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    Worst. Person. Ever.


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      ALSO BY DOUGLAS COUPLAND

      Fiction

      Generation X

      Shampoo Planet

      Life After God

      Microserfs

      Girlfriend in a Coma

      Miss Wyoming

      All Families Are Psychotic

      Hey Nostradamus!

      Eleanor Rigby

      J Pod

      The Gum Thief

      Generation A

      Highly Inappropriate Tales for Young People (with Graham Roumieu)

      Player One

      Non-fiction

      Polaroids from the Dead

      City of Glass

      Souvenir of Canada

      Souvenir of Canada 2

      Terry

      Extraordinary Canadians: Marshall McLuhan

      PUBLISHED BY RANDOM HOUSE CANADA

      COPYRIGHT © 2013 DOUGLAS COUPLAND

      All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Published in 2013 by Random House Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto, and simultaneously in the United Kingdom by Heinemann, a division of The Random House Group Limited, London, and in the United States of America by Blue Rider Press, a division of Penguin U.S., New York. Distributed in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited.

      www.randomhouse.ca

      Random House Canada and colophon are registered trademarks.

      This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

      Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Coupland, Douglas, author

      Worst. Person. Ever. / Douglas Coupland.

      eISBN: 978-0-345-81375-6

      I. Title.

      PS8555.O8253W67 2013 C813′.54 C2013-902352-6

      Cover image: JIANG HONGYAN/Shutterstock.com

      v3.1

      This book began, improbably, as an attempt in McSweeney’s No. 31 to reinvigorate the biji, a genre in classical Chinese literature. Biji roughly translates as “notebook,” and can contain anecdotes, quotations, random musings, philological speculations, literary criticism and anything that the author deems worth recording. The genre first appeared during the Wei and Jin dynasties, and matured during the Tang dynasty. The biji of that period mostly contain the “believe-it-or-not” kind of anecdote, and many of them can be treated as collections of short fictions. My thanks to Graham Weatherly, Darren Franich, Jordan Bass and Dave Eggers. You’ve made me feel like Cher getting an Oscar.

      Contents

      Cover

      Other Books by This Author

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Acknowledgements

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      Chapter 21

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Chapter 43

      Chapter 44

      Chapter 45

      Chapter 46

      Chapter 47

      Chapter 48

      Chapter 49

      Chapter 50

      Chapter 51

      Chapter 52

      Chapter 53

      Chapter 54

      Chapter 55

      About the Author

      01

      Dear Reader …

      Like you, I consider myself a reasonable enough citizen. You know: live life in moderation, enjoy the occasional YouTube clip of frolicking otters and kittens, perhaps overtip a waitress who makes the effort to tart herself up a bit, or maybe just make the effort to try to be nice to the poor—yay, poor people!

      I suppose, in general, I enjoy travelling through life with a certain Jason Bourne–like dashingness. Oh no! An assassin is rappelling down the side of the building, armed with a dozen Stanley knives! What are we going to do? It’s Raymond Gunt! We’re saved!

      That’s my name, Raymond Gunt, and welcome to my world. I don’t know about you, but I believe that helping others is a way of helping yourself; what goes around comes around—karma and all that guff. So, seeing that I’m such a good soul and all, I really don’t know how to explain the most recent month of my life. There I was, at home in West London, just trying to live as best I could—karma, karma, karma, sunshine and lightness!—when, out of nowhere, the universe delivered unto me a searing hot kebab of vasectomy leftovers drizzled in donkey jizz.

      Whuzzat?! Hello, universe? It’s me, Raymond! What the fuck!

      I am left, dear reader, with no other option than to believe that when my world turned to shit last month, it was not, in fact, me who had done anything wrong. Rather, it was the universe, for I, Raymond Gunt, am a decent chap who always does the right thing.

      And as I look back to try to figure out when the universe and I veered away from each other, I think it definitely had to be that ill-starred morning when I made the mistake of visiting my leathery cumdump of an ex-wife, Fiona.

      Fi.

      It was a blighted Wednesday off Charing Cross Road. After about fifty ignored emails, Fi deigned to allow me to come to her office, in a gleaming steel-and-limestone executive tombstone that straddles one of those tiny streets near Covent Garden. The building’s lobby was redeemed by being filled with heaps of that 1990s art about death and fucking—pickled goats, fried eggs and tampons—and there was a faint hissing sound as I passed through it and into the elevator, the sound of my soul being sucked out of me, ever so nicely, thank you.

      Behind her desk sat Fiona, elfin, her pixie hair dyed a cruel black. She cocked an eyebrow at me. “Jesus, Raymond, I’ve seen rhesus monkeys that look hotter than you.” She was busy piling caviar atop a Ritz cracker.

      “Lovely to see you, too, dear.”

      Her office was well-oiled leather and chiselled steel, a fine enough reflection of her method of handling daily life. What was painfully evident was that Fi was minting money with her casting agency. The joke was on me for having suggested that she give the casting gig a try. She’s an expert at meeting people and figuring out instantly what their personal style of lying is and how to make it work for them. What else is acting, if not that?

      But you do need to know that Fi is a dreadful, dreadful, dreadful person. She is monstrous. She is the Anti-shag. She is an atomic bomb of pain. If you puncture her skin, a million baby spiders will explode from her body and devour you alive, pupating your remains, all the while making little squeaking noises that will taunt you while you die in excruciating agony.

      And yet …

      … and yet there i
    s something about Fi’s, um, musk. I can loathe her at a distance, but up close that scent overrides every other emotion I harbour for the woman: murderous rage, bilious hatred and not a small degree of fear. Fi is the only woman who’s ever had this effect on me. All the crap I’ve put up with just for a whiff of her: all the times she’s fucked me over, looted my bank account, stolen my pills and trash-talked me all the way from Heathrow to Stansted. My inability to overcome this most primal of attractions has been the downfall of my life. There is no other way to explain one of nature’s most catastrophic and implausible pairings, but I guess that’s what any chap says about his wife.

      As I entered her office, Proustian recollections of our time together swam in my head. I felt poetic and wistful.

      “One moment, Raymond.” Fi removed a black onyx stash box of coke from a desk drawer, sprinkled some of it on top of the caviar, and began to demolish her snack, conveniently forgetting to invite me to join in. The noises from her mouth were like randomly typed keys: “Vbv bdlkfnsld jz slvbds lbfbakl.”

      “Looks delicious, dear.”

      Suddenly she leaned back in her chair and began coughing out mouthloads of crackers and caviar. “Vbn. Sfhejwbe cfbiqq fflekh!!!”

      Heimlich: yes or no? “Dear?”

      She waved me away and finally shot a cluster of sturgeon eggs out her nostril. “Fucking hell.” She used a nearby letter to fan her face. The crisis seemed to have passed. “Ooh. There. Finally it’s gone,” she said.

      “What is?”

      “The food trapped in my esophagus. It’s in my stomach now.”

      “Fucking hell, that’s disgusting, Fi.”

      “How is that disgusting, Ray?”

      “It’s like you’ve just taken a massive shit inside yourself.”

      Fi burst into a cackle. “Sometimes I miss your childlike take on the world, Raymond.” She smiled at me.

      “Fi, look, just give me a fucking shooting assignment. I’m three months behind on my rent.”

      “Stop throwing your money away on dildos and Asian preteen porn, darling. Then you won’t always be broke.”

      “I don’t go to Thailand, dear. Nor am I into goats and gerbils.”

      “So what did you really spend all your money on?”

      “Fi, need you be such a raging twat?”

      “Coke bill overdue?”

      “Coke’s a bit out of my league these days.” I glanced over at her door to see a pink silk ascot tied around the knob. “Hmmm. What about you—into autoerotic asphyxiation these days?”

      “Oh, don’t mention autoerotic asphyxiation to me! Fucking entertainers! All these actors and musicians ever want to do is strangle themselves while they’re getting off. I can’t believe more of them haven’t died.”

      “How does that whole strangling thing work, anyway? I mean, do actors recite a bit of Hamlet, sing a song or two and then suddenly, Oi! I’m famous and I think I’d better go strangle myself while I come!?”

      “Pretty much. And you’d think they’d hire someone to babysit them while they do it.”

      “Yes, but that would wreck the fun, wouldn’t it? ‘Ooh! I can’t breathe! Help me! Help me!’ Not very sexy at all. Chances are your babysitter would be so repulsed by your lack of commitment she’d let you hang anyway.”

      “I keep the ascot there to give my clients proper hanging lessons. The DIY sites on the Internet are hopeless, and a dead client is a client who’s no longer making me money.”

      I looked at Fiona’s beloved onyx coke box with sad beagle eyes.

      “Blow!” said Fi. “Excellent idea.” She dived in.

      God only knows how badly I was salivating at this impudent display of purchasing clout. She vacuumed two rails, wiped her nostrils and said, “I like to see you grovel and be deprived of drugs. Life is good.”

      “You ball-curdling witch. What is your problem?”

      “My problem is you, Raymond darling. I don’t like having you in the same city as me.”

      “Can’t say I like it much, either.”

      “Yes, but the thing is that you, darling, are a failure. When people bump into you, they justifiably equate me with you, and you have to imagine how that makes me feel.” She put the coke box back into her drawer. “I really can’t have that, at least not until a few more years have gone by and all memory of you and your rapidly accelerating downward failure spiral has faded away like a pensioner’s capacity for long division.”

      “I see.” I leaned back in my chair. “I seem to remember a much younger version of you making bedroom eyes at me from the floor of the 1992 Daytime BAFTA Awards when (if I may pat myself on the back here) I accepted my trophy for Best Hand-held Camera Work in a cooking or DIY home-improvement show.”

      “You have to stop living in the past, Raymond.” She made her oh-why-not face. “How would you like a camera gig in the sun-kissed Pacific, ogling young beauties all day, just you and your shoulder cam?”

      I kept silent, awaiting the catch.

      “There’s no catch, darling.”

      “What’s the catch?”

      Fiona sighed. “Paranoia has never looked good on you, Raymond. Here I am offering to rescue you from your prison cell of a life and you make me sound cruel and vindictive.”

      “What’s the catch?”

      “I don’t know if I’d call it a catch, per se …”

      “What’s the catch?”

      “Darling, you would have to work for Americans.”

      “Jesus fucking Christ.”

      “Sorry, darling, but take it or leave it. A friend, Sarah, handles the people for a U.S. network and she owes me a favour.”

      “Who’s this Sarah, then?”

      “She’s—well, I’m hoping one day she’ll become my … special friend.”

      Doubtless some filthy labia-chewing swamp raccoon. “For God’s sake, you’re not still tinkering with lesbianism, are you?”

      “If trying to grow as a person is a crime, I stand accused.” Fi clasped her hands together on her desk like a schoolgirl. “Sarah, like me, is only trying to expand her world, and I like to think of myself as a nurturing, mentoring woman.”

      I snickered.

      “Take it or leave it, Raymond. At the count of three I rescind the offer. One, two—”

      “I’ll take it.”

      “Go talk to Billy.”

      Her face became all business. It was as if I were no longer in the room as she stared down at her iPad and began browsing through toddlersroastingonaspit.com. She said, “Go on. Billy will arrange your flights and your visa for Kiribati. Lovely place. Whores growing on trees, from what I hear. Coke bushes around every corner.”

      After a moment she looked up me. “Really, Ray—be a love and fuck off. And as you leave, Billy will offer you a complimentary bottle of water and some sanitizing hand wipes. Cold and flu season.”

      “It’s a wonder Billy hasn’t been strangled with a shoelace by one of those man-sluts he arse-rapes nightly out on Hampstead Heath.”

      From behind me I heard, “Those days are over, Raymond. I have found love and am a reformed man.” Billy appeared, as polished and moisturized as a daffodil salesman at Harrods, but incongruously dressed like a Canadian lumberjack out for a day of chopping down a forest of larches.

      “Oh. Hello, Billy.”

      “Hello, Raymond.”

      I had no mirth in my heart for Billy, and I remain convinced Billy was part of the chorus saying “Dump the bastard” back during the divorce.

      “Going to Kiribati, I hear. Lovely place.”

      “Let’s just do the paperwork.”

      “Manners, please.”

      “Or else what?”

      “Be rude to me one more time and I’ll go online and start a wicked, wicked rumour about you.”

      “Like what?”

      “Like …” Billy paused a second. “I know: I’ll go into an online chat room posing as you.”

      My interest was piqued: “What kind of chat room?”

      “A shit-eating chat room. I’m sure t
    here must be hundreds of them. And once there, I start the rumour that you, Raymond Gunt, are a … a log hog.”

      “You wouldn’t.”

      “Wouldn’t I? Or maybe I’d invent some other scarier category … I know: you’re into funnel cakes.”

      Fi cackled with glee and then her phone rang, a zithering that made my spinal hairs rise. “Both of you—out,” she ordered. “That’s my Bollywood line. Without the rise of the Indian middle classes and their zest for quality English-language entertainment, I’d still be rolling in the muck like you. Now fuck off, Ray. Really. And enjoy the South Pacific or wherever this Kiribati shithole is.”

      Not putting a trapdoor opening into a cobra pit past her, I fucked off. Billy followed me into the hall. He said, “FYI, you get to have an assistant with you on this gig.”

      “An assistant?”

      “Yes. All they need is a valid passport and the ability to tolerate you day and night.”

      I didn’t absorb what Billy said next. My brain stopped at the word “assistant”—the joy! On a fly speck of coral dust in the middle of the ocean with no labour laws, no police and most likely no witnesses to whatever punishments I might dole out to my assistant—or rather, my slave. A lifelong dream of human ownership was coming true.

      “… and so I’ll email you shortly. Goodbye, Raymond.”

      “Right. Yes. Goodbye, Billy.”

      Down on the street I looked at my BlackBerry: it was a Wednesday, fuck it, always my bad luck day. I then sort of spaced out looking at the phone’s screen. Wednesday … Wednesday … Wednesday … what the fuck is a “Wednes”? I mean, for Christ’s sake, think about it.

      Wednesday comes from the Middle English Wednes dei, which is from Old English Wõdnesdæg, meaning the day of the English Woden (Wodan), a god revered in Anglo-Saxon England until about the eighth century. Wõden, or Woden in Modern English, is the head god in English heathenism.

      So wait a second … this guy, Woden, gets a whole fucking day named after him? Do we have no say in this matter? Let’s rename Wednesday something better, like, say, James Bond. And we can call Thursday Hitler and Saturday Tits and … You get the idea.

      I looked up and saw that I was once again inside that wretched, unwieldy dump people call the real world. I rode home on a series of buses, and what is a bus but failure crystallized into the form of two storeys of metal, painted red, hurled out into the world to hoover up losers from the streets of London.

     


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