THE TIME-SWEEPERS by URSULA WILL JONES
You may not be familiar with the time-sweepers. The
time-sweepers are the people who sweep up all the time that is lost and wasted.
You cannot see them, though if you are in the railway station and think you see
something out of the corner of your eye, that will probably be a time-sweeper,
cleaning up around the bench you are sitting on. If you were to see them, you
would find a small, bluish person with an intent expression, clutching a broom
and a mop. The men wear overalls, the women old-fashioned tweed skirts and
scarves on their head.
The time-sweepers are present
wherever time is being lost or wasted. There are always several in train
stations, and at least one in every doctors surgery. The man who has waited so
long to propose to his girlfriend that her hair has gone grey, probably has his
own personal time-sweeper following him around. The woman who has spent
thirty-five loathed years in an estate agents, dreaming of opening a florists,
causes the neighbourhood time-sweeper to sigh, and fetch a bigger dustpan.
You should not feel sorry for the
time-sweepers, though their work is menial: they are never sick, do not worry
that they are in the wrong career, and have excellent working conditions,
though what they do for leisure is unknown. They enjoy bank holidays off, which
is why, on these days, there seems so much more time than usual. At Christmas
and new year, the time-sweepers have a week's holiday. When they return to work
in January, they face a vast backlog of time which has been lost, wasted and
thrown away over the holidays. It takes them around three weeks to resume
normal service, which is why January always seems to last longer than other
months.
The time-sweepers have been around
forever, though modern life has created wasted time in such large
concentrations that in some places the time-sweepers have been forced to
industrialise their operations, buying a number of specialised compressing
lorries similar to those used by ordinary bin-men. They use these for the
largest collections, at prisons and shopping malls, two venues where the tide
of wasted time threatens to swamp even the most dedicated operatives.
Were you to ask a time-sweeper,
they would tell you one surprising thing: time enjoyed is never time wasted.
Cleaning up in a large office full of staggering tedium, the time-sweeper will
pass straight by the desk of the woman who is reading a holiday catalogue under
the desk, poring over photos of tropical beaches. They will pass by the next
desk, where a man is enjoyably wondering what his mother-in-law looks like
naked, and stop by the desk of the young man who is counting every minute, and
loathing the hours.
You may wonder what happens to the
wasted time after it has all been cleaned up. Never fear, the time-sweepers are
ardent recyclers. It is collected, packed into large containers, moved to
Liverpool docks, loaded onto a ship, and taken to India. There, in a dusty
industrial estate somewhere near Bombay, it is cleaned, sorted, and graded. The
most toxic and poisoned time – the residues of failed peace negotiations,
wrongful imprisonments and truly poisonous marriages, is skimmed off and buried
in a tank underneath a disused army base. There, it will take two or three
centuries to decay, and become harmless again.
The rest of the time – made up of
stuff such as dull meetings, missed appointments, delayed buses and bad nights
at the theatre, is cleaned and put back onto a ship, where it is taken to the
Guangzhou industrial export processing zone. Here it is compressed and stored,
awaiting redistribution. Around twenty percent goes direct to the factories of
the export processing zone, which has the world's highest productivity rate. A
quarter is bought in hard dollars by the Chinese government. Ten percent of the
most concentrated stuff is sold to a cryogenics laboratory in California.
Another twenty or so percent is discreetly sold to a variety of rich private
clients, mostly old, rich men who have married beautiful young women.
However, the time-sweepers are not
in it for profit. The money from these deals pays for their operations,
including dusters, bin-bags, overalls and shipping. The rest is distributed to
good causes. No-one who gets any extra time has to fill in any forms, or ask
for a grant. They are all quite unaware that they are in receipt of assistance.
One of these beneficiaries is a shabby and overtired scientist in a crumbling
public laboratory outside Novosibirsk, who will be the man to find the vaccine
for malaria. Another is a prostitute in a Nairobi slum who has fostered
seventeen children, and who, despite twenty years in the business, never falls
ill. A third is the Indian taxi-driver in a cramped flat in Toronto, who, in
between sending money home to a sick wife and children, is writing what will
later be acknowledged as the greatest novel of the century.
Not all the recipients of the
time-sweepers' largesse are people. About forty miles outside Timbuktu, a
medieval mosque, buried in sand, receives a delivery every decade or so.
Somewhere below the floor in the Aegean sea, a Trojan galley is miraculously
preserved in mud. Similarly, the time-sweepers gift a little extra time to a
temple in Mexico, and preserve a haul of dark-age treasure in a Galway bog.
A certain amount of charitable
time is kept back for emergency situations, both small and large. It is
parachuted in in times of desperation, and has facilitated peace deals, changed
battles, and allowed numerous fathers to make it to the delivery room in time.
The time-sweepers are, by their
very nature, a tidy and orderly sort of people. They wish that humans would
think more about throwing away this valuable commodity, but don't expect it'll
happen any time soon.
There isn't a moral to this story.
It's just that if you are planning on throwing away your time, please
remember - somebody has to pick it up.
COMMENT
A
rare thing, an original idea. And well executed. There is a logic in how the
timesweepers do their job, why it needs done and what is done with the time. I
firmly believe that stories of pure imagination like this have to create and
rigidly stick to the rules of their imagination universe. This does. There are
too many stories on this site that are just descriptive pieces or a snapshot of
a life. This is above that level.
I am impressed and gave 5 stars for the first time since looking at stories on this site.
I am impressed and gave 5 stars for the first time since looking at stories on this site.
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