What You Make It: Selected Short Stories. Michael Marshall Smith

What You Make It: Selected Short Stories - Michael Marshall Smith


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       MICHAEL MARSHALL SMITH

       WHAT YOU MAKE IT

       A book of short stories

      Dedication

      This collection is dedicated to the three people without whom … to Nicholas Royle, Stephen Jones and Howard Ely.

      Table of Contents

       Introduction

       Chapter 1 - More Tomorrow

       Chapter 2 - Everybody Goes

       Chapter 3 - Hell Hath Enlarged Herself

       Chapter 5 - Later

       Chapter 6 - The Man Who Drew Cats

       Chapter 7 - The Fracture

       Chapter 8 - Save As …

       Chapter 9 - More Bitter Than Death

       Chapter 10 - Diet Hell

       Chapter 11 - The Owner

       Chapter 12 - Foreign Bodies

       Chapter 13 - Sorted

       Chapter 14 - The Dark Land

       Chapter 15 - When God Lived in Kentish Town

       Chapter 16 - Always

       Chapter 17 - What You Make It

       Chapter 18 - The Truth Game

       Acknowledgements

       About the Author

       Praise

       By Michael Marshall Smith

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Introduction

      I like short stories. I hope you do too, because this isn't a novel. If an honest-to-goodness novel is what you're looking for, then put this volume back on the pile. Propped up, so other people can see it. Or better still, take it with you anyway. You can snuggle down into novels, draw them over your head like a warm duvet and go away for a while. It's like taking a road trip in another country – while the land's got you in its clutches, you can't go home again. Short stories are different. They're evenings out, or day trips, an hour spent gazing out to sea. You don't have to do lots of packing beforehand or set timer switches or arrange for someone to feed the cat, but they leave their mark on your life all the same. Sometimes more so: short stories don't have the luxury of time to draw you in – so they have to come in low, under the radar, and hit you with the very first shot. They're doorways to other worlds, perpetually left ajar, dreams that you experience while you are still half awake.

      Novels are time out of time: short stories are part of real life, and sometimes the shortest song can contain the longest single note.

      What follows is a selection of the stories I have written in the last decade. Some of them are about fairly normal things, others less so. A few come at similar ideas from different angles, others stand alone; some have a life of their own now, having previously appeared in a variety of formats, while others are shiny new. They include both the first story I ever wrote, and the most recent. Everything else is bracketed between them. Through one of those coincidences which seem too telling to be merely random, while I was putting this collection together I was in Edinburgh for the Book Festival. In the evening I took my wife – who was but a dot on an unseen horizon when the first of these stories were written – to the place where I was sitting when I got the idea for that first short story, just over ten years previously. It was a strange feeling. Two days later, back in London, I attended a book launch for the writer who did more than any other to inspire me to write in the first place – and whose fiction I'd been avidly reading on that day in Edinburgh a decade before. This was the writer's first official visit to this country in seventeen years, and it seems odd that it should fall in the same week that I had stood on The Mound in Edinburgh and remembered how it had been.

      But that's the way life is, a sea of coincidences and strangenesses and dark heartbeats – and what follows is an attempt to capture something of it. Then it was 1987. Now it's 1998. These stories chart the journey from there to here, and I hope that amongst them you'll find a couple of evenings to remember.

      Michael Marshall Smith

      London, October 1998

       MORE TOMORROW

      I got a new job a couple of weeks ago. It's pretty much the same as my old job, but at a nicer company. What I do is trouble-shoot computers and their software – and yes, I know that sounds dull. People tell me so all the time. Not in words, exactly, but in their glassy smiles and their awkward ‘let's be nice to the geek’ demeanour.

      It's a strange phenomenon, the whole ‘computer people are losers’ mentality. All round the world, at desks in every office and every building, people are using computers. Day in, day out. Every now and then, these machines go wrong. They're bound to: they're complex systems, like a human body, or society. When someone gets hurt, you call in a doctor. When a riot breaks out, it's the police that – for once – you want to see on your doorstep. It's their job to sort it out. Similarly, if your word processor starts dumping files or your hard disk goes non-linear, it's someone like me you need. Someone who actually understands the magic box which sits on your desk, and can make it all lovely again.

      But do we get any thanks, any kudos for being the emergency services of the late twentieth century?

      Do


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