posted on Jul, 26 2008 @ 04:20 AM
(Part Two)
All that still lay in the future however and Martin just watched the fly and asked, “Why is she rubbing her hands or whatever they are together like
that?”
“They all do,” his partner informed him, who having in a doctor’s waiting room one day read the JIDSTUK’s special issue (vol. 24), which was
devoted soully to studies of flies and their unique sets of behaviour characteristics cover to cover and had nightmares about it for days afterwards,
knew all about it. (Note: Well, nights afterwards in fact but try saying “for nights afterwards” and see how it sounds, this is why we say days
even when it’s really nights.)
Martin sighed, “I know they all do -- but why?”
“It’s O.C.D. Well, an O.C.D. to be more accurate,” she replied, correcting herself.
“An O.C.D.?” Martin asked.
“Uh-huh.” Kathy plucked a few more daisies then realizing she was tormenting herself for no good reason she wrung her hands together then tossed
them over her shoulder with a sigh. There is something rather satisfying about tossing things over your shoulder with a sigh like people do with
things in the movies especially comedies as if signifying complete and udder resignation. If you’ve never tried it then please do. A book, your
Blackberry or laptop, an anvil that was under your thumb when you hit it with a hammer, your deepfreeze that breaks down the day after you leave for a
fortnight’s summer vacation, completely full of Frozen TV dinners and ice cream, whatever is causing you needless grief, toss it over your shoulder
with a sigh and you’ll appreciate the benefits. So, having tossed them sighing over her shoulder, Kathy, turning to Martin, explained, “An
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. In capitals.”
Martin shook his head, because he was puzzled or (at least) disbelieving (at most) and not actually flat-out disagreeing with Kathy, who was, after
all, a medical student in her final year and very clever and in fact had a better knowledge of him than he did -- at least from the point of view of
what he would look like if dissected. It stood to no reason at all therefore that she should know all about the behaviour of flies but he’d had
several glasses of red wine at lunch just a little while ago so it was kind of standing to reason with him, but even so his mind demanded a token
defense so that’s why he shook his head and responded, “You are seriously telling me that flies have an O.C.D.?”
“Well of course they do.” Recalling what she had read that morning and half the afternoon of the day she waited in the waiting room, she quoted
almost verbatim an edited version of several pages of text from her memory: “Detailed studies have shown that there is no good, earthly reason why
flies rub their little hand-thingies together so it must be behavioural, and as it’s kind of compulsive then of course it’s an O.C.D.” She began
to reach for another daisy and frowned, the thought coming to her (which is what most thoughts do -- they come to you) that that that she was doing
was awfully close to an O.C.D.
Kathy compulsively worried about any behaviour things she had that might be signs that she had an O.C.D.
“God…what on earth would cause it?” Martin leaned forward to study the fly more closely, trying to determine if it’s expression showed it was
displaying symptoms of psychological distress or if it was neurotic or stuff like that. He was an auditor with the Inland Revenue (ie the Taxation
Dept if you are not American) and so he was very good at picking up signs of distress from expressions though not often from flies, as many of his
“clients” seemed distressed just when he was visiting them for some reason.
“They have a complex.” Kathy began to reach for some daisies again and quickly drew her hands back in her lap and clenched her fists as if
they’d bitten her. “Think about it. All their lives they hear how filthy they are, how they eat garbage and carry disease, even the millions and
zillions of flies that never set eyes on garbage and haven’t carried a day’s deadly disease in there lifes, they all get kind of tarred with the
same brush and so they get this complex and spend half their waking hours washing their poor little hand thingies,” she finished, with a concluding
shrug.
“Wow…I never would’ve believed it,” Martin murmured after a moment’s silence while he thought about it.
“Hee hee hee,” Kathy laughed, because it was quite funny really. “I guess it sounds kind of hard to believe.”
“Yeah…Ha ha ha!” Martin laughed in reply. “It kind of does.”
“Ha hee ha hee ha hee ha hee ha!” they laughed together.
They looked at each other and burst out laughing again.
“Ha ha ha ha haaaaaa!”
“Hee hee hee heeee!”
Oh, how they laughed! It was sooo funny!
“Ha ha ha ha haaaaa! That is sooo funny!” Martin commented laughingly, getting up from the path where he had been rolling around laughing and
sitting down next to Kathy who hadn’t but had managed to stay seated and not roll aound (she just lay back on the seat and kicked her feet in the
air a bit), once again.
The fly, which had been flying around in a holding pattern while Martin steamrollered the daisies as he rolled around laughing now came flying down
once again and made a perfect three-point landing on it’s six legs on a still-standing flower once again.
“Amazing things, flies,” Martin remarked, nodding in the direction of the fly.
“Yes, complexes or not,” Kathy agreed, looking at the fly Martin was nodding at, “Quite amazing.”
“Yeah,” he agreed. There was a moment’s silence when neither of them spoke then after a short pause he asked, “Have you ever seen a fly
aeroplane?”
Kathy’s expression was puzzled and she showed it. “A flying aeroplane? Of course I have.”
“Not a flying aeroplane,” Martin corrected her. “A fly aeroplane,” he went on, emphasizing “fly” so that she knew what the
correction was.
“You mean an -- an aeroplane for flies?” she asked him, her expression still puzzled because she still was.
“No,” Martin answered shaking his head negatively in disagreement. “It’s not quite for flies, it’s fly powered,” he
elaborated by way of explanation.
“Fly powered?” Kathy frowned, picking up exactly on his meaning but still a bit lost. “How does a fly power an aeroplane?” she
asked.
“I saw it on the Web somewhere…Let me explain,” Martin began explaining, making motions with his hands so Kathy would get the picture better.
“You have this tiny little model aeroplane made of little pieces of balsa wood or paper like this, just like a little plane but a very small
one.”
“A tiny little aeroplane. Uh-huh,” Kathy replied, not really believing him, as you could tell from the tone of her voice, which was disbelieving.
A kind of low, flat tone. Like that.
“Yeah, a tiny little aeroplane,” Martin confirmed, nodding. “But a very small one. Then you get four flies, nice big healthy ones like that one
there -- and oh yeah they have to be alive, too -- and you use a tiny little drop of glue for each one and you stick them on the wings where the
engines go on real planes except they go on top not underneath and then you let it go and they all fly and it flies around like a little four-engined
bomber.”
“You cannot be serious,” Kathy responded, not believing him but because it sounded kind of funny trying not to laugh and succeeding pretty good.
She smiled though, kind of downwards.
Martin was miffed. “I am as serious as you are,” he answered miffedly. “I saw the design and it made an inedible impression on me and I’ve
never forgotten it. They even had one for eight flies where you stick them in four pairs like those big eight-engined military bombers have.”
“Really? Eight? In pairs? But -- but what do they carry?”
“Oh, all sorts of stuff,” Martin shrugged. “Even nukes.”
“Nukes?” Kathy asked, amazed. “Like, nuclear bomb-type nukes?” Her eyes widened and her mouth hung open in stunned silent amazement
except for when she said something.
“Sure, like that big eight-engined bomber a while back that flew by mistake right down across the country with live nukes under it’s wings. You
remember?”