Beyond the
Shadow
Ogden knew
the city. Not like a cab driver. knew his way around but would get lost like a
tourist if he moved beyond his turf. Ogden felt the city, breathed it, lived
it. He had become so close to it that he had the city in his bones. Sometimes
he wondered why that was.
He had
been born in the middle of nowhere, further east where America still looked
like it was covered by infinite nature, humans staining the land only
occasionally. In his home village, just a couple of houses really huddled
around a crossroads for safety, people still had the feeling that nature was an
inexorable force. They had to rebuild after tornadoes, battle the creeping
plants cracking open streets and walls, supplies had to brought in from far
away to maintain civilisation.
When he
went west, to the big city, he was blown away. Suddenly it was the other way
round. Everything. Everything was put there by human hand. Even nature was
there only by the mercy of man-kind. Nature grew restless everyone in a while,
like horse half-way broken, weary but with still some fight left in its heart.
But man didn’t give a fuck. They would mop up the debris. Rebuild. And that was
that.
For Ogden
this was a revelation. He had come here because he fancied himself a musician,
a singer and actor, a creative type. Legend had it that boys and girls like him
moved west to the great city. Here they would pass through many arduous trials.
If they were worthy they would be elevated to become stars. He had expected
many challenges, thought he was ready for them all, but nothing had prepared
him for the immensity of human achievement he saw himself confronted with.
It almost
broke him. For a while he could not imagine a world where his insignificant
self could grow or even prosper in this place.
However
one day a second revelation had come to him. This city was made by man. Not by
a single god like person, but by millions and millions of them. Everyone from
menial worker to highly qualified specialist had assembled to work together to
build this incredible monument to modern civilisation. This was the American
Dream made manifest.
He
channelled his sense of wonder into his music. He wrote strange songs about the
strange city which got him recognition in a certain crowd of people. He never
broke out of that niche. He lived. He always had enough money to pay the rent
and most weeks he had enough to eat. Something wasn’t right though. He worked
hard on his music. He always kept an ear on the ground looking for other new
artists that had appeared with a new vision to share with the rest of the
world. He grew constantly. As a human being. What did not grow was his wallet.
For a
while Ogden had doubts about the American Dream. He was following the rules,
yet somehow life did not follow. He went through hardship, he never gave up, he
constantly improved himself. Yet success never followed. It turned out that he
had not been paying attention. He had been blinded by his ambition. He was a
good musician, yes. But was that what he was really best at?
Obviously
not.
What he
was actually best at was sniffing out greatness. As he moved through the many
communities inhabiting the city he knew which within their group had raw talent
or a spark of genius. It did not take long for him to realise that these people
were usually so caught up in their art, that they had no idea how good they
were and what was worst these people had no clue how to get their work out into
the world.
Ogden
knew. So he left his guitar behind, all his songs, his poems, his pictures. All
the things he loved but knew he was not good enough at. He sacrificed them to
the past so that he could help those with real talent to grow.
He now put
all his energy into bringing the most brilliant artists of the city to the
attention of the others. And the American Dream rewarded him richly. Even in
his first years were he was basically shuffling around the underground scene
uniting galleries with painters and stages with bands, he began to earn very
well. For him this was a sign that he was on the right track.
And he
never stopped. He never stopped immersing himself into all aspects of the
cities culture. For Ogden there was no good art, no bad art, no ‘is that even’
art. There was only raw potential. When he found it he did all in his power to
bring it into the open. Give it space to evolve, reach its peak and shine. To
do this right he had to be so close to the city that he basically became a part
of it. No other task could have made him happier.
Ogden was
the ruler of his own little empire when Carlton Alexander appeared. Carlton was
not the first representative of one of the international titans that came
knocking on his door, but he was the first executive that came in person. The
first that went through the trouble of getting to know him first and only then
make him a generous offer. Money alone was not enough for Octavian Ogden, the
attitude behind the money had to be the right one. Carlton was the first one
who asked the right questions. There was nothing about how much it would cost
him to hire Ogden. There was a long conversation about the state of art in the
city. Who was up and coming, which people were past their prime. Who should be
boosted above the masses through the power of the titan Carlton represented.
This man was not rying to blindly hire him because some had told an assistant
of his that Ogden was good. No Carlton Alexander had a vision, he had shared it
with Ogden and offered him to be part of it.
He agreed.
While he remained an independent freelancer, when it came to music he worked
now exclusively for Carlton Alexander and all the music labels he represented.
The thing
that rankled him the most was Carlton had found about the band, while he was
still convinced that it was one of the many urban legends that were doing the
rounds. The city was full of them. The man with the trumpet that appeared in
bars enchanting the audience and leaving with half of their painful memories
and half of what was in their wallets. The sprayer who made graffiti that
warned those who could read its symbolism of impending doom. The fire that
burned in empty lots returning the ruins of the buildings who once stood there.
Crap like that. He heard them every other day.
So the bad
that appears out of no where riding an infinite double-decker bus which is also
a mobile stage? Sounded pretty urban legendary to Ogden. This time it was
simply an exaggeration, also happens all the time. Usually he could sniff them
out in time. That Carlton’s army of talent scouts had found that band before
him… No good. Was he getting old?
He pushed
those negative thoughts away. Getting angry got him nowhere. Now that he knew
the band existed, he knew that he would find them. The city was a small
universe full of different worlds. He had been to all of them and he was there
always travelling between them, always watching. This was his city. There was
no one who could hide from him forever.
The first
thing he did was shift worlds. He left the world of the super rich powers, who
ruled the world of entertainment from their sky scraping temples. He crossed
into sibling worlds of the stars where the famous mingled among each other. He
did not stay long, just listened to the grapevine for a bit. The news trickling
in that something was going on. Someone was making a huge spectacle. In this
reality they were all still eyeing each other suspiciously, believing that it
was one of their own trying to pull some kind of stunt.
Interesting.
If the stars were speculating about it, it meant that a newcomer had appeared
in the city making a power play. It also meant that who ever was it was going
to rise high. Maybe they would crash and burn afterwards in some spectacular
fashion or just crumple up like a dead insect blown away by the next big thing.
But right now they were rising. This meant that Ogden had to hurry. He had to
find the band before anyone else.
He left
the world of stars moving to the underground. Here the strange, the crazy, the
contrarians, the incurably full of shit, the ones whose art did belong either
to the past or the future but not the present and the ones so brilliant that
everyone was blind to their genius lived. It would be a bit of a slog but this
was the place where he would find the band he was looking for.
He was
wrong.
The
underground world, just like the world of stars was only vaguely aware of them.
Those who knew about them jealously guarded their knowledge from all others,
for such was the nature of the underground. Octavian had friends here though
who owed him a lot of favours.
This was
intriguing. He passed through more worlds. Always with the same result. Vague
rumours.
For a moment
he was stumped. Where ever he looked there were a few wild stories doing the
rounds but no one knew for sure. This did make him feel a bit better. So far it
totally looked like an urban legend although this one was to evenly spread
across all the worlds of the city to be just a normal legend. Still it meant
Carlton’s scout must have lucked out. It would be him that would get to the
band and sign them.
If they
had not appeared in any of the worlds yet he had to track them down in the
spaces in between. There were always points were social spheres overlapped,
neutral zones that had never been claimed by any culture, hallowed grounds that
were left untouched and the parts that were deemed repugnant by all but those
who had no other choice but to remain there. Ogden decided to go to the
adolescent packs fluctuating between the different camps not quite sure with
home to pledge their allegiance. Extraordinary things would be found by them
first. The packs never felt quite comfortable in the company of the old ones
because they could never could shake the feeling that they were not taken
seriously. It was this chronic lack of poise that made them the most flexible
of all the groups. If anyone could be said to be native to the space between
the worlds it was them. The same could be said about bums and hobos, but these
were exiled into this space. The adolescent packs while having their home there
moved into every world until the day one of the adult tribes would accept them
as one of their owns. The only other species that moved so freely through the
cosmos of the city were the crows.
Ogden
talked to many packs. His assumption was proven to be correct, the young ones
knew about the bus. Or busses. Depending on which tribe he was talking to The
Band With No Name appeared either in one gigantic mega bus more than a block in
length or in three different busses which were still ridiculously long but on a
more sensible scale. Ogden made a mental note that there were only these two
variations. Furthermore while the description varied somewhat the wre
consistent with each other. The adolescents also had one name for the one long
bus. They called it the Block Buster.
Another
things all stories had in common was that the concerts always ended the same.
The music would suddenly stop, often in the middle of a set, leaving not
silence but the sound of sirens approaching. The young ones would panic, many
of them very drunk and very underage, shooting away in every direction trying
to avoid the cops while the Band With No Name packed its things and vanished
into the night.
The most
important thing was that no one could really tell him what the music was like
they were playing. The usually grabbed into the genre bag throwing together all
they could find there in an attempt to make sense of it. All who had heard the
music agreed on one thing. It was fucking awesome.
Many of
the witnesses had become obsessed with this music, it now haunted their dreams,
filled their minds during the day, inspired them to break out of the path they
had been following in a daze and try something different. Not indy label
different. Really different. Like the Band With No Name.
Ogden
followed the trail. When ever he passed through on of the established words he
passed on the message that he was looking for the Band With No Name. It was a
gamble. In doing so he was going to cause a new wave of foaming rumours to
crash into the city. It would mean that sightings would be reported to him more
rapidly though, he had people who he could trust in all the worlds. Downside
was that his competitors were going to take note in a day or two. By then Ogden
was hopefully already near the mark and the others distracted by bullshit
rumours.
Then it
was back to gathering information. The band always appeared in different
places. No rhyme or reason to it so far. A day before the concert fliers and
posters would appear announcing the next concert. They would always arrive on
time. With only one exception a couple of days ago when they failed to do so.
The next day there were new fliers with pictures of the place were the concert
should have taken place identifying plain clothes police officers on the crowd.
Their
legend grew.
“You were
there when they played?” Ogden asked a girl that looked like 22. Looking at her
friends he was pretty sure that she was no older than 15.
“Twice.”
said the girl beaming with pride. Even the boys in her pack who used up most of
their energy to appear manly could help themselves but nod in respectful
approval.
“Impressive.
You are the first one who managed to get hold of them twice.” he said to her,
the compliment setting the girl alight. Ogden suspected that the compliment
might have been a bit to much, the girl appeared as if the endorphin rush was
taking her to the places heroin addicts dreamt of reaching.
“How did
you pull that off?” he asked.
“Connections.”
the girl said sending off waves of smugness that had narcissists in a two mile
radius broke in to cold sweats feeling that a great wave of force was
displacing them from the centre of the universe.
“You know
someone from the band?” Ogden asked, instantly regretting it as the girl
suddenly turned bright red, here eyes wide open, jaw taking a running jump
towards the floor.
“Oh. My.
Goooooood. That would be so fucking cool!” she half shrieked. Her eyes were
still focused on another plane, the ones around her also went glassy eyed
imagining for one moment to know the band. Talking to them. Crusing the night
inside the Block Buster.
“No.” she
was slowly returning to reality. “God I wish I did…”
“So…”
“I now a
guy, he’s 18,” she added to the envy of her female and the annoyance of her
male pack mates, “and he is one of the pilots.”
“A pilot…”
Ogden had learnt that if you want people to keep talking you just say something
that they just said. Usually he was more subtle about it but this girl would
take any excuse to keep on bragging about her exploits.
“Yeah. He
is a flier guy, he hands them out. The band is strictly stone age. They don’t
announce things on the Internet. At all. So if you can’t grab a flier your shit
out of luck.”
“An idea
where he gets his fliers from?”
“No idea.
He doesn’t even know. Got the job from a guy who knows a guy. Before a concert
the fliers appear on his door step. He has his own place so he gets it
delivered there. Next day there’s an unmarked envelope in his mailbox with one
hundred bucks in there.”
“One
hundred?” Ogden was surprised. Not only was the method of delivery so utterly
melodramatic that it served as its own PR but they paid the kids 100 $ to hand
out fliers?
“I know!
Right? “
“So when
the next concert happens you are going to know.”
Another
wave of smugness washed over him. The more lucid narcissists in the
neighbourhood were now near to a terminal nervous break down. The luckier one
could self medicate with some generous helping of cocaine.
“You can
bet your life on it grandpa.” said the girl. Ogden died a little bit when he
registered the ‘grandpa’ bit but he kept his pokerface going.
“When the
next concert is I need to know.”
“You?”
asked the girl.
“Yes, me.
All my friends heard of the band. But so far no one has actually heard it. And
I totally want to be the first.”
The
considered his words for a moment before they started nodding. What that old
man had just said like made total sense, maybe he was one of these fabled cool
old people their myths told them about.
“Tell you
what,” one of the professionally male ones said with a confidence that was 90%
hard work. “You buy us a bottle of vodka and a couple of six packs and we tell
you.”
The girl
Ogden was talking too turned around with a quick motion towards the guy who had
just intruded into her territory. She inhaled sharply but did not say anything.
She turned back to Ogden with a sightly displeased expression.
“No way.”
she said. “Two bottles of vodka, fours six packs and two big bottles of water.”
“Deal.”
said Ogden without missing a beat.
“Deal.”
the girl said obviously happy with this outcome. The others in the pack were
also congratulating each other, marvelling at having found a cool old one. They
could not believe their luck. They had a direct line to the Band With No Name
and now their own adult to buy them their drinks.
“Just one
question.” said Ogden.
“What?”
“What do
you need the water for?”
“What do
you think it’s for, for the vodka we can hardly take it to a club or anything
in the original bottle. Duh!”
The pack
decided that the coolness of the old ones had its limits.
An hour
and several beers later, Ogden had returned to the pack like an alcoholics
version of Santa Clause, he left with at least one possible avenue to the band.
More importantly he now knew what the band looked like in the first place.
There were
five people in the combo. Two girls three guys. The band leader who everybody
called ‘King Crimson’, was the keyboarder. Ogden’s mind boggled at the very
thought. Not only had they a keyboarder but he was the band leader? Didn’t that
break several of natures laws? There were two guitarists. Both dudes. And a
lady drummer and girl bassist.
Walking
away Ogden felt his confidence grow. He now had a mental image of the band, he
knew a bit more about their modus operandi. He had befriended a pack of
teenagers who were obsessed with them giving him a direct source to all the
news about his not quite so mysterious target, they’d also alert him to their
next concert.
Once that
happened he would strike.
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