Track 12

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Track 12" is a short story by British author J. G. Ballard, written in 1958. The story was published in Passport to Eternity, The Venus Hunters, The Overloaded Man, and later in The Complete Short Stories of J. G. Ballard: Volume 1.

[edit] Plot

The story begins with Maxted, a run-down athlete, having been invited over to the home of Sheringham, a university professor of biochemistry. Despite Sherigham having asked him over on the topic of business, Maxted suspects that Sheringham may be about to comfront him about his wife, Susan Sheringham, with whom Maxted has being having an affair.

Throughout the course of the evening, Sherigham continues to play obscure sound recordings to Maxted, making him guess what they are (at one point he plays the amplified recording of a pin dropping). He explains he thinks microsonics is a great hobby, but it may be developing into an obsession. Maxted becomes impatient with the man he finds repulsive, and awaits the confrontation.

As Sheringham leaves the patio to play the titular last track, Maxted begins finishing off his whiskey but begins to feal a perculiar sensation in his abdomine - what he feals to be like ice cold mercury weighing down his stomach. He becomes sluggish and disorientated as track 12 begins to play. Sheringham enters again, smiling. He explains to Maxted that he has been aware of his wife's affair, and has been recording their intimacy for some time with numerous microphones. He explains that Maxted has drunk Chromium cyanate, and as Maxted begins to literally 'drown', Sheringham reveals that the 'spongey...elastic waves lapping in a latex sea' appended with thunderous rhythms growing ever louder is an amplified recording of a kiss shared between Maxted and Sheringham's wife.