Monday, 7 April 2014

The Bare Bones of It

‘No, it will not do,’ he thought as he held the door open for the woman struggling with the push chair and the toddler at her side. The shopping bag fell from the handle of the pushchair, Wagon Wheels dropped to the ground, ham shaped like a bear’s face, alphabetti spaghetti.

‘Waaagh,’ cried the child by her side, seeing the loss of the sustenance as final and irreversible.

‘You may cry now, just wait until you’re older and the realisation hits you that This Is Your Life. This is life. You will lose your imagination and all the magic will spill from your childish mind into a pool by your feet, lost to the boredom of gravity’s inevitable pull, lost to the soil that is calling your bones back down down down.’ He handed her the ham shaped like a bear’s face and she shoved it in the bottom of the buggy and off she went. She did not say ‘thank you’.

Would the ham bear face sustain the child? Would it cause growth? He suspected not. He wondered of what precisely it consisted, as he watched her dragging the screaming child along by the wrist. He could see the child spelling out its first words in alphabetti spaghetti: ‘Fuk yew,’ little Benny’s first written words, aged eight, a proud little smile on his tomato-sauce encrusted face as he swings his stunted legs with glee under the table, just managing to kick his little sister in the process, making her cry. This, little Benny felt, was his finest moment.

He worried about little Benny and all the other children that didn’t stand a bloody chance, probably unwanted and barely loved, dragged into life and dragged through it, just about scraping through. Just about scraping through; that was how he felt every day.

He pondered his theory regarding the frequency of crying within the human life: We cry more when we are babies and children because we are only just getting used to the inconvenience of life and the shock of coming out of the warm womb into a life of too hot, too cold, hungry, full up, sick, tired, bad dreams, awake, constipated, sitting in your own shit, waiting for someone to come and clean it all up. But as you get older, you realise that no one is going to come and clean it up, not when you’re an adult. And as you get used to a life outside the womb, you grow more acclimatised to the little inconveniences of life until you accept them and then you stop crying. At least you stop crying outwardly. The inner tears drip constantly. They needed a washer but he knew you couldn’t buy one the right size. Not in B&Q.

He thought about Anne. After he had told her this theory, when they were very young, she had looked at him as though he had shat in her handbag and then had knighted him ‘Eeyore,’ tapping his shoulders with her fork. Dear Anne. Every time he thought of her this way he had a brief holiday from his loneliness but it returned again with a vengeance. Now he was back on familiar ground and he trod it alone.

He opened the door to the offices, helped Robert Glew carry some boxes upstairs (another thankless task, he noted) and was about to push the door to his office open when something stopped him. He stood motionless at the door, his breath condensing on the pane of glass, his nose an inch away from the eight hours of futile boredom which awaited him beyond the door.

‘No, it will not do,’ thought he, turning on his heel and walking down the steps, guilt and a sense of duty hot on his heels but he shook them off at the door where he burst out into the fresh air of the day, the endless sky opening up before him. ‘No, it will not do.’

He was fifty three. He felt he had achieved nothing but the days kept turning and so he kept on going, like a cog driven by the movement of the sun, yet disconnected from all else around him. A cog without purpose. As sure as the sun would come up, he would rise, do his exercises, have his cup of tea, water the plants and then water himself in that pathetic dribble of a shower. He must remember to buy that limescale remover. And that washer. The plants. He must always water the plants. That was his purpose; to keep them alive, to keep them green and growing for Anne. For Anne.

He walked across the heath, noting the beautiful browns and oranges of the autumn emerging. Leaves had begun to fall. He felt at home in the autumn, when everything was curling at the edges, when everything was getting tired. He was at ease in the melancholy end that autumn brought. Autumn was bittersweet; such vibrancy, such beauty, yet an end nonetheless. He felt an affinity with the autumn. He wanted to be as beautiful, to be as colourful and as noticeable as the leaves. Only Anne had really seen him. Why could no one else? He wanted to be like the leaves, to burn as brightly before fading away.

‘No, it will not do.’ He kept walking, up the steps to the hilltop that overlooked the town, the harbour, the sea. Since Anne had gone he no longer felt attached to the town, to other people. He felt attached to the plants; they kept him rooted to her. He kept them alive and they kept him alive. They swapped vapours, they breathed life into him, they gave him purpose. He was more at home here, amongst the ferns and the trees than down in the town, amongst the unfathomable people.

He felt he could be closer still to his leafy cousins. He stopped in a patch of ferns, beneath a horse chestnut tree. He watched a curled leaf fall to the ground. He took off his shoes and socks and placed them at the foot of the tree. Another leaf fell. He removed his carefully ironed trousers, folded them neatly and placed them beside his shoes. He unbuttoned his jacket, undid his tie, his shirt. He watched the leaves falling. He folded his underpants and placed them on the top of the pile of clothes.

He felt calm and free and honest. He stepped out from under the tree, onto the footpath. The sun shone brightly on the sea. The air was crisp and fresh, the ground soft under his bare feet. He walked. He felt the air about his body. He thought about the movement of each muscle as it worked to move him along the path on top of the cliff. It really was beautiful.

His heart leapt when he saw a middle-aged woman approaching. He would nip into the nearest bush. Too late! She moved her hand to her gaping mouth. He had been spotted. What to do? He kept walking, nonchalantly, as if all were well. She reacted in the correct and English manner by concentrating on her dog and pretending he was not there at all. As he passed her he said, ‘Sorry.’ She glanced at him, disgusted, wrapping her Barbour jacket around her as if his nakedness might be infectious.

He felt offended that she could be so offended by his body. Then he felt amused. He smiled to himself and walked boldly onwards. She had noticed him, at least.

The ground, the path, the air, the view belonged to him as he belonged to it. He could be there in his body, in his honest form. Life suddenly seemed simple to him. He belonged here amongst the trees and the ferns and the sky. There was no confusion. Nature did not rush or shout. Nature took its time, stayed as steady and true as his footsteps.

He walked on, the leaves fell around his bare feet. He took a left and walked down a rockier path. Dusk was coming. He had walked all day long. He grew tired. He saw the sea. The sea was tired too. It fell, exhausted onto the shore, it exhaled. It wanted to rest, to stop, to stay but the shore would not let it stay. He felt tired like the sea. It grew dark and he stood, staring at the sea. He cried. He missed Anne. He walked on, into the sea. The sea was tired too. He walked on. He would water the plants later. First he would meet with the sea; together they would know what to do.

Thursday, 27 March 2014

Between the stations

They speak for twenty minutes each day. She gets on at Ramsgate. He gets off at Canterbury. But between the stations, they have twenty minutes.

She likes her name when it comes from him. His vocal chords play it well; better than the man who shares her bed.

He likes to make her laugh. It’s his favourite sound, next to Sammy’s laugh. He especially likes her laugh when he makes it happen. Once, the ticket man made her laugh, but it did not sound as good that time. It was better when it belonged to him.

He knows that the twenty minutes before she gets on, is much longer than the twenty minutes they share. She knows that the twenty minutes she spends with her husband, in-between the programmes, is much longer than the twenty minutes between the stations.

It is there, between the stations, that they really feel alive; connected to another person. If only for a little while.

Monday, 17 February 2014

The rain is very beautiful tonight

The rain is very beautiful tonight, tapping gently on the windowpane. Not asking, beckoning politely.
The wind is telling stories tonight, raucous, full of embellishments and lies. The wind is working hard tonight, showy and confident.
But the rain is quiet and tired. Falling and falling, making puddles and reflections; thinking of the life it might have had.
The wind tells tales of everything it says it has been, and I would not question it for it might blow me aside, angry, brash and bold.
I can give you diamonds, says the wind, I can show you the world and I am every man.
I can give you tears, says the rain, and nothing else I have to offer, but the tears are true and I am to blame, so says the rain, as it falls and taps on the windowpane.
I can give you colours bright, says the wind, and excitement as I dance you through the day.
I can give you what I have, says the rain, it is not much but droplets you can drink, my love; water sweet and plain.
And the wind carries you away.
And the rain falls as you dance the distance.
But when the wind dies down and drops you to the ground,
The rain will just keep on falling.
And the rain is very beautiful tonight.

Friday, 14 February 2014

When we turned off the engine

When you kissed me and the sun hit the back of your head and warmed my face.
When I watched the sea chopping and changing, restless behind you.
When I saw your eyes closed as our lips met soft.
When all was right and held close as can be.
When there was no place to go and no thing to do.
When all was just me and just you.
When we turned off the engine.
When you kissed me.

Thursday, 9 January 2014

The prophet in the rabbit skin coat

She came stumbling up the stairs and you caught her eye;
The prophet in the rabbit-skin coat.
And soon you realised your mistake
Because first she licked you,
But then she got her teeth stuck in
And she shook you about with the contents of her glass.
“You’ve got shdeep, mysterious eyes…”
She examines you more closely, swaying towards you from the top of the stairs.
“Surch slanty eyes,”
You laugh.
“Silfer fox….” Sway, narrowing of the eyes, “Cunning fox,” sway, wine ebbs over the side of her glass onto your leg, “Shly fox.”
She turns to me, “ ’e’s a sly foxsh, don’t trust a shly one.”
She turns to you, “I’nt she beau’iful! Shis beau’iful!”
The glass swings up into the air (slop)
“She’ll leave you if you’re not careful. “Sh’ weel!”
She turns to me, “Oh you’re beau’ful,”
To you, “Oh she ees.” She sways in close, you laugh, wiping the spittle from your face. She drops a little more wine on your leg for good measure.
“Ma bruther got me this coat. Oh yesh. He’s in Irn Maidin. Ish rabbit shkin.”
“Ooh, how lovely,” I say stroking the coat in horror.
She leans in, close to your face. “She’ll leave you if you’re not careful. Sh’ weel!”
And off she stumbles, the prophet in the rabbit skin coat.


After School

After school they were so tired because they had learnt so much, they needed food.
After school they were so tired because they had learnt so much, they couldn't hold onto the wrappers from the food.
After school they were so tired because they had learnt so much, they dropped the bag of sandwich crusts, crushed diet coke can, empty Tesco bag, Golden Wonder, fish and chip paper, wooden fork, lollypop stick to the floor.
After school they were so tired because they had learnt so much, but they wanted to share what they’d learnt, so they just about managed to scrawl, “BIGGESTS CUNT CHOPS IN THE BAY” on the windowsill of the bus.

They were so very tired after school because they had learnt a new word: “BIGGESTS.”

Monday, 6 January 2014

The Sea and the Shore

The Sea and the Shore

The sea is so tired because it never stops. It falls on the shore exhausted, asking for a place to stay, to rest. “No room for you, you’re too big,” says the shore so the sea flops down momentarily and then falls back. It comes knocking again but the shore never lets it stay for long. When the sea is very tired and very angry it lashes the shore, pounds on the door, as if to say, “You won’t let me stay? You’ll pay, you’ll pay.” Then, in its anger, it breaks the shore down into tiny pieces, hoping to make room, but there’s never anywhere for the sea to stop. The sea is so very tired. It is always seeking a place to stay.