MindF**k
102 pages
English

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102 pages
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Description

Set in South Africa, MindF**k is a powerful, disturbing, and at times frightening story. Chris Burns, and his friends - Kerbs and Sky Eyes - take to the road, heading for the MindF**k rock festival. Along the way they pick up the gorgeous Partygirl. Burns and Partygirl connect immediately. But on the first night, while the rockmusic blasts from the stage, something unexpected happens - Burns's world gets turned on its head as one of the boys emerges from the tent with blood on his hands. This fast-paced read is dynamic and gripping, perfect for teen readers who want all the characteristics of a long novel, dealing with teenage issues and tough topics, in a strong, condensed book. From a series written by some amazing authors, this book is everything a reluctant reader would want to get them engaged. Note: this book contains some strong language, graphic scenes and/or tough topics, so is only suitable for older YA readers.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 janvier 2013
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781781271667
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0333€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

MindF**k
FANIE VILJOEN
For the broken and the beaten – when the music is all you’ve got left, crank the volume right up.
Contents

Title Page
Dedication
Warning
TRACK 01 The things we won’t do for money
TRACK 02 Lessons on stop streets and how things work in the movies
TRACK 03 The story about the three Bs and how I came and fucked everything up
TRACK 04 Oh, my car, my car
TRACK 05 The Mystic Boer
TRACK 06 The things that Sky says sometimes frighten people
TRACK 07 Dreams, blood and money
TRACK 08 Make like a tree and leave
TRACK 09 Allemanskraal Dam
TRACK 10  Lost souls and their sins
TRACK 11 Sky’s next revelation
TRACK 12 Partygirl organizes the beer
TRACK 13 MindFuck and music that makes Partygirl cry
TRACK 14 The sex scene you’ve been waiting for (me included)
TRACK 15 Unwelcome Guest
TRACK 16 Frozen Moment
TRACK 17 The plan with Partygirl
TRACK 18 Shosaloza
TRACK 19 The party is only starting now, and what are we doing?
TRACK 20 Back, as we came
TRACK 21 Night Ride
TRACK 22 Peace at last
TRACK 23 Lost
TRACK 24 What would you do, Jack White?
TRACK 25 Lost anything?
TRACK 26 Something has changed
TRACK 27 Brandy doesn’t work
TRACK 28 How do you tell someone that he is supposed to be dead?
TRACK 29 What I know
TRACK 30 dnuoranruT
TRACK 31 Proof
TRACK 32 In the end it’s all lies, isn’t it?
TRACK 33 Running on empty
TRACK 34 A shovel full of dirt
TRACK 35 Forever and ever love
TRACK 36 I’m still breathing
HIDDEN TRACK The End
About the Author
In the Same Series
Copyright
Warning
This book won’t make you feel better about yourself, it won’t explain the meaning of life, and it certainly won’t help you ‘find’ yourself. If Mommy and Daddy don’t like it when you read books with explicit language do one of the following right now: Chuck the damn book away. Kindly request the bookshop where you bought the book to exchange it for one of those transform-your-life- into-something -precious-and-beautiful- in-ten -easy-steps-books. If you nicked the book from a bookshop, return it in the same fashion and instead nick one of those transform-your-life-into- something-precious -and-beautiful-in-ten- easy-steps -books. You can tear out the pages and use them to smoke a little something. You can secretly read the book in the loo where Mommy and Daddy will (hopefully) not disturb you.
If you still have the book in your hands, you probably want to continue reading it. Tzhen, my bru, you’re in for a hell of a ride, but be warned: this book is going to mess with your mind and it may just leave you even more fucked-up than you already are.
press play to begin …
TRACK 01
The things we won’t do for money
It was Friday night. I sent an SMS to Kerbs:

2night, 12 bells. bring ur tools. i’l open the hate.
‘Open the hate, what hate?’ grunted Kerbs while slipping through the gate. The rain poured down and shined on his jacket.
‘Hate?’
‘The SMS, dude’
‘The gate, Kerbs!’
‘You really should learn how to fucking spell, Burns.’
‘Yeah, the day you find a job.’
It had been a year now since Kerbs finished school, and he was still unemployed. I always reckoned that anyone who even considered giving him a job would be totally off their rocker.
‘Yeah, right,’ said Kerbs.
Back to business: Everything was organised. I nicked three of my mom’s sleeping pills earlier that night. One for the mutt. (He’d chowed down hard on that vienna and by now he was in doggy dreamland.) One for the old man. (He knocked back the whiskey and should be hanging around alcoholic heaven roundabout now.) Last but not least, one for my mom – in her coffee. I think she had already popped one by herself as well, but I wasn’t going to take any chances. (She was probably so wired that we would only see her later the following afternoon.) Kelly missed the drug party. (She was with her boyfriend again.)
‘Come on, I’m getting soaked,’ I said to Kerbs.
He walked up to my mom’s brand new BMW in the driveway. ‘Is the alarm off?’
I pressed the button on the remote. The car’s lights flashed and the doors jumped open, but we couldn’t take the easy road. It would look too suspicious.
It was the perfect night to put our plan into action: Mom forgot to park the car in the garage. She’d intended going to the gym but it had probably slipped her mind. The rain also helped; the neighbours would be sound asleep. And nobody would show their faces to investigate strange noises.
Kerbs stood ready with a brick in his hand. His gaze met mine. I nodded. With great force he hurled the brick through the car’s passenger window. The glass shattered, shooting away like stars and falling on the wet paving. Only then did he open the door.
‘Do you know what you’re doing?’ I asked.
‘Sort of.’
He got into the car and wedged a screwdriver between the Kenwood front loader CD player and the dashboard. It wasn’t easy, but he didn’t take any shit. I could hear the dashboard cracking. With the tip of the screwdriver lodged behind the CD player, he pressed it forward. Hard! The mounting snapped. One forceful jerk and the player popped from the dashboard like a new born baby from his mom’s tummy. Hurriedly Kerbs cut the wires.
‘Don’t just stand there watching me, you should check to make sure nobody’s coming,’ he said.
But I couldn’t help it; one ought to learn how to do this kind of thing. You never know when you might need the knowledge and skills. (Outcomes based education turning around to bite the community in the ass.)
Kerbs started on the speakers. After a while he said, ‘No, shit, I’m not going to hassle with this, it’ll take a lifetime.’
‘Okay.’ I shrugged. ‘O yeah, check out the cubby-hole. The sunglasses …’
Kerbs removed my mom’s Police sunglasses and stuffed them in his pocket.
‘I also planted her cell phone in there. My mom sometimes forgets it in the car. She’ll never know it was me.’
It was a Nokia. Small technological wonder: GPS system, WAP enabled (unlike its user) and it could take photos, record sound, you name it. She uses it to phone people.
‘Okay, do you have everything?’
‘Yes.’ Kerbs stuffed the loot into a black gym bag.
‘Alright then, you have to go now.’
‘See you later, bru.’ Kerbs gave me a pat on the back. ‘Open the gate.’
Again, he slipped through the gate. The rain came down even harder now. I watched the raindrops run down the BMW’s leather seats.
So much for the new car smell.
Kerbs’ car pulled away in the street. It backfired once, sounding like a gunshot.
I entered the house. Everything was dark, but I knew the way to my room. Hey, I must have done it a million times, after long, drunk nights on the street.
The sudden voice from the living room startled me.
‘Chris.’
‘Dad?’ I asked when I saw his silhouette moving against the curtains with the patio light on in the background.
My heart started racing.
‘Why didn’t you tell us you were going out?’
Two things he said totally confused me.
Numba one: who were the ‘us’ he was referring to? Was it him and my mother? They haven’t been much of an ‘us’ for a long time now.
Numba two: did he really think I went out? Did or didn’t he know?
What could he have heard? What could he have seen?
Silently I rewound the night’s events in my mind.
Noises: the click of the opening gate; our voices in the driveway; the brick sending the car’s window to hell; the cracking of the dashboard; the click of the gate opening up a second time; Kerbs’ car backfiring.
See: fuck all from the house – there were way too many plants. Except if he came out of the house. Kerbs was right, I shouldn’t have checked him out, I should have kept an eye out for nosy onlookers.
Fast forward to where we were last.
I realised that it was one of those soapie moments where the silence lasts a lifetime and one of the actors simply tilts his head to the side until it becomes time for an ad break.
Where was my ad break?
Okay, time to decide.
He didn’t know – ride the wave.
‘I was only out for a while. I didn’t think you would mind.’
‘You and Kerbs?’
Damn, does he know?
Again, I pulled a soapie response. ‘Kerbs?’ Testing the water.
‘I heard his car backfire.’
Never, bru, where do grown-ups learn these things? He was playing cat and mouse with me. Did he want me to come up with the whole bag of stolen goods?
‘Switch on the light so that I can see you.’
Pros & cons, I thought instantly. Con: he might see that I’m lying. Pro: I could see if he doesn’t really know.
The light was blindingly bright – like D-day .
We both twitched our eyes until we were used to the light.
I saw the glass of whiskey I had poured for him earlier. He hadn’t drunk it. He must have known something was up when I brought him a drink without him asking for it.
He sat there with a full glass in his hands. (That time of night?) Obviously, he was smashed. His shirt was unbuttoned and wrinkled.
He wasn’t wearing pants.
I darted off to my room.
Lock the door! Lock the fucking door!
One of these days I am going to smash his skull in, I decided.
I knew he was standing on the other side of the door.
And the voices in my mind came rushing fast and furious.
TRACK 02
Lessons on stop streets and how things work in the movies
There was this man who once drove over a stop street at a helluva speed. Next thing he knew: flashing lights, screaming alarms. A traffic cop had managed to chase him down and stop him. (At that time he had already skipped a few stop streets.)
‘Hey, what the hell do you think you’re doing?’ the traffic cop yelled at the guy. ‘You ran a stop street back there! Why the fuck didn’t you stop?’
The guy checked out the traffic cop and said: ‘I don’t believe everything I read.’
Ha, ha, ha:-)
And you shouldn’t either.
Do you really think my dad sat there without his pants? This is not what this story is about. Leave that for the newspapers. (I don’t even know why kids would allow stuff like that to happen to them. They obviously don’t know what sh

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