Explore Flipsnack. Transform boring PDFs into engaging digital flipbooks. Share, engage, and track performance in the same platform.
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The morning it started he was woken by the radio (“Two hundred killed and many others believed to be injured; and now over to Jack for the weather and traffic news . . . ”), dragged himself out of bed, and stumbled, bladder aching, into the bathroom. He pulled up the toilet seat and urinated. It felt like he was pissing needles. He needed to urinate again after breakfast — less painfully, since the flow was not as heavy — and three more times before lunch. Each time it hurt. He told himself that it couldn’t be a venereal disease. That was something that other people got, and something (he thought of his last sexual encounter, three years in the past) that you got from other people. You couldn’t really catch it from toilet seats , could you? Wasn’t that just a joke? Simon Powers was twenty-six, and he worked in a large London bank, in the securities division. He had few friends at work. His only real friend, Nick Lawrence, a lonely Canadian, had recently transferred to another branch, and Simon sat by himself in the staff canteen, staring out at the Docklands Lego landscape, picking at a limp green salad. Someone tapped him on the shoulder. “Simon, I heard a good one today. Wanna hear?” Jim Jones was the office clown, a dark -haired, intense young man who claimed he had a special pocket on his boxer shorts, for condoms. “Um. Sure.” “Here you go. What’s the collective noun for people who work in banks?” “The what?” “Collective noun. You know, like a flock of sheep, a pride of lions. Give up?” Simon nodded. “A wunch of bankers.” Simon must have looked puzzled, because Jim sighed and said, “Wunch of bankers. Bunch of wankers. God, you’re slow . . .” Then, spotting a group of young women at a far table, Jim straightened his tie and carried his tray over to them. He could hear Jim telling his joke to the women, this time with added hand movements. They all got it immediately. Simon left his salad on the table and went back to work. That night he sat in his chair in his bedsitter flat with the television turned off, and he tried to remember what he knew about venereal diseases. There was syphilis, which pocked your face and drove the Kings of England mad; gonorrhea — the clap — a green oozing and more madness; crabs, little pubic lice, which nested and itched (he inspected his pubic hairs through a magnifying glass, but nothing moved); AIDS, the eighties plague, a plea for clean needles and safer sexual habits (but what could be safer than a clean
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