is quite reminicent of his style.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to ugly-side [2008-12-27 17:01:11 +0000 UTC]

I've read bits and pieces (some short stories and Choke) but I was never conscious of echoing his style, although someone upthread mentioned him also. I suppose subconsciously I must have remembered it, which is funny. Thanks for reading!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

ugly-side In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-27 18:17:57 +0000 UTC]

pleasure.

well done on the daily deviation!

congrats

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

ChiiKei [2008-12-27 15:50:09 +0000 UTC]

You have a quirky writing style that was fun to read. Loved the story and the character. <33

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to ChiiKei [2008-12-27 16:59:01 +0000 UTC]

That's so sweet to say. I'm really glad you liked it!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

FlyingTigress In reply to ??? [2008-12-27 15:49:13 +0000 UTC]

This is so very amazing. I can't believe someone could write such an inspiring piece. Well, not so much inspiring as very, very... touching? Familiar? Hnnnn... I seem to be having trouble with words. I'm in love with the perspective you give this... story if I may call it that or just literature... and the witty ideas that you have put into this. It is certainly inspiring to sit down and write which I think I will leave you at that as I browse my room to find my very own leather-bound-yellowing-paged book.
Keep writing because I certainly look forward to reading some more of your awe-inspiring work... hnnn there I go again with difficulty finding the correct context without being to terribly redundant.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to FlyingTigress [2008-12-27 16:58:29 +0000 UTC]

It's not redundant at all, your words are incredibly lovely to read. I think that the most anyone who writes can hope to achieve should be affecting the person who reads their work, so I'm so touched by your comment. I'm really glad you liked it, thank you for reading.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

FlyingTigress In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-28 16:37:31 +0000 UTC]

you're welcome

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

wireless-indie [2008-12-27 15:46:14 +0000 UTC]

my policy doesn't allow me to fav a daily deviation, but i'm closing my eyes to this one.

bravo.

👍: 0 ⏩: 2

alooper21 In reply to wireless-indie [2008-12-27 21:24:01 +0000 UTC]

your policy etc...? what's that and how come?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

wireless-indie In reply to alooper21 [2008-12-28 10:54:54 +0000 UTC]

it's kind of my own set of rules.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

alooper21 In reply to wireless-indie [2008-12-28 15:46:46 +0000 UTC]

oh... ok...

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

wireless-indie In reply to alooper21 [2008-12-28 20:43:49 +0000 UTC]

a, pai esti roman(ca?)! si iti place gymnopedie no. 1!

nu-mi spune ca nu ai sau nu ai auzit de un set personal de reguli.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

alooper21 In reply to wireless-indie [2008-12-28 21:26:50 +0000 UTC]

imi place mai intai no.5. apoi no.1, dupa care nu prea conteaza ordinea.

nu prea imi ordonez regulile pe seturi. le aplic reflexiv i functie de situatiile in care ma gasesc.

ai niste poze faine prin galerie. vroiam s-o iau a-z, dar la un moment dar am uitat pagina prin background, ca ma luasem cu altele. nu-i bai, revin altadata.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

MacDoherty In reply to wireless-indie [2008-12-27 16:56:43 +0000 UTC]

Oh, thank you. I really appreciate it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

childofsatan2002 [2008-12-27 14:24:08 +0000 UTC]

You are simply amazing. Being a writer myself, I can appreciate this fine piece. I know you hear this from everyone else, but I really love this.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to childofsatan2002 [2008-12-27 16:56:21 +0000 UTC]

That's really so kind of you to say. I still have a lot to learn, but to get positive responses from so many people is just such a lovely thing. I'm really glad that you took the time to read it. Thank you.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

childofsatan2002 In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-27 16:59:08 +0000 UTC]

I am really glad I did too. Its so amazing. I look forward to reading what you write in the future.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

TortuousThrenody In reply to ??? [2008-12-27 13:50:05 +0000 UTC]

This is the first time I read any prose on DeviantArt .. I never found it interesting enough, but the first sentence of your story got me reading. I love the way you use your adjectives, you have a really beautiful style of writing. Congratulations on the DD ! Take care

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to TortuousThrenody [2008-12-27 16:55:23 +0000 UTC]

Thank you, I'm really thrilled with the DD. And thank you so much for taking the time to read and comment, I'm really flattered, they're such kind things to say.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Jaala In reply to ??? [2008-12-27 11:03:49 +0000 UTC]

it is scary. I could end up like that. if i do, i will shoot myself in the head first.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to Jaala [2008-12-27 16:54:18 +0000 UTC]

I hope nothing so extreme! I just think we do what we can to get by. I think Arthur will work it out in the end.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Jaala In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-27 17:01:03 +0000 UTC]

still extremely nevertheless.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Wolfenlied In reply to ??? [2008-12-27 10:50:01 +0000 UTC]

This makes me think of Douglas Adams in SO many ways!

Excellent

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to Wolfenlied [2008-12-27 16:53:45 +0000 UTC]

Oh, cool, I'd never thought of that comparison before. That's really neat. Thank you for reading!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Wolfenlied In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-27 16:57:03 +0000 UTC]

Sure thing, especially Arthur's attitude and name corresponds to Arthur Dent from "Hitchiker's guide to the galaxy".

Awesome series of books, even if they are partially spoiled by a really abrupt ending.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

akinotasogare In reply to Wolfenlied [2008-12-28 03:32:27 +0000 UTC]

I thought of this same thing~ hehe.
Douglas Adams was a genius.
To MacDoherty, congrats on the well-deserved DD~! (^_^)

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

annaisjesus [2008-12-27 10:38:50 +0000 UTC]

This is so great, you've drilled so deep into all of your character's reactions and thought processes. It makes it feel like I'm actually there in that cafe with them. The humour is so bleak and dry, I love stuff like this

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to annaisjesus [2008-12-27 16:43:41 +0000 UTC]

Thank you! I really like that type of humour too but am never sure if I manage to write it well. Thanks for reading and commenting, it's really cool.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Wings-on-Water [2008-12-27 10:33:20 +0000 UTC]

Lovely. I've never read any lit on DA before, never been interested, but this is fantastic. I had to keep reading as soon as I caught a glimpse of the first two sentences. I think "mildly burned to death" was my favorite part... it's just so ridiculously typical of that character. (Actually, my favorite part was how quickly and adeptly and vividly you painted the characters. How else would I know it's typical of him? )

I can't figure out what's so engaging about that first sentence. Something about it sure is...

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to Wings-on-Water [2008-12-27 16:42:51 +0000 UTC]

That's such a lovely thing to say. I'm really thrilled that you took the time to read and comment, and thank you for being so kind! I'm really glad you liked it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Wings-on-Water In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-28 10:03:21 +0000 UTC]

No problem!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

leslien In reply to ??? [2008-12-27 09:42:48 +0000 UTC]

i like it. dunno can't do deep analogies of it cos that's not what i'm good at, but really like the way you write.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to leslien [2008-12-27 16:41:55 +0000 UTC]

That's really so kind of you to say, I'm really glad. Thank you for reading.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

leslien In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-30 09:33:32 +0000 UTC]

heh! you're so welcome!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

P1pp1N In reply to ??? [2008-12-27 09:34:38 +0000 UTC]

gloriously pathetic subject. fantastic writing...

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to P1pp1N [2008-12-27 16:41:28 +0000 UTC]

Oh, thank you, that's so sweet.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

P1pp1N In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-28 01:35:31 +0000 UTC]

haha no problem, the pleasure was all mine.

so glad you took that as a compliment as it was intended.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

XxrockgoddessxX In reply to ??? [2008-12-27 09:05:23 +0000 UTC]

certainly one of the more interesting pieces I've come across on DA-
I felt compelled to read through and I'm glad I did.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to XxrockgoddessxX [2008-12-27 16:41:15 +0000 UTC]

I'm glad you did too, I really appreciate anyone taking the time out to read my stuff, so thank you for doing so, and for commenting.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

XxrockgoddessxX In reply to MacDoherty [2008-12-28 19:12:39 +0000 UTC]

any time!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

GwenavhyeurAnastasia In reply to ??? [2008-12-27 08:58:49 +0000 UTC]

It's refreshing to see such a lovely piece of literature get a DD. The repetition of (the F stands for...), as well as the over all beauty of the characters makes this. I can think of a person like each of those here. Quite realistic. Wonderful job.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MacDoherty In reply to GwenavhyeurAnastasia [2008-12-27 16:39:17 +0000 UTC]

Oh, thank you, that's such a lovely thing to say. I'm really flattered. I'm really pleased that you see something you can recognise in it, that's really cool.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1


| Next =>