Michael Coalhouse
by Adrian McKinty
(with apologies to Heinrich Von Kleist)
Michael Coalhouse’s war against the council began when the refuse collectors refused to empty his yellow recyclable bin because it contained non
recyclables. When he got home from work at the foundry he found a notice pinned
to the bin explaining that it "contained a non recyclable plastic bag" into which
Coalhouse had thrown all his old beer bottles.
He called
the council’s help line but it was busy. He left messages on the council’s
Facebook page but got no response. On the fourth day he went down to the council
offices on the High Street and was told that he needed to make an appointment
by email. He tried to make an appointment by email but the municipal website was
experiencing technical difficulties. He went to Councillor Smith’s constituency
surgery and told her all about his problem, but she sided with the refuse collectors and
gave him a leaflet on eco consciousness.
On the
seventh day the binmen came back and again did not empty his bin. On the eighth
day Coalhouse attended the meeting of the council’s Sustainability and Waste
Management Sub Committee. He demanded to be heard but he was tossed out by security.
At work the next day he was formally cautioned by a police officer. When the
cop had gone the foreman said that he didn’t want any troublemakers and Coalhouse was
“let go.”
Coalhouse
brooded. On the fourteenth day his bin was again not emptied. He drove to the
council offices and protested. He was accused of “making a threatening gesture”
and was asked to leave. He did so. When he got home the police were waiting for
him, so he circled the block and drove
out to his storage locker near the reservoir. He filled fourteen vodka bottles
with petrol and put a rag in each of them. That night he firebombed the council
offices and left a message with the local paper letting them know who had done
it and why.
He lived in the bush for the next
eleven months coming into the city only to mount lightning guerrilla strikes
and get supplies. He attacked the recycling plant on Gaia Street and destroyed
the council vehicle depot on Evergreen Terrace, an incendiary attack that wiped
out the city’s entire fleet of bin lorries. He sank a garbage barge anchored in
the bay by means of a home made limpet mine. He released baby alligators into
the storm drains and used on site methane to blow up the city’s main sewage
plant. Two days after that outrage Mayor Cunningham returned home from the
Single Mother Initiative Open Day to find his house on fire and his garden
gnomes beheaded.
You didn’t need to be Foucault to
read the death spiral subtext.
Peace feelers were sent out over
Community Action Radio. Helicopters dropped leaflets on the forest where
Coalhouse was suspected of being holed up. Coalhouse agreed to surrender himself if
his yellow bin was emptied and Jimmy Carter, Stephen Hawking and Fiona Apple
were brought in as official witnesses. Only Carter was available and Coalhouse
said that that would do.
Coalhouse surrendered the same
night and was remanded in custody without possibility of bail. He faced
multiple counts of arson and criminal damage and a possibility of thirty years
in prison.
The recyclable bin was emptied on
the 14th. Jimmy Carter officially certified the fact a day later.

42 comments:
This is my first attempt at Flash Fiction, so be kind...
I'm told that the rules are that there are no rules so long as the piece is in prose and under 500 words. Check and check.
oh and someone online said it has to be written in 60 minutes. check.
Charming, but I'm OT-I just read on Declan Burke's blog that your CCG is about to be published in the US. So happy for you, and I'll have to buy another copy for you. Enjoy!
Lil
Yeah it was a long time coming but its a coming.
Adrian , for what it' s worth I found it totally convincing but Jimmy Carter was at my house on the 15 th which leaves a gaping hole in your story !
I don' t know if you're aware of this but in the UK you can be fined if you put your wheelie bin out too early (£80).This is true !
Neil
80 quid for leaving your bins out early?!!! what a bloody scandal. My blood would boil.
I liked the garden gnome part.
By the way, The Cold Cold Ground gets a very nice description in the comments to this post: http://bookriot.com/2012/05/31/riot-round-up-the-best-of-what-we-read-in-may/
Speedskater
The audio version of course. I get a lot of reflected glory from G Doyle.
Don't sell yourself short, Adrian. Doyle is a great reader, but it takes a lot more than a great reader to make a great audiobook. I doubt if he narrated a lesser work that the author would get comments like that one.
Beaut! I'm with Coalhouse a all the way.
This is really very nice blog i have visit and really very impressed from your ideas..
Thank you for post..
Maybe we can get some Flash Fiction about the Yankees in the post-season this year.
The alligators will be his final revenge.
Paul
Me too.
Matt
It'll have to be a story about the trade of Manny B Jose Campos and Phil Hughes for King Felix who then goes on to dominate the post season.
Randy
Oh yeah, hopefully one of them will mutate into a giant killer mutant.
Gee, I had never heard any sixty-minute rule. But since everyone knows that Internet fosters creativity, instead of complaining, I'll invent the category of 60-minute-plus flash fiction.
Peter
Isnt that the flash aspect? Thats what I read somewhere. 60 minutes, stream of consciousness, minimal editing...
I may be wrong though. I'm not au courant with all the hip things happening.
Like it, although I'll confess i never understand the point of flash fiction. Its the bastard child of 20/20 cricket I reckon
I somehow missed this when you put it up. Goes along pretty well with Blundell's "well-known appetite for redemptive violence and seriously cool appreciation of characters who reject conformity", I'd say.
But it also goes along with my analysis, which is that you are pretty damn funny.
Nice job. I need to pop in here more often.
Thought this was going to be a short story about a superhero who runs really fast. My bad!
I remember this one, and the pick is well deserved. I hadn't read the Heinrich Von Kleist bit before though. Michael comes to a better end than his real life forefather.
I should add that for some reason, these reposts don't pop to the top of my ways of following this blog, so not everyone may see this news. Not that I have any idea how anyone else keeps track of the blog world these days.
Matt
Sheldon would have liked that.
Seana
The book is excellent. And there have been a couple of modern remakes, one I think by E L Doctorow...
Ragtime is all I've ever been able to read of Doctorow's, which isn't a reflection on him, although I wasn't wild about that one.
You'll be happy to know that one of my friends and coworkers just gave five stars to From Dawn to Decadence, which I think I helped push him towards, thanks to reading about it here first. Of course I've only got halfway through it myself so far, but that's just me. I asked him how he had managed it so fast and he said that he was driven to find out what the decadence was all about.
Great piece of fiction. It's about the nature of bureaucracy, that even when it is the best-intentioned and politically correct bureaucracy, it is still a bureaucracy and dumb to the point of absurdity.
It is written in newspaper-speak and the details in this piece are delightful.
Bravo!
I was just thinking about you, as last night I finished up listening to FIFTY GRAND, courtesy of our local public library. This Paula Christensen who did the audiobook narration was very, very good.
Olathe Mantel has won Costa for ButB...
our local independent bookshop has several of your books A - CCG, FG and DY.. And by the door, pride of place, on their bestseller and new titles shelves IHtSitS. Good old Webberleys in Stoke-on-Trent
God knows what is up with the auto spellchecker - Hilary Mantel of course
Seana
Such a great book D to D, not only for its educational value but also because of its lovely witty prose style.
Rich
Thanks for that!
If you could possibly give her a review on audible that would be great. They've been pretty mean about her narrating skills over there but I thought she did a lovely job.
Deb
Thriller of the year in my opinion. Such a fast, exciting book.
yes, I'd say IHtSitS is thriller of the year so far!
Michael Coalhouse,Michael Forsythe,Sean Duffy….ye gads,my world is being peopled by Adrian Mckinty .Yesterday ,I even read a bit of Lorca in New York .I am truly delighted to have encountered a man of many parts who has the rare gift of being able to share a vision of different worlds whose inhabitants dream of quests for love ,truth and maybe the vanquishing of lonelieness.Best Alan New Mexico
Sorry for (again) an off topic comment. I hope I'm not annoying anyone.
But, I'm a college basketball fan, and I can't help but be reminded of Carrickfergus and Adrian McKinty when I read the name "Carrick Felix," who plays for basketball Arizona State University in Tempe, AZ,
http://www.thesundevils.com/sports/m-baskbl/mtt/carrick_felix_731447.html
Deb
You are too kind!
Alan
That Lorca in New York will do you a power of good, I promise. As for the McKinty, well, the jury's still out...
Speedskater
Carrick Felix is cool.
Have you been watching Boardwalk Empire? Big up on the song Carrickfergus over there. I havent actually seen it but the meme is all over the shop...
http://lousybookcovers.tumblr.com/
Just for a little amusement.. I can't believe these designs!!!
thanks for share..
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