Saturday 28 February 2015

In Loving Memory

I’ll remember every inch of you
And how you made me feel.
Your chicken legs,
Your wrinkly balls.
Cold skin like jellied eel.

I’ll remember how you looked at me
And every snide remark.
My greying hair,
My mid-life hips.
Undressing in the dark.

I’ll remember all the rules you made
And every tut and frown.
Your lists, your laws,
Your timetables.
Meals in front of Countdown.

I’ll remember when we said our vows
And how young I was at heart.
My auburn hair,
My dirty laugh.
A hopeful, naïve start.

I’ll remember every inch of you
And every foot of earth.
My blistered hands,
My nervous laugh.
A rose bush. A rebirth. 

Friday 27 February 2015

Prompt 2: Kill the Music

The glove leather pulls tight against the back of my hand, resisting my obligatory knuckle crack. I shift focus to the left hand – once on the right; twice on the left. Click… crack… crunch. It’s become a compulsion; a disabling ritual I have to observe before I can proceed.
Tension relieved, I turn the key in the ignition; the pistons press; the air compresses; the engine kicks to into life and an abrupt and discordant cacophony belches from the stereo. Recoiling from the sound, I stall and slam the immense weight of the vehicle into the verge in front. Eyes shut, I cock an ear in readiness for a complaint from the suspension, but the shrieks from the speakers fill the air around me and drown out any echo of damage – a single saving grace.
Our work is done in silence – that’s the drill – respectful silence. It’s the first rule we’re taught. I scan the week’s rota in my mind’s eye, trying to identify which ignorant pick last sat behind this wheel, but who can think amid such a riot of noise. I smack it into silence with a sharp slam of my hand, then breath deeply and and count slowly to ten.
It’s time to go. Time to arrive. Time to say goodbye. I glance over my shoulder at the highly-polished mahogany of my passenger’s temporary billet. I’ve been eighteen months in this job and still the hair on my neck stands in respect before the casket. I doff my hat in apology, re-crack my knuckles and restart the engine. This time there is silence, but for the sombre murmur of the engine. Better.
I use the mirrors to reverse to avoid my passenger’s absent gaze, and slowly pull the length of the hearse round and into the main flow of the traffic. Heads turn towards us, then snatch away. Eyes watch, then avert their stare. Such is the oscillating magnetism of my cargo – it draws and repels, creating voyeurs and shunners with each passing of the clock. I stare at the road ahead and part the sea of discomfort around me.
Off duty, I drive carefree with one hand at 12 and the other resting on the gear stick. Yet the pinch of my blazer and the weight of this vehicle commands my hands to 10-to-2 and I feed the wheel deliberately into and out of every corner en route. In my first few months I spent too much time and energy thinking about the gravity of the job. I’m responsible for taking people on their last journey – covering those last few miles that transfigure people from loved ones comforted in hospital beds to the closed-lidded subjects of funeral ceremonies. On my loading and unloading they turn from animate to the inanimate; from bodies of life and love to objects of loss. I’d make my way through a bottle of whiskey a night working through those ideas, conjuring with my role as the conveyor belt between last and final goodbyes. But the alcohol only served to darkened my thoughts and intensified my unease the following day.
Now I choose to focus on the road between my hands and the tail-lights of the car in front, to avoid the gaze of passer-by and to blank my mind. Yet thinking of nothing is a skill in itself – impossible except for the vacant, for meditators and for the wasters of the world. I need to count. As a child scared of the dark, I counted the obligatory promise of sheep. As a young man running from insomnia I moved to pure numbers – challenging myself to get to ten thousand and hoping desperately I’d fail. Now, I punctuate the deathly minutes in the hearse with a tally of passing cars, sometimes junctions. The intensity of counting is an enforced necessity – chosen to offset and dampen my inner chatter. Just enough to drown out; not enough to distract. Just enough to drown out; not enough to distract. Just enough to drown out; not enough to distract.
Today’s drive is thankfully short – 6 junctions (two rights, one roundabout and three lefts) then the crescent wall of Morton Hall Crematorium opens in welcome and we drive on in. Five hundred meters of managed garden and a wall of remembrance slide smoothly by. My companion’s family and loved ones stand up ahead, a murder of crows in black. Bodies dissipate as we approach, drifting inside on a sea of convention. By the time I bring the hearse to a halt only the sons and nephews who will bear the coffin remain.
I step out, exchange handshakes and condolences and help them raise their father and uncle aloft. I can never decide which I like less – the silence of the dead, or the suppressed cries of those left behind. From the uniform trace of red in their eyes, the man these boys carry was loved, loved deeply. Yet amid their grief, custom insists they thank me, and they do – profusely – before stepping away in unsteady unison towards the half hour of farewell where everything and nothing will be said in the hope of capturing just an essence of the truth.
I watch them move off and my hand drifts toward the Lucky Strikes in my breast pocket, but I shrug off the instinct to light up and take a step back from my own death. I might stand a while in the sunshine or walk, instead, through the gardens of remembrance – a memorial path is not so very different to a park track when all’s said and done.
Echoes of the first song escape from the service and sashay their way towards me across the late morning air. Something in their pitch reminds me of my journey start – the scream of the radio, the jolt of the stall and I glance over at the bonnet. It looks fine – normal. My gaze drifts down to the registration plate, searching out areas of possible damage, signs of our sudden encounter with the verge.  There are no dents, thankfully, but… I step forward… crouch down for a closer inspection… there’s what looks like… a streak… a… a bloody smudge on the registration plate – a fur-blackened streak of something, a note of remembrance from something that once used to be.



Thursday 19 February 2015

Him

Him

“You cunt. Your’re fucking dead. Dead. Cunt. Dead. Next time you see me will be your fucking last. Yeah, run away. Cunt.” The screamed words echoed in the darkening space that lampposts invaded with orange-tinted light.

Sun shone around the gaps in his blackout-lined curtains; the corona illuminating the bedroom. He lifted his head from his mass of pillows and looked at the corona. It would be the last he would see, he was sure of it. He looked around his bedroom at the tangled mass of t-shirts, jockey-shorts and socks in the plastic boxes; the television and DVD player placed on their respective mini-tower on plastic boxes; the mountain bike besides the clothes wrack and the pile of books strewn next to his bed. His gaze lingered on the books, all bought through an obsessive compulsion. He’d lost count of the number of books he’d read, many many thousands. They’d given him more pleasure than any other thing in his life. He was proud of what he had read and bought. His collection, well mini-library, showed, to him, a sign of good taste; a thirst for learning too, albeit a meretricious and hollow thirst, if he was being honest, which, on this day, he knew he had to be. That was something he had to be today: honest, deadly honest.

The urge to coil up like a foetus inside his duvets and pillows surged through him as he thought about the acts of honesty he would perform before the evening. He wanted to go back to the warmth and comfort of his amniotic past. To go back and start again. To, to, to… It was a lie, he knew that. The warmth and security associated to the past. A trail of rose-tinted memories and feelings which time tampers with as they fade into the depths. The past is a foreign land as Hartley had said. It was also, he thought, a film projected onto a screen behind soundproof glass, which tints and obscures at will, only showing glimpses of what has been. It was gone. She was gone, the person he loved most and was in his blood. Nothing would change that.

Reflex actions kicked in and he walked to the kitchen to make a coffee and a pot of tea. The phrase ‘killing two birds with one stone’ came to him as he passed the sheet covered mirror at the end of his hallway, filled the kettle and switched it on. This he thought, was one of the reasons why he had to do it. He’d become conditioned by his inner voice to try and perform tasks as economically has possible, no wastage of time or actions. The contradiction of this impulse to the way he still acted in so many ways made him smile to himself. He’d said to himself and other people at times over the years that he was a pragmatist who tried to do things in a way which best suited his current need. For some of the important needs in life he's been as practical as rubber knife. He knew or felt that he could be practical about it, but he never had been. The question which bugged him about this lack was simple: why not? The answer also seemed simple to him too: fear.

He was afraid. He may have been born afraid, but he had no way of knowing that as he could never prove it. He’d certainly felt like he’d been afraid for his entire life so far, but he thought that there must have been periods when he wasn’t just because of the law of averages. However, fear was so familiar to him that it felt like a constant shadow illuminated from within. The kettle clicked and steam poured from its spout; he spooned a teaspoon full of freeze dried coffee into the mug, added the right level of milk and poured water up to an inch from the top. He then emptied the two used teabags from the pot into the sink and added two new ones before filling it up. He stirred in the residual of the coffee grains that floated on top of the mug a few times to make sure that it would be consistent and walked back towards his bedroom. He always left the coffee in the kitchen to cool for a while and then add more water once he’d taken a few sips. He was tempted to give into the sentimentalised thoughts of ‘it won’t change what happened to her, nothing could,’ but, he didn’t want to be sentimental. If he did think that way, he would not be able to go through with it. That cunt deserved it, pure and simple.

He’d got away with it for far too long. Sentimentalising would lead to the pushing in further of the stopper and not freeing of the genie; the black, hate-filled, self-pitying, angry essence that bottled itself up within him. The freeing would probably make his actions desperate and messy, he knew that or paralyse him to inaction as the tempest raged within. Paralysis had happened too many times in the past and when he next saw him he wanted the stopper to fly out and shatter the frame of this world. Paralysis wasn’t an option. Not this time.

He picked up his copy of Hemlock and After by Angus Wilson and settled back into his pillows the finish the final forty odd pages. Wilson’s prose sang to him as he read. He’d always been drawn to this style of writer since he’d started reading Waugh in his late teens and early twenties. It took him to a place where people lead golden lives-to him, anyway- and characters who were rich and textured, and more appealing to most of the people he had met during his adult life (he couldn’t remember many from his childhood) Hemlock, he thought, would be ideal for his purpose.

Poison made him think of lying in the suicide ward, white gowned with charcoal stains around his mouth. The pink livid scars he'd happily scored into his arms and body contrasting with the gown that covered his saved self. He didn’t want to use that method again. It would, ironically, be too certain. He knew that many people would say that this meant that he wasn’t really serious and that he didn’t really want to do it. Was that true? Today, he wanted to escape the futile reflection of his thoughts and feelings about the deed and just act, but their weight as they built up in mass daily and hourly over the last seven months was too much. Enough, though, enough. Once he faced him, looked into that hated gaze, he’d know for sure.

The bitter taste of the coffee went well with the buttery taste of the digestive. He had simple tastes, almost peasant like. This was probably due to a rather crude palate, he’d thought, but it could be down to just liking basic tastes. Although he loved eating, especially when he was younger, he’d preferred to spend his money on other things, books, DVDs, CDs and cycles. His current need for parsimony had come in handy in over last few months as it had helped him to shed weight and and spend more time running or cycling, using the dark matter inside to be better prepared for what he had to do.

He was obsessive about exercising. Actually, he was obsessive about many things; buying books, especially the works of authors he loved; films with his favourite actors or by his favourite directors, as his Woody Allen and Hitchcock collections confirmed. Once an idea about a book or a DVD had come to him, he’d had to get it. He’d had to have it now and not wait. He’d always had to have things now. Waiting was a torture.

Time was his enemy as it could snatch away his prize by some careless action of any of the people in the chain of him ordering it though Amazon, ebay or any of the other sites where he’d spent his way to some ersatz form of happiness during the past few years, and him receiving it through the letterbox. The wait had felt excruciating sometimes, pregnant as had been with the dread of loss. He was happy when his prizes arrived, but only for a few seconds or minutes. Once they were his and couldn’t be taken away, they’d been placed on shelves or chucked onto existing piles of new purchases waiting for his attention. At least they didn't end up like the tennis rackets, snooker cue and other one loved possessions from his youth that were smashed to pieces in frustration-filled rage at losing or just not getting his way.

Anticipation is often said to be the best moment, the perfect moment too as it is a time which doesn’t contain any stains of disappointment only possibly, the seeds of it. His anticipation was so high now the act could only be a disappointment, a shadow of what he desperately wanted to think and most importantly, feel as he did what that man deserved. It would be a shadow light by the flame of his rage and disgust. He remembered he first came across the Plato’s Theory of Forms whilst at university, or was it when he was reading Sophie’s World? Whichever it was, as he’d continued to exist and read more, listen more, watch more he couldn’t help but realise that, for him, he would always expect the Plato’s ideal and feel let down by what he actually experienced. This perpetual disappointment was not uniform; it was true, especially when it came to books films and music. It did apply to people and their affect on the world around them. People were a stain.

He should get things ready, set the ball in motion and shed the mossy thoughts that would slow him down.

They let you down by saying and showing one side and then delivering an impoverished other. Anger suffused disappointment ate at him when this happened. When he was younger, he wanted to understand why. As he aged and ricocheted his way through his life, he had made connections between the ideal and the actual,particularly when he’d read about structuralism and Saussure’s idea of the signifier and the signified, and the idea seemed to him to underpin all advertising with it’s promise of a fantastic life if only you brought that particular product. It was all the stuff of fantasy. It was also prevalent in books and particularly television programmes and films. It seemed to him that people liked to be deluded, to be presented with a version of life that had a certain verisimilitude, but also had a sprinkling of pixie dust/ fabulation which made it so attractive. Although he recognised this intellectually, it still didn’t stop him from lapping up all of the idealised characters and lifestyles presented to him through the screen or page. He was a sucker for the ‘will they won’t they’ relationships as it struck a chord with some need, or sense of relationships within him. He always rooted for the characters to finally get together and he always felt that extra sense of warmth and excitement when they did. He had never achieved that feeling with a woman, not when there was a chance of his liking of them becoming concrete, real. 

Returning to Wilson’s prose he tried to shake his thoughts away like mist dissipated by a strong breeze and concentrate on the characters and plot; a thought he didn’t want to dwell on as it would start a longing for the unread books on his bookshelves and the unwritten novels by his favourite writers that he hadn't got round to reading. Literature was his lifeblood. It had brought a world of people, places and events to him and animated the grey matter neglected by his school. He flamed for the world while sitting in a chair of lying on his bed. Still, being contrary was something that he had been the master of for most of his life.

His eye danced across the page without leaving a trace of what it saw in his mind. He’d lost his concentration. He put Wilson’s novel down next to him on his crumpled duvet and gauged the strength within him: a full-bass hum that vibrated events ahead. It was strong like the noise tracks make in anticipation of a high speed train that thunders past those kept safe by the level crossing barriers. He’d felt the strength many times before, but not with today's shakily-bridled intensity.

Filthy, droppings littered straw came to him as he thought back to the time when the pet rabbits he and his siblings shared had became ill and the kindest thing was for them to be put out of their misery. Tears had been hot on his cheeks and flowed freely. The knot in his stomach was part the feeling of loss and part guilt over the neglect he had shown towards them which meant that they’d die at the hands of their next door neighbour, Harry, who said he’d take care of it. The tears were a sign of his sorrow at the neglect he had shown that had brought Sandy, Penelope and Benny to their pitiful state but also a salve to the post fact, avoidable, guilt festering within him. The guilt process would remain a constant presence within him, like a port wine birthmark on the inside. 

He’d been marked as a nuisance from his very first week as secondary school, a legacy, no doubt, passed on by the ‘concerned’ teachers in his junior school. He was a pain; he’d known that even then. He could talk the hind legs off of a donkey, horse, giraffe, elephant and any of its other quadruped brothers who’d happen to be in the vicinity when he was in full flow. The words were connected to volcano of energy inside, the lava spewed out in a stream, often chaotically. His unfiltered chat and silence his teachers his teachers insisted upon - mostly to his angry annoyance and sometimes bewilderment - were not compatible, like a 99 with an uncooked sausage instead of a flake. Funnily enough, he’d probably have gobbled that down when he was in full flow, chomping down the bites of vanilla ice cream and pig’s foreskin without any thought.

The need to talk was still there, especially when it was a subject that interested him or he knew enough about to make his contribution to the discussion worthwhile. Giving the thoughts he had about what he’d seen, read, heard or experienced was what truly made him fell alive. He buzzed with them. Vibrated. The high he felt when reading about Freud, deconstruction, abstract expressionism and other ideas exceeded the high he had felt when he spent most weekends fucked out of his mind on ecstasy, speed, cocaine or very occasionally LSD. He’d taken drugs to fulfil the role he’d given himself within his group of friends as the hard man who would not lose control, no matter what amount of narcotics he’d taken. He had to take more than his friends to prove that he was superior to them in some way, as he was not as cool, relaxed or at ease with other people. He’d also, he knew, taken them to block out the pain, guilt and fear he’d felt since his her death. It worked too, for a few precious hours. But, they didn’t last. What they left behind was an even deeper pit of bleakness where his fears could fester and grow.

Sound filled the living room as the DVD player automatically played the tracks on his red Sony mp3 player. Cate Le Bon’s Me Oh My began to play as he walked back out of the room to pour himself another cup of tea. The hall was filled with light. His bikes were organised against the wall, waiting to be taken out and used. They would be again, he hoped, but not by him. He’d never really used them anyway. They were, like most of the things he had bought, objects of obsession; things that he had to get at the time because he thought he wanted and needed them. The desire he’d felt for them was so strong that he was a man possessed. He certainly couldn’t feel at peace until they were his. The hope would begin with each new purchase and would expire as the item was listened to, watched or read and then realisation, soon followed by disappointment would return and the gradual slide into that person he was.

The tea tasted good, of the way life should have been. He loved to drink pot after pot when he’d gone alone to visit his nan. She refused to use tea bags and the ritual of adding the mild and using the strainer help over the cup became part of the peace of the visits. She’d told him time and time again to lay the strainer on the rim of the cup – never a mug – but he would play the pouring-without-spilling game whenever she in her bedroom or in the lounge secretly drinking her glasses of sherry and pretending that everything was fine. Pretending worked for many people; ignoring the unwanted and heading for the wished for or desperately needed. The early morning cup of tea was best, given after spending the night in the spare bedroom and having the space to himself. The time was jarring, but the sound of Classic FM coming from his granddad’s stereo system in the lounge and the orange-tainted street light that beamed through the kitchen window and along the hall into the single bed he’d sleep in made the energy coiled inside vibrate peaceably. Peace would be his again soon.

Orange-tainted street light formed the frame of his curtains now. Day had passed and the evening was here. Thinking, he now saw, was done. Over with. He opened the bottom draw of his bedside cabinet and pulled out the old and faded Tesco’s carrier bag. Holding the handles, it unfurled itself and he widened his arms to look at what lay at the bottom. It still had the stain of her blood on it, he knew, he bore the scars of that. The handle felt cold and familiar.

Naked he walked out into his hallway and stopped. The orange-tinted frame from his bedroom was replicated by the curtained window running most of the hallway's length. He turned and looked at the lilac sheet hanging from the wall, covering what he must now face. He took a deep breath and let it out slowly. Took a few more. The stopper, he had to release the stopper. Piercing blue eyes and pale freckled skin stained by fear filled his vision. The stopper was out, his world in pieces around him.


Four calm strides and one sweeping arm movement and he was there, staring fully at him. 

Wednesday 18 February 2015

Prompt 2

Write from the point of view of someone who committed a murder today.
Do not mention the murder.

Prompt from: Zoe
Deadline: 28 February

Beach at night



This is a treacherous road, and I don’t even have a torch with me. You shuffle along carefully and a pothole trips you, then stride purposefully without incident until it’s your nerve that fails you: it’s bloody typical. I’d be better off walking along the beach - at least the shingle is consistently uneven. 

So I do. The concourse of stone is illuminated by some damn fine moonlight and a smattering of stars. With the wall of night behind me it’s like being on a stage, the moon a disco ball, the starlight scattered across the waves. The light bounces around, shines on my face. 

The sea is a broken mirror sealing a door. Is the light from the sky or is daylight from the other side pushing in? Maybe if some of the people carved out up there left their posts for a while to explore, the animals would have their chance to shine, and there would be some clarity. 

In daylight there would be fishermen, casting a lure to catch the unwary. Transpose the writhing underbelly and you’ll see a legend of land pulled up by a fish-hook, a precious gift. But it is night, and this beach is resolutely night right now, and any fishermen unseen are keeping their own counsel, as I keep mine. 

Dark night, day light. So black and white at first glance, but this night is so white and that light so black that the days and nights bleed together. It’s only fitting then that they compete before me, one trying to overwhelm the other, spook their opponent with an unexpected current. It’s hard to tell who’s winning, as the foam clawing at the shoreline keeps falling back, changing colour.

The mirror pulses, broken fragments overlay. Or are the reflections a window? Is this a shining to the other side, where the sun glows, seagulls frost a rock, waves crash in reverse? The troubled surface puzzles at me in the unclear night, poses a question as it slips it away. You might campaign for this darkness, to see these stars provide illumination, but I can only see the door, the window, the fragments of a home caught in shadow.

Monday 16 February 2015

The rainbow beach huts blaze gold as the winter sun strokes by on route to the horizon. Rock pools light up in reflection and for a stolen moment the world shines with warmth and chases December’s shadows to the margins.

Lone figures on the beach pause in place, skittles of appreciation dotted across the sands. It’s a shared grace; a last kiss of kindness before the night steals the warmth from the day. I yield and step into the moment, closing my eyes and laying my hands gently on the stretch of my stomach. I hang there, suspended in the moment until a chill blast of evening air blows it away.

Amber fades to yellow; yellow gradually dims to grey and my scattered companions begin to shake off their statuesque appearance. Kites are drawn in and stowed away; jackets are zipped and scarfs tied tight. All faces eventually turn from the water and navigate towards the promise of cars and home hearths.

I draw the belt of my coat tighter and walk forward, against the tide of activity. As others wane their way back to the comfort of home, I step toward the emptiness of the beach and its fickle shoreline.
Barefoot and alone in the half-light I trace the patterns afternoon tide with my toes, trying to read in them how to return to the joy of summer, back to July when I padded, giddy, along this same shore.

The sand had been soft and warm that day, giving gently under the pressure of my tread. My summer dress had billowed lightly in the onshore breeze, revealing the briefest glimpse of the swelling in my abdomen. I saw Andrew waiting for me by our stripped beach hut I’d begged as a wedding gift. He’d sensed my approach, turned and studied me; read me from a hundred yards.

“Really? Are you?” He’d spoken through an open grin, his arms spread wide to embrace me and my confirmation of our future. I’d intended to tease him and play innocent, to deny all knowledge and then just whisper the truth in an  unsuspecting moment. But the heat of the sand tracked up my legs and filled me with hot laughter that I just couldn’t contain. I nodded and he swept me up in his embrace and we kissed and squealed and kissed again; giddy as children. Happy as sand boys.

The winter sand is less generous of spirit. It gives not under my step, steals warmth from my feet and gives no inkling of how I might return to the open-hearted glee of that moment.


I leave my boots behind and walk on. The unyielding cold beneath my feet keeps me prescient, refusing to let my thoughts fall back to sunnier, kinder times. The life inside me kicks out, but all I can offer in empty reassurance of my gloved hand….

The balcony



Ten years ago I had a flat with a balcony overlooking the sea…or rather a road, the promenade, the stony beach, and then the sea.

I loved that balcony. It was completely bare. The salt air killed every plant I ever put out there, even the lavender which my mum insisted couldn’t be killed. We never had chairs or a table out there. I preferred to stand as I watched the tide and ships come and go. It felt wrong to sit as everything else was in motion. I was younger then, I wasn’t good at being still.

The spring and summer would bring coaches and families and, this being Portsmouth, men walking the promenade with their tops off. From May onwards, the hotel next door would entertain an endless parade of weddings, and the brides and grooms would have their kooky pictures taken on the pier. Our neighbours above and below were both second-homers, arriving at weekends with their kids and grandkids. The basement flat, the only other one occupied year-round, was allegedly a brothel but they had their own entrance so we never minded. Ours was the only flat in the building with a balcony.

My family loved that balcony as much as I did. Whenever a big aircraft carrier was coming in they would turn up unannounced with their binoculars. ‘Have you not got any chairs yet?’ my nan would say.

Every autumn, the Great South Run would pass under the balcony, and I would watch it unravel from serious runners to people in tutus to lunatics in dinosaur costumes. I'd get that lump in my throat that I get when I see people being extraordinary (and the Red Arrows, they get me every time).

Winter was my favourite though, when everybody packed up and went home, save for a few fishermen on the pier. The sea would get hostile and interesting, and the Isle of Wight would disappear for days on end. One winter it snowed right down to the water line. From the balcony, the pebble beach looked like a layer of cottage cheese gradually being eaten by the tide. Every boxing day, three robust old ladies would strip down to their big black swimsuits and go for a swim. Not just a quick run in and out to say they’d done it, but a swim. One drunken New Year’s Eve we sprayed a bottle of cheap cava from the balcony and shouted into the wind, ‘We’re getting married this year!’

By the following New Year’s Eve we were gone. Later, the brothel was raided and shut down. Even the pier is now derelict and boarded up. Everything changes. I have a garden now. I have plants and patio furniture. Sometimes I can even be still.