Jani Ojala - ICE ROAD -- Chapter 2: The Head lyrics

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Jani Ojala - ICE ROAD -- Chapter 2: The Head lyrics

A black sedan parked in the driveway of a house with red, wooden walls – Miska's. Out of the car, came Tapani, unobtrusively wiping sweat off his forehead and proceeding to the backyard, in a hurry. The backdoor of the garage was open. That's where he'd be. Tapani rushed into the garage and saw Miska rolling the decapitated head of some a**hole on the floor. Miska looked up, startled, and then recognized his friend. They both fell tacit. This even real? Tapani looked at the head and felt something with no explanatory words for it. He looked his friend in the eye. A new level to the depth in the look on Miskas eyes emerged; like they were asking for help. — ”I am rather speechless.” Tapani informed his buddy. Miska continued rolling the dead head to the gra** of the backyard. — Don't f**ing take it out! Where do you think it's going? Under your backyard? — ”Are there any other ideas!?” Miska shouted. Tapani just gazed. He didn't even want to think about what he was witnessing. Miska was morose still, and he expressed that by glares at his buddy, who could care less – he was still in a mixture of amazement and fright about that human head on the floor. — ”…You got a smoke, by the way?” he asked, turning to look at his friend. — I think I do, not sure. My mind's been racing the whole morning and I've been chain-smoking like a motherf**er. Miska slipped his right palm into a jacket-pocket and flapped the hem of his open jacket around in search of floaters. He ripped the pack out and offered it. Tapani got it. A cigarette slid out to his palm and he placed it in between his lips, then looking inside the open pack. — ”There's three left.” He stated. — Oh, yeah, coo'. — Here, you take one too. — No. I'm feeling weak. — Doesn't matter, take it now. Miska silently consented. He put a cigarette in his mouth, and as he was toking on it, the blowin' wind made him turn his eyes, and they'd meet the sight of that human head again. He took the next small hit, blew it out against the wind. The head fell down on its ear, and caught Tapani's attention as well. — ”Alright this has taken enough”, Miska said, frustrated. ”Do you have any idea what to do with this? I trust that you can say at least something... Maybe offer a more objective view, sh**, I don't know what I want, but this much I do know: I don't wanna get--” — ”--How'd he die?” Tapani shamelessly interrupted. Miska turned a tired and nervous look to his buddy, starting to explain: — I k**ed him. We was having an argument about something very very… close to heart… He wasn't-- — --Yeah I don't care about your fight. You know what? I might have an idea. — Oh please, do tell. Your thoughts are specifically what I've been waiting to hear the whole night and the rainy morning. And God only knows, you got those; enough to fill a book. — ”Thanks, I suppose... Well, my thoughts are: the decapitation you've already done, was the right start...” Tapani explained his side, while watching Miska put the head back up, standing on its neck. ”…A step in the right direction. But don't roll it out to the backyard! You don't even have a hole and those neighbors are bound to see you mysteriously digging a mysterious hole – which you won't be finishing in hours, not with that back – and you'll have to stay up the whole night doing it. Miska, these things are doable and all, you can do it on the low and get away with it, but please… Use your head.” — I didn't ask you here to make stupid f**ing jokes. — Ask? — Oh my God... — The first thing that you do is stay calm. Take in some air once in a while, focus on the slow and glorious burn of that cigarette, or whatever you're doing at the moment. It's all about the moment. Think about those repetitive, yet inviting, routine-esque shapes in that cloud of smoke you breathe out. Everybody has a reason for picking up this dangerous habit. Be it the guilty pleasure, temporarily clearing your throat, looking more busy or businesslike than you are, or just relaxing. Whatever the reason is, own it, be one with it and let it… be. Don't focus on the severed human head which you mercilessly cut off from the live human being, who probably has a family and a-- — ”Stop f**ing f**ing around, you're not funny!” Miska yelled. — ”Alright, let's just get in now and cut it up inside”, spoke Tapani, fully focused, not a sign of fatigue in his posture anymore. Funny how that happened. He picked up the head and walked in the house through the garage-door, holding it. Miska was still sitting around at the exit-door. Alluva sudden, Tapani yelled at him: — Why do you have so many rolls of garbage-bags, though? Don't bullsh** me, Miska; you were planning on this. There's three of these. — There are? Well I must'a overbought them. I can't recall. I'm stressed. — I still don't buy it for sh** that you're stressed over taking a life. You've done that before. — ”Will you f**ing shut the f** up and get in?!” Miska clapped back. HALF AN HOUR LATER: Tapani was standing in front of a window, at the end of the upstairs-hallway of Miska's house, smoking a cigarette. He quit oggling at the cigarette and positioned it in between his lips, took a couple of quick revitalizing tokes while simultaneously blowing out the nose, blinked and zoomed his sight into the stone courtyard. A little mumble was heard from the left. Oddly reluctant, he turned to look. — ”Holy f** I can't do this I can't do this.” He heard Miska repeat. ≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈ There's a feeling I get When I look to the west ≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈ Miska walked alarmingly fast – he rarely ran for/from anything, and was close to that now – to the open window Tapani was having a smoke-break at. Tapani saw it, ducked out the way, but was pushed before he could. The cigarette dropped in the midst of the long hairs of the carpet, diagonally. Neither one noticed; Tapani was checking on his buddy, who was leaning on the window, heavily and indecisively taking hurried breaths. With time, he started sounding like himself again, and Tapani took this chance to quickly get a word in: But he couldn't. — ”Well?” Miska asked a rhetorical question. — What? — Well, be a smarta** again. Ha ha, Miska gets fits from disposing a body, ha ha ha, Miska wasn't such an old school guy after all, Miska's scared of washing dirty laundry. — You really should stop with that self-blaming and those suppositions. They're probably what got you carried away this time, too. — Whatever. — Well what do you think it comes from? Do you think it's the changing weathers, circumstances or what? Anxiety's very common, but all the more mysterious. — You wanna know something? Huh, you smart-mouth f**? — ”Well...” Tapani said, trying hard to do a delicate job in choosing the next word to come out of his mouth. ”Shoot?” — I've been having this for over a year. It's taken over me every time I do this... At one point last winter I couldn't get sleep for the d**h of me because of these. That's right, I've been a mental case for over a year! There's something for you and Samuli to gossip and laugh about to your f**ing out-of-town friends. — …What do you honestly expect me to say to that? You're blaming me now? — You'll figure out something smart soon, pull in all you big fancy words and philosophies. No one is totally bored of listening to you already. — Wasn't my input exactly what you invited me here for? — f** you. Miska stood up and looked at his friend dead in the eyes. There was a silence before the two guys, as they stood there, facing each other, getting nowhere. — ”You're not even trying to listen.” Tapani said, as he turned away, and started walking down the hallway. As he was walking, he heard Miska yell out: — You're such a f**ing hypocrite! — I hope you f**ing choke next time. Tapani left, and the house was consumed by silence, only broken by the Van Morrison record – Astral Weeks – playing in the background. ”To be born again... ...To be born again... ...In another world... ...In another world... ...In another time.” Suddenly, Miska spit a mouthful in the air, letting it land wherever it may. He caught onto his breath again, and started walking back to the room he just came out of – getting back to work. ELSEWHERE: Samuli Leinonen, a 26 year-old normal-height, normal-looking young gent, opened his eyes, stared at the roof of his room for a minute, closed his eyes, opened them again and kept on blinking until his throat would clear up and he was able to call out: — Veera! You up? — ”Hold up!” Yelled a quiet, cute female voice from a few rooms away. Following the instructions of the voice, Samuli got up, slow, steady. He sat on the edge of the bed, and saw Veera coming. — ”Good morning.” Said she. — ”Mooorrning...” Samuli muttered back at her. ”My stuff, is it ready?” — ”Yeah. It is”, Veera replied. By half-an-accident, Samuli laid his eyes on a snake-tattoo that was covering his girlfriend's arm, as she asked him: — Listen… I know it won't help your stress out, that I'm asking about work, but... Why were you so tense yesterday? Where did you-- Samuli looked at Veera with a sense of warning in the eyes. Silence followed. — ”No, go ahead”, said Samuli with awfully mixed signals, while simultaneously making quick work of putting on his shirt and jumping in his pants. — But what you need the hammer for? Samuli, really. You gotta tell me right away if the Gym's in trouble. — It's not. Just a precaution. You know how long it's been since there was even conflict. The guys just keep on talking about how they feel pressure brewing. I know it's nothing serious; I carry it with me mostly to satisfy them. — Alright. Well, remember, you call my brother right away if you need help… of any kind. I'm serious. — ”I'll keep you up to date.” Samuli a**ured. ”You're worrying over nothing.” Side by side was the way they walked themselves to the kitchen. Samuli reached to the table, took a brown paper-bag as Veera looked at him with concern. She was quiet. He reached closer to her, landed a quick routine-kiss on her forehead and told her: — I'll be back pretty early. Maybe by four, if I'm lucky. He took a gun, laying on the table next to the bag, in his right palm. Holding the bag with the other hand, the gun with the other, he walked out the front door. ELSEWHERE: Tapani scrolled along Miska's stone courtyard, back in the daze. The daze. That's what it's referred to, now. Miska rushed to him from the backyard, looking at him with rehearsed bullsh** remorse. — ”Don't go anywhere now! I mean it.” Miska yelled out. Tapani stopped and turned to look. He faced those remorseful eyes and felt a sense of guilty pride. — ”Sorry...” Miska clumsily pronounced. ”You realize I was upset, right? I don't do this everyday, and the smell... Come on, help me, please?” Tapani looked at the trees next to him, which were just pa**ing by him slowly, just a minute ago... He couldn't let his eyes, or that thought, go. Why. Why the fu*k am I paying attention to those now? Why not, say, the situation instead? Tapani! Wake Up! For real. The phone. Tapani's phone vibrated in the front-left pocket. He reached to get it, and stopped to watch the rocks, completely forgetting Miska, who was looking at him. The colors on those stones turned… more vivid, as he kept looking. The sun had been coming up fast enough for the eye to notice the small differences. — ”I'm coming to Miska's. Did it happen?” Samuli's voice spoke to him from the phone. — Huh? What you mean? — Miska. He told me yesterday that he might need some help early in the morning, just in case he can't keep himself under control. There was a silence. Tapani laid a knowing, blaming look on Miska, who was still staring. — ”Anxiety, my dick...” Tapani mumbled out to himself, too quietly for either Miska or Samuli to hear. — Huh? — ”Are you coming?” Miska finally spoke up. — ”Tapani? What's going on in there?” Samuli's voice asked through the phone. Tapani looked at Miska in the eyes, silently, leaving both his friends without an answer. It lasted a while. Miska took a cautionary step back. — ”Yeah”, Tapani said to the phone in the middle of it. ”He couldn't keep himself under control. Just like he told you yesterday, but neglected to tell me, even when I was cleaning up his mess. Definitely stop by.” Tapani walked past Miska, heading to the garage. Miska was quiet and awkward. Tapani stopped at the door of the garage, turned to look at Miska with disappointment, with blame. — You're such a f**ing hypocrite.