His Dark Angles

 

Shade and shame covered her as she stood staring down at the hole in the ground that now housed her mother. Had it not been for the unused tissue providing a barrier between nail and skin, she would have bled from the force of her clenched fist. There were no tears here just a stern pale straight face staring downward, wondering whether she would ever feel full up with enough satisfaction to walk away.

A bird had been watching from the high branches of the old oak that sheltered her but she had not noticed as the dark angles of him had danced along above. The tree shaded them both from the afternoon sun of that day so thick was its maturity that dappled light could only be found at the periphery of its shadow. She had hoped for heavy rain and fast winds to mark the occasion, yet none came, only a bright stillness was in attendance that brought nothing that the dead woman did not deserve.

She had dreamt of this day many times, and each time the scene came to her in her sleep, it had been raining hard with an aerial view that presented sharp black and obedient umbrellas in a neat row boxed around the hole. In the first dream, she had seen the bird swooping across her vision, and in all of the other dreams that followed if it did not come to her, she had scanned the treetops, and traced her mind along the stony outline of the church in the distance to seek it out. He was the only guest she cared to notice but he was not a mourner and he only wore his textured black suit through obligation and no choice of his own. He did not pay respects, or forget all the bad things she had done, he just danced from branch to branch in the old oak, or skimmed on the breezes that blew through the cemetery.

Outside of the girl, nature knew nothing of the storm within her and bore no reflection of it. She made no change to it but for her weight channeled into the earth through the small soles of small shoes. No noise came from her to change the sounds, no movement was made to disrupt the air there, save the regular deep breaths that came from her. Petite and perfectly still, she did not hear the mourners voices carry from where they stood, chattering among themselves, waiting for her in clusters. She did not register the crunching of gravel under the tyres of a shiny new hearse full up with the next body moving slowly around the crematorium. Her being, connected to only the ground beneath her feet and the intensity of her fixed gaze, quietly celebrated the death of her mother.

Party Time

 

It used to amaze me how my mother could sit still and do nothing at a table. I used to consider it strange behaviour to be doing nothing besides smoking a cigarette and sipping tea. As an adult, that can sit at a table with nothing but a cigarette and a cup of coffee, I now understand exactly what she was doing. As children we do not understand how the minds of adults work. I sit alone and still with the whole weight of my life for company, as, I guess, my mother often did. The table is full, all seats are taken and as one faithful heavyweight shifts out, another steps in to take its place.

I look down at my coffee cup to avoid the burning glare of Regret searing into me from the opposite end of the table. I didn’t see him take his seat but I know he has come – even before I felt his stare, I felt my tummy drop fast as though I’d taken a hill at speed. He always comes with such penetrative force so I am not at all surprised but I still try, every time, to delay acknowledging him for as long as possible.

I trace the flat petals of a porcelain rose, still staring down, focused on my cup as if the fate of some brilliant human depended upon my accuracy and I realise that jealousy has joined the party. She hasn’t come for a long time and I can’t help but briefly furrow my brow at her presence. She takes her seat with a subtle elegance that I admire. The heat on me lifts as I feel Regret shift away towards her and I know he cannot help but find her intoxicating; drawn in by the power she is known for.

Discontent knows no such subtlety. He bursts in, unapologetically, raging and thrusting his weight at the place next to me. Regret moves his attention from Jealousy, skims past me, and meets the eyes of Discontent. The pair nod in acknowledgment and omit thin-lipped smirks of mutual satisfaction.

Now all seats are taken I understand that nothing at all depends on the accuracy of my traced lines .

“You all need to leave. I don’t have time for this shit.”

“Really?” asks Regret “That’s funny, I’m quite sure we’re here because you invited us.”

The Bird Book

It was the colour of the kingfisher that I recalled most clearly:

the grainy blue-green hue imperfectly contained in frayed lead lines.

It came to mind when they returned its weight to me:

some swooping bright image, perched on a river-side stump.

And I thought of your bones, and this book:

all I had of you, heavier than the bones of you,

but really only just a papery ghost of you.

I soon felt the true meaning:

The only meeting place we’d ever had

was at the page where the blue-green

bird was sat.

 

Hour’s Up

Hour’s up.

 

That’s it.

Time’s over.

 

Shifting bones rise from dents in the sofa.

Remember where you are?

Then call back all those released

thought beasts, back to the cage.

Peel them away from the walls,

present and bold as before; restored.

Take back their freedom,

and slam the cage door.

 

 

AGL & DVL

 

Angles aligned as I was looking away.

Now I, returning to myself, find

a gravity, pulling at every part of me.

Even as the force of feathers stings,

Angels lean in, and sing:

“Don’t sin”

 

 

Denounce bright light, slip down, nestle in;

Enticed by the beat of blackened silk wings.

Via the dark path of the deadly dance, I’ll bring

immensity, intensity; the lover’s best scene.

Devils lean in, and whisper:

“Don’t scream”