Laboratory I obtain a poorly-paid job in a dusty
laboratory. The afternoon sunlight falls into the room through yellowing venetian blinds,
I pass the time making tea and answering oblique questions desultarily during collapsed
conversations. As time passes in its tedious way I slowly become aware that the
experiments taking place in the laboratory are at best sinister; and at worst, evil. At
least eighty per cent of the hypotheses are obviously invalid and intended to support
revolting surmises. I increasingly spend most of my time in the kitchen, staring at the
limescale that bedecks the overflow of the sink. I fancy that I can see emergent
civilisations in the crust that grows daily around the tap bases. The weeks fall through
my finger Eventually the experiments become too much for me to tolerate. Mice are being
sacrificed to a nameless dark presence that hovers over the building, manifesting in the
dust, colouring the minds of the scientists with whom I am forced to spend my futile
daylight. Somehow the laboratory is filling my dreams with fear. At last recognise that it
is the mouldering soul of the building itself that is engineering this mounting horror.
Quietly, |