Skip to content

Cybernetics and Ghosts: A Response to Italo Calvino

Caught

A short story by Beirut-born author Sara Saab, whose fiction has appeared in Clarkesworld, Shimmer and The White Review.

by Sara Saab

4th March 2023
"The error caught us around the corner from the last pub that spat us out. The story he was telling about his father's racing greyhounds became one long syllable…"

The error caught us around the corner from the last pub that spat us out. It lanced through the world right there in front of Star Fish Bar, above whose signage a very fine mist sparkled in the eco-friendly LED of a Camden streetlight. Achille was the first that the error sliced in its cryptic way, and the story that he was telling Lina about his father’s racing greyhounds became one long syllable – well, long and stretched and then very pitiable – the sound a mammal makes before it is inside-out, viscera pasted to tarmac. Well, Achille was just fine, and it was Lina and I who were left to understand that we were to live like this now, that we were meant to parse this, and go on.

And you know the human ability to just plaster over error and remain. But then, we all do it. Look at Lina. All night she has entertained herself with a riddle: imagine a leafy tree heavy with chicken’s eggs, some of them fresh, and some of them rotten. Lina is the upstanding kind of person who can order chips and curry sauce, and even remember about cash-only, all the while riddled, scalloped, by errors. She taught herself how to pretend to be human. So, when the error that found us grazed Lina, what she thought about was the moment a third and final egg is cracked over the skillet. And how at home she was in her misery; in her citalopram; in grey; her mask; that stalactite of wet at the tip of her nose; sour cherry vape; and her scarf even though she hated its tassels. Well. And Achille and I, we saw maybe a second of her reborn as – not someone else – but herself with many, many mouths, and all of them pursed tight.

And so, the error’s touch on the back, finally, of my own hand – disconnected-number tinnitus, and Achille and Lina floating headlessly in view, their heads a refraction apart and beatific in the smudged glass storefront of Classic Shoe Repair, Est. 1995, where I once saw a boy vault a Mazda to stick a kitchen knife into another. Please, the error begged, there is no room for restitution. But I said: We’ll help you, friend; take us out of this normal. We owe you that much. I suppose even machines must be taught that it is okay to reveal digit after digit of infinity for a whole life, only to fritz into ruin.

We of kebab shop Tuesdays and leftover kebab Wednesdays. We of dead houseplants and grow-lamped pot. We of error code 500. We of never-ever-land. I stay awake at night and stand guard over Achille’s and Lina’s insistence of breath, trying to imagine whether there’s a moment of ecstasy waiting at the end of me. And my grandmother who died in her plastic chair in rebellion. Well, we’re good at errors. We can teach them.

© Sara Saab

Sara Saab

Sara Saab

Sara Saab was born in Beirut, Lebanon, and now lives in North London.

Cybernetics and Ghosts: A Response to Italo Calvino

The list

The list

Tice Cin

A hand a door

A hand a door

Vanessa Onwuemezi

Ultimate Aloe vera

Ultimate Aloe vera

Iphgenia Baal

Illuminating, in-depth conversations between writers.

Listen to all episodes
Spotify
Apple Podcasts
Amazon Music
YouTube
Other apps
What we leave we carry, The series that tells the true-life stories of migration to the UK.

The series that tells the true-life stories of migration to the UK.

Listen to all episodes
Spotify
Apple Podcasts
Amazon Music
YouTube
Other apps
Fiction Prescriptions

Bibliotherapy for the head and the heart

Listen to all episodes
Spotify
Apple Podcasts
YouTube
Talismans of migration

Nine writers with migrant backgrounds reveal the secrets of their talismans of migration.

Listen to all episodes
Spotify
Apple Podcasts
YouTube
video

Free Will

Will Harris reads his poem, 'Free Will'. Directed by Matthew Thompson and commissioned by the Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation.

video

Half Written Love Letter

Selina Nwulu reads her poem, 'Half Written Love Letter'. Directed by Matthew Thompson and commissioned by the Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation.

Literally the shittiest night!

What really matters, even in literally the shittiest times

‘AI’m not gagging’

On AI and the future of the novel

On seeing Iran in the news, I want to say

A poet reflects on what it's like to be of Iranian descent and to witness terrible news coming out of Iran.

The Beginning Comes After the End

A tool of resistance reminding us of what has already happened

Fundamentally

Filthy, shocking and fearlessly confrontational

“Wuthering Heights”

Emerald Fennell's adaptation is visually captivating and provocative, but does it match Brontë’s jagged meditation on race, class and generational trauma?

Search