Does Barry Dream of Electric Ursula?


After Philip K. Dick

A huge cloud descended over Swindon. People were asked to relocate to other cloudless, safer towns such as Chippenham. Some refused to leave and were branded as 'Special.' No one knew what was in the cloud, but it contained an omnipresent dust of befouling filth and everyone who remained in the town suffered from a depression that could only be controlled by mood organs. Each household was given an electric person to cheer them up. 

Barry is in a pair of hi-viz pyjamas. Mabel is sleeping on the sofa. She has not touched her twin-tub in days.

MABEL: 
Keep your hand off my settings! I don't want to do the washing.

BARRY: 
You set your Penfold too weak, let me reset it? If you surge yourself high enough you'll be happy to do the washing. At setting C you'll be dancing with your electric paddle agitator again.

MABEL: 
Get your crude road-digger hands off my paddle agitator.

BARRY: 
I'm not a road digger, I haven't dug a road since the cloud came.

MABEL: 
You're worse. You make road-blocks to keep people from leaving this town. People that refuse to be 'special'.

BARRY: 
Only the electric people.

MABEL: 
They're still people. Ursula's on the roof. Would you stop Ursula?

BARRY: 
She was a real woman once, a lovely woman.

MABEL: 
I'd like a real woman friend again.

BARRY: 
Impossible.

MABEL: 
Exactly, which is why my schedule for today is a six hour self-accusatory depression.

BARRY:
What? Why did you set it for that? It defeats the purpose of the mood-organ. You might as well go live in Chippenham.

MABEL: 
Never, I'd rather have electronic depression thank you.

BARRY: 
Why are you so bent on being depressed? Who will do the washing?

MABEL: 
I saw that awful commercial again, the one for Hotpoint Lead Codpieces. I felt sad about the past and the direction Hotpoint were being forced to go in. So I shut off the sound and I heard the…(Mabel gestures to the houses next door)

BARRY: 
The emptiness, the silence?

MABEL: 
I was in a 382 mood, so although I heard the noise intellectually, I didn’t feel it. I was grateful for my Penfold at that point and stroked the twin-tub in deep appreciation, loading it with a pile of washing I had already done. But then I realised how unhealthy it all was, sensed an absence of life. I miss the real Ursula.

BARRY: 
But despair like that. You’ll end up in Reading!

MABEL: 
I’ve got an automatic resetting for three hours later. A 481: awareness of the manifold possibilities and joy in housework. 

BARRY: 
Let’s dial a 104 together, forget all this. Then I’ll set mine for collecting a skip, ready for work, then I'll pop up on the roof to check on Ursula.

MABEL: 
Look what happened the last time someone dialled what you wanted them to Barry. Ursula happened, she dialled for ecstatic sexual bliss and bang! The end of her. So I won’t be taking advice from a road-blocker, or skip-remover if that’s the job of the day.

BARRY: 
You turn into a bloody snob when you are depressed. You belong in Bath. Not here, with the Swindon Specials.

MABEL: 
Just keep off my settings and go to work.

After breakfast, Barry abandons Mabel in her six-hour self-accusatory depressive state and leaves for work. First, he goes to check on Ursula. Despite his lead, hi-viz codpiece, the cloud filtered in and at him, brought him daily as long as he refused to move to Chippenham. He was now, quite special. Doug, another Swindon refuserite had come to check on his human too.

DOUG: 
I’d give you five hundred pounds a month for your electric human. I do like her.

BARRY: 
But that’s my Ursula, I can’t sell Ursula.

DOUG: 
There’s none like her in stock.

BARRY: 
I had her specially designed.

DOUG: 
But for you to have a unique person, it violates the whole basic theological and moral structure of Swindon.


BARRY: 
Not really, if you didn't have your own human there on the roof, I’d see some logic in your position. And if I had two electric humans and you didn't have any, I’d be helping to deprive you of true fusion.

DOUG: 
I think Ed down the road had his wife made up into an electric one but possibly he’s just pretending. How did you get her done like this?

BARRY: 
When she was real, she dialled for some ecstatic sexual bliss on the mood organ and I came into the bedroom to find her lying on her back on the floor, legs in the air. I managed to lift her up but after a moment or two that was it, she keeled over.

DOUG: 
Women get strange reactions to this mood organ.

BARRY: 
Any organ.

DOUG: 
So what did you do next.

BARRY: 
We had her buried, as usual and Mabel and I started to miss her. No mood-dialling worked on the loss we felt. So I took her photo to one of those shops that manufacture humans. They made her up for us. Pity she can’t live in the house, rules are rules.

DOUG: 
It’s not the same though is it? Don't you dream about her?

BARRY: 
I have some funny electric Ursula dreams that is true. Some involving button 377. 

DOUG: 
Good lord! 377 ... no one goes on 377. I didn't know organs still came with that one. Better watch that Mabel of yours in there then, she could die like Ursula died. Keep a sticker over those settings. When you get home from work this evening, you might find her laid out, feet in the air, like a bug.

Barry strode off, car key in hand, and in silence plucked open the door of his hover-car. He had nothing to say to Doug.


Malevolent Ivy


after Daphne Du Maurier

Mabel and Ursula are having breakfast together at the Queens Hotel, Blackpool. After Mabel's abduction by aliens, a mini-break seemed the answer. 




MABEL: 
Last night I dreamt I went to Swindon again.

URSULA: 
You've been gone some time Mabel.

MABEL: 
It seemed to me I was stood by the iron gates leading to Town Gardens, and for a while I could not enter, because the way was barred to me.

URSULA: 
They lock it up after 5pm. What shall we have for breakfast?

MABEL: 
Then, like all dreamers, I was possessed all of a sudden with supernatural powers and passed the barrier before me.

URSULA: 
I'm having full English.

MABEL:
I reached the rose garden with plants standing fifty feet high and with naked limbs.

URSULA: 
That's symbolic.

MABEL: 
Their branches like a strange embrace, making a vault above my head like the archway of a church.

URSULA: 
Big rose bushes...hadn't anyone pruned them? 

MABEL: 
And weeds had thrust themselves out of the quiet earth, along with monster shrubs and plants, none that I can remember.

URSULA: 
It seems to me Mabel, you should stop the idea of this wedding with Mr. Tuttle, and any dreams of children, (although that might not be possible at your age of course). This nightmare of thrusting weeds and strange embraces is all about fear of your hidden female psyche Mabel and very unhealthy.

MABEL: 
But then Ursula, vast and secretive, was our cafe with its myriad of chairs extending to the iron gates on the other side, so many chairs Ursula.

URSULA: 
Weddings again ... cancel the whole thing.

MABEL
Then those rose bushes came out of the garden like serpents and entered into alien embraces with the pansy displays that look so lovely in March.

URSULA: 
Do I need to say any more? a bus driver and a poet...doesn't add up. It will lead to misery.

MABEL: 
Then a primrose mated with a rhododendron!

URSULA: Very crude. Reminds me of Sandra and Charlie, the babies they might have made if things lasted longer than a week.

MABEL: 
Then to bind them, evermore closely, the malevolent ivy...

URSULA: 
Hmmm, that'd be Barry. He introduced you to Tuttle at the Harvey. Always an enemy to grace! My kind of man.

MABEL: 
I'll have a boiled egg.

Snubbed at the Meat Raffle



Clown-faced pork luncheom meat was there, but were you?
You were invited to the meat raffle at The Harvey last night were you? I dreamt about Mabel Watson and she told me that you had won some tenderloin, is this true?
Like ·  · 22 hours ago · 

Delete all cookies, fire an empty biscuit barrel at the moon

An empty warehouse lit by a projected image of YouTube on the far wall.

A figure sits at a laptop with his back to the audience.

He is a wearing a hi vis jacket and woolly hat

A YouTube video of Big Arts Day 2011 plays

The figure turns away from the projection

We hear Barry Dicks’ voice shout ‘You fool’

The figure holds his head in his hands.

The figure reveals himself as Barry Dicks.

The video pauses.

He turns back to his laptop.

A browser history page opens, still projected onto the wall.

BARRY:
Where are you? Backspace, backspace, right click, save as.

Pause

Mabel’s disembodied voice loudly fills the warehouse.

MABEL: 
Just call Roy. Roy. Roy. Roy.

BARRY:
Watson is that you?

MABEL:  
Elementary my dear Barry.

BARRY:  
There’s a séance at Ursula’s on Thursday 8 for 8:30pm, be there, two knocks for yes.

MABEL:  
Find me Barry. I am have been shared beyond my ‘likes’ I am an invisible Friend Request, I have been retweeted way beyond Swindon to a dark place of freeze dried poetry and giant nappies.

BARRY :  
Are you in Oxford?

Mabel is Back 2: Death by Paddle Agitator

READ MABEL IS BACK 1 HERE

Barry takes a small device from his belt and starts to adjust it when suddenly a large shadow falls over him from behind.  He hears a monstrous howl and turns to see an eleven-foot-tall shape towering over him.  It is the Mabel-like machine creature, lunging at him ferociously.

BARRY:
Aaargh!

Barry grabs for his spanner, but is hit flat in the face by a huge hand holding a paddle agitator.  He falls unconscious onto a Swindon pavement, and in a moment his milk-float makes a bang, then a smash as the wind-screen is broken.

The Mabel-like machine creature grabs Barry by one ankle and drags him away across the Swindon pavement.

EXT. SWINDON – MABEL’S KITCHEN - DAY

The Mabel-like creature loads Barry into her twin-tub and closes the lid, securing the spinner seal beforehand.

Enter, Ursula

URSULA:
All right, don't lose your temper. It wasn’t Barry’s fault you were abducted. We all thought you’d been murdered by a teapot. Until the massages started. Now stop right there and I'll come right over and give you a hand to pull him out.

Mabel takes up her paddle agitator and lunges at Ursula. Ursula sprays her in the face with some window cleaner and Mabel faints.  

MABEL:
(coming too … groans)
Ursula?

URSULA:
Yeah…Ursula! Any sign of life in that twin-tub? You put Barry in there. You'll know if he comes around!

MABEL:
Ursula, I've got to leave.  I can't stay any moreThey've got Roy.


Ursula, is standing at the cooker nearby, is dressed in a short white combat jacket and pants.  Her hair is braided across her head in a Nordic fashion.  She seems somewhat distressed.

Mabel is Back: The Cherry-Shrouded Crater

EXT. GALAXY - PLANET EARTH

A Cherry Tree moves through space, releasing Imperial probe cherries
from its underside. 

One of these cherries zooms toward the planet Earth and lands on its brown surface.  An explosion marks the point of impact. 

EXT. EARTH - CHERRY CRATER - SWINDON PLAIN - DAY

A weird fruity smell rises above the scent of Ursula Pitt, stuck in her downstairs room since the disappearance of Mabel.  A strange probe-robot (looking like Mabel Watson), with several extended sensors, emerges from the cherry-shrouded crater.  The ominous mechanical woman floats across Swindon and disappears into the distance.

EXT. PLAIN OF SWINDON - DAY

Barry rides across a windswept Swindon slope.  The Hi-Viz rider is mounted on a large white milk-float. 

Barry rides up a slope and brings his milk float to a stop.  Pulling off his protective goggles, Barry notices something in the sky.  He takes a pair of electrobinoculars from his utility belt and through them sees smoke rising from where the woman had crashed. He thinks he's just seen Mabel.

The wind whips at Barry’s fur-lined Hi-Viz cap and he activates a comlink transmitter.  His milk-float shifts and groans in the cold air.

BARRY:
(into comlink)
Echo Three to Echo Seven.  Urs, old girl, do you read me?

After a little static a familiar voice is heard.

URSULA:
(over comlink)
Loud and clear, lover.  Where are you? The milk-round never usually takes this long.

BARRY:
(into comlink)
Well, I finished my round.  I am picking up life readings and I think she’s back.

URSULA:
(over comlink)There isn't enough life in Swindon to fill a milk-float!
Do you really think she’s back?

BARRY:
(into comlink). 
There's a meteorite that hit the ground near here.  I want to check it out.  It won't take long. I’ll know it’s her if I see it.

Barry clicks off his transmitter and starts up the cold milk-float. 
He pats the truck on the steering-wheel and off he goes. The float is playing up, it jerks about, appears nervous.

BARRY: 
Hey, steady old boy.  What's the matter?  You smell something?

Who Killed Mabel Watson?


DEAD POET'S FOLLY

After Agatha Christie


"So here you are, Barry," said Roy. "Assisting at a murder once again."

"You are right," said Barry. "I was called down here to assist."
"Called down to assist?" Roy looked puzzled. Barry said quickly:
"I mean, I was asked down here to give away the prizes of this murder hunt."
"So Ursula told me."
"She told you nothing else?" said Barry, with apparent carelessness. He was anxious to discover whether Ursula had given Roy any hint of the real motives which had led her to insist on Barry's journey to Devon.
"Told me nothing else? She never stopped telling me things. Every possible and impossible motive for Mabel's murder. She set my head spinning. Phew! What an imagination!"
"She earns her living by her imagination, mon ami," said Barry drily.
"She mentioned a man called Terbish - did she imagine that?"
"No, that is a sober fact."
"There was something about a poem at breakfast and a boat and coming up the canal for the launch. I couldn't make head or tail of it."
Barry embarked upon an explanation. He told of the scene at the breakfast table, the poem, Mabel's headache.
"Ursula said that Mabel was frightened. Did you think she was afraid, too?"
"That was the impression she gave me."
"Afraid of this cousin of hers? Why"
Barry shrugged his shoulders.



Exhibit 1 Share photos on twitter with Twitpic