The Memory Man

I stand

at the gate that squeaks

when it moves to meet

the rest of itself.

A viscous collision occurs

as metal meets metal and

flakes of rust are disturbed

in the force of the thrust.

I wait in the wind for the

memory man to find his wings

and bring the broken

songs he sings for us.

I recall last spring when

the squeaking gate squeaked

and my waiting ceased,

when I rushed to greet you,

I moved to meet you;

the rest of myself.

As he sings to the beat

of the squeak,

and the thrust

of metal on metal,

the flaking rust,

I think of us.

Mistaken Identities

I thought that by the time these things started happening, the circumstances would be different to what they are at this point.

I always knew she would grow up and leave at some point, obviously, but I didn’t expect it to be yet, or under these circumstances. I didn’t expect it to feel so shitty, that’s for sure, or for her tunnel vision to be quite as narrow as it appears. I didn’t expect her to stay out most nights at another family home with a boyfriend I’ve never met. I didn’t expect her leaving and changing to feel like someone ripped my heart out, or like she has entirely denounced me.

This is not about self-pity. Well, maybe the act of writing about it here is, but everything behind it has nothing little to do with it.

We all have hopes and wishes for our children. We want them to have better lives, or similar lives to our own. People compare her to me and my life at her age and I dismiss the comparison. I refuse it. The circumstances that surrounded me are entirely different to those that surround her. Yes, I had a child at her age. Yes, I had a home at her age. Yes, I had a job at her age but that means nothing. It doesn’t mean that as long as what she does doesn’t fall below the level I was at at a certain age, then anything above it is ok. I want better for her. She should want better for her. I don’t want her struggling or missing out on anything. I want her to love her life, to be able to experience things and places, to feel free, to stay young and vibrant because she has avoided a hard life. I want her stable and secure in an unstable world. Stability, comfort, and peace has to be strived for, for most of us anyway. The possibility for experiences comes from funding those experiences.

I am not saying that there are set things that she should have, save for a good job and a nice home. I don’t think she would be failing if she didn’t marry and have children, for example. I think she should have tattoos and piercings, and crazy hair if she wants it. I do want her to see beautiful places, and to do brave things. I want her to be successful – but then, i know we all measure success differently.

I guess I just wanted a good life for her, that’s all. A free and safe life and a strong and prosperous place in the world.

But here’s where I think I went wrong. Well, one of the ways in which I went very wrong…

I made her feel like she was my biggest mistake.

I wasn’t hard about anything else other than boys, sex, and education. My greatest fear for her was that she would sacrifice experience and the chance of education, freedom and stability by making the same mistakes I did. I would tell her that I wanted a better life for her than I had, that I wanted more for her than I had. What I didn’t realise, while I was trying to steer her in the right direction, was that I was deeming her my mistake – the biggest mistake a person could make, the biggest mistake that I had made.

That is, the mistake that caused me to miss out on education, travelling, a social life, a career, financial stability. One that prevented my own success. One that hindered me at every potential avenue to the extent that my life, the one that she was at the centre of and was the priority of, was insufferable.

I didn’t mean to do that.
That isn’t the message I meant to give her.

I meant to empower her, not make her feel worthless. I wanted a good life for her, not to make her feel like she made my life bad.

The only things she had ever defied me over are boys and education. The presence of too much of the former, and not enough of the latter, we’re all I was focused on. She didn’t ever do anything else wrong that made me a mad parent, not really. Those are the areas of her life where she has found her right to assert herself in immediate defiance to the lines I etched; those that were my greatest fears for her.

I never meant to make her feel like she was the greatest mistake I made. She was probably, looking back as I often do, one of the best decisions I ever made. Maybe one day she’ll realise that she has brought me the greatest amount of happiness. It’s always been me and her. She has been my priority since I was a child myself, my best company, and loveliest friend and now, she misunderstands so deeply that the gap between us feels wider each day.

I did not mean for that to happen.

Death’s Kiss

I hide in the shadows.

Watching.

Waiting.

I, in my ethereal form, am crouched and cramped; peeking over the floral duvet that bedraggles the bed. The house is empty. Her room: both her prison and hiding place, is the room she has chosen to die in; shrouded in an inky blackness – a comforting darkness – just as she likes it. The wall opposite the bed supports the defeated frame of the girl who, during these long hours, has shed a torrent of tears.

She does not know I see her folded there with the pink jingly-jangly elephant, faded and aged, sandwiched between her chest and thighs. She does not know that I hear the breath bursting in fits from her body as she sobs or that I know that she has remained in the same position for 6 hours. She thinks no one sees or hears her but I do. I see her pale drawn face and her blonde dishevelled hair revealing white knuckles that belong to hands that clench it in fistfuls.  Her mother and stepfather cannot see her. They currently dine on shellfish at a reputable restaurant, talking idly of their fraudulent lives but secretly wishing they were elsewhere. While many miles away, her brother sips a pint of ignorant bliss in the company of friends, far from the hell he calls home.

I want to grab her but I cannot. There are rules.
And those who break the rules pay the consequences. I have learned that lesson.

So I, uncontrollably mimicking her, am folded as she is and all I can do now is watch and wait. My watching provides no detachment. Watching means to live and breathe; though I have no life or breath inside of me. I am integrated into the secret agonies of the final moments of my charge; witnessing every erratic thought that spins through her haunted mind. I feel what she feels while, unknowingly, she manipulates my invisible form to mirror her actions.
It is she who has summoned me.

The flashbacks come.
I see the time she watches her mother leaving the driveway. At the window she stands, praying her mother will change her mind. Her muscles tense. Her throat tightens. Her eyes tingle with the sting of raw tears. She is clutching something fluffy and pink that I recognise: the thing that always absorbs her teardrops. She wants to bang on the window and scream for help. She hears footsteps and turns to seek out the source.
The man is there.

Perhaps I should steal her? I want to spare her from this painful review.
Oh, but I must wait!

A new memory comes. I see her sitting alone at a dining table. She hums along to a song that plays only in her head. She is told to shut up. She does as she is told and finishes her homework in silence.
She packs her books away and rises from the table, pushing her chair underneath. Wooden legs screech on ceramic tiles. The base of the milk bottle slams into the back of her head. Down she goes.
Darkness overpowers her vision
The man sips his tea.

She takes me to the summer she turned 7. She has been out riding her bike. She comes home to discover her mother is working an evening shift at the local pub, keeping her blind eye busy. The daddy long-legs are dancing clumsily yet menacingly across the garden path. She makes a run for it, through their lax formation, to the door. She enters; quiet as a mouse but I, and I alone, hear her prayers for invisibility.
The man waits.

Patience, I tell myself. Patience.

I see her asleep. Cosy in her bed. Skinny arms form a tight cage around her favourite thing: the pink jingly-jangly eared elephant she has had since she was 2 weeks old. His stitched-on, big, bright blue eye is eternally open, currently just centimetres from her face; looking at everything. Seeing nothing. The radio plays low. The room is covered wall to ceiling in posters of posing pop stars. So many faces. So many eyes. None that can see. She dreams of being a dancer while her mother dreams an unknowable dream just down the hall. A floorboard creaks.
She stirs as the stuffed toy is prised slowly out of its cage.
With a drowsy reluctance, she opens her eyes.
The man is there.
Together, we shift again, to another time and place.
She is racing through the house, through the kitchen, under the arch and left up the murky green stairs. Step after step, she inclines. Gasping; grappling for purchase on the bannister. I hear her heart thumping in her chest – faster than her footfalls – to the soundtrack of frantic jingling bells. A hand grabs at the swinging tail of the elephant but she yanks at the substantial portion of polyester already in her hold. I see the tail rip from its base as the main body is freed. A hungry hand finds her scrawny ankle and pulls her down to the bottom step then carries her up.
The man has her.

Next, in a bedroom with one whole wall covered in sliding, mirrored panels.
She is surveying the scene of a previous crime, looking for an elephant’s tail.
On her hands and knees she checks under the unmade bed and there, in the dusty space, hides a wooden box. I beg her not to open it but she cannot hear me. I remember that this is her memory and my begging now, just as it was then, is useless.
She retrieves the box, sits cross-legged on the flecked carpet and opens the lid.

I watch signs of confusion spread over her face as she takes in the contents.
Newspaper clippings, yellowed and folded neatly, guarded by her elephant’s bodiless tail. Frowning, she snatches it out. She was about to close the lid but curiosity seized her. Once open in her shaking hands her eyes flicker over the faded black print; skim, skim, skimming over the words

Draper. Aged 9.  Missing.

And underneath, a photograph. A pretty young murdered girl. Smiling widely with gaps in her teeth.

The slamming of a car door startles her away from the page. I see him walk briskly down the pathway towards the house. I beg and plead her to put the box back. She cannot hear me. I scream at her. I cannot help myself. The man is coming.

But instead of doing as I pointlessly insist she moves her gaze to a second page. I fill with dread as I see the man grope into the depths of his pocket to locate his keys.
She hears the key in the door. Moving fast she stuffs the papers back into their wooden enclosure and shoves it back under the bed. She grabs the tail and nimbly flees the room on tip-toes, trying to remember the emboldened words that will not make sense to her for years to come.
The man is home.

I rock back and forth, manically, as she does. I hold an invisible elephant and she holds the only comfort she has known for 14 years. I feel her weaken, her chest rise and fall, her heart slow to a beat that signals that soon it will end and all the while I hear her cries punctuated with shrill screams. Desperate, dying moans. Images flash and flicker. Voices tune in and out. Echoes from the depths of the past. So fast. Little snippets. Fragments of a life.
I almost resign to break the rules but then it’s too late. We are hurtling again, together, deeper into the crevices of her sub-conscious. Pillows. Scissors. White rope and teddy bears. I smell whisky, tobacco, engine grease and lemon cake; strong, sweet and putrid all at once. I hear Buddy Holly, the sound of chewing, and whispering in the dark.

We are thrust into an imageless void where only sounds can be heard. A cacophony rises up; louder and louder. I can hear them, all of them talking over each other but not to each other. We raise our hands to pound our palms into our ears, over and over, to make the noise stop. Our rocking becomes clumsy. Gradually, they drop out one by one by one until, only one chillingly morose voice remains; seeming to seep from in the darkness. In this shared space of memory where only she and I reside, it speaks: ‘You were the reason I married your mother.’

We scream out a terrified sound that comes from the deepest depths of our despair as pain shoots through our chests like fatal arrows shot into our hearts.

And then, silence.
Only silence.

An eerie stillness seizes the room. We are too weak, too sleepy, to react to the stabbing pain; dazed and drifting slowly apart.
She has released me.

She is nearly there. It will soon be over.
She moves only her eyes to the carpet beside her, to the brown bottle that lies empty and lid-less on its side. The back of her head is heavy against the wall barely supported by a limp, thin neck and a spine that is ready to flop. I see her fingers twitch to touch the matted fibres of the pink elephant with the jingly-jangly ear. Their tips move slightly as they stroke their farewell to a faithful friend.

I have lurked in these shadows many times – longed to take her – to free her from her hell but it was destined to be the man’s hand that took her life. That is what is etched in stone on the tablet of her fate. Yet, she beats him to it. She cheats the design and in doing so she prevents a duplication of the event in 1964. She will leave on her own tragic terms, not his.

For as long as she could recall she had yearned, fiercely, to climb out from her own skin. It has constantly itched and prickled at her from inside as if irritant nettle leaves and spikey thistles were growing in its layers. She knew what she must do before he did it. Tonight, empowered by the thought of freedom, she will leave him. She will leave all of them to become peaceful and mine.

She is ready.

I prepare to go to her when I see her arms drop limp to her sides, landing with a quiet thud, palms up. She blinks once, twice, and again. Her torso slides gently sideways, to the right, along the wall that has supported her for all this time. The elephant slides reluctantly from her lap to the floor with a sad and solitary jingle.
Her shoulder passes over the skirting board then meets the carpet. I see her head loll and come to rest, finally, softly, on the floor of her bedroom next to a familiar pink trunk.

Now it is time.

I dart across the room in one breezeless swoop to where she lay; serene and numbed.
I stand in her fading vision. She blinks slowly, heavily – just once; using the last drop of life left in her to focus on me. She can see me now. I know she belongs more to my world now than to hers.

I lean to her and hope that, if any dwindling consciousness remains with her, she will not fear me. ‘It is time’ I say as I place my mouth to her lips. I think the thought I am required to think and in only seconds my work is complete, my kiss has taken her last breath and ceased her failing heart.

Her wide eyes have fixed firm.  The beautiful blue of her irises are eclipsed by the blackened pools of her pupils and up from the beautiful yet ruined form, crumpled and defeated before me, rises a pure and perfect essence.

She gives me her weightless hand then glances back, not in sorrow at the empty human shell or in regret for the life she is leaving behind but in gratitude, at the tailless pink elephant with the jingly-jangly ear. She turns back to me then smiles a smile so almost divine.

I have given my kiss,
and now she is mine.

 

Futile Love

 

My love for you does not exist,

For it cannot be.

For it to be, must mean it must belong

To some time and place,

To some tangible somewhere, to some version of reality.

If I claim it as my own, it must belong only to me,

Which cannot be.

And after all, which reality would you have me confine it to?

To this reality? This world of sense and smallness?

You would have me beat it to reduction?

Or densify it into visibility? So you may use blind eyes upon it,

So you may name it ‘my love for you’, and call it sure and safe?

You would have me claim it as my own, and not ours?

I cannot do that, for my love for you does not exist.

It cannot be. It is not.

Yet its magnitude, could not, would not,

be held fast in the feeble confines of this world.

There would be no room for its weightless gravity;

No space durable enough to cradle its submissive anguish

to peace. Nor to Rock its calm into a frenzied, reckless rage.

I cannot trap it here. Nor coax it to reside here,

Within some brittle walls of vain construction,

Where no human hand could hard enough whip

Its roaring silence until its deathly silence screeches and

its mute screams reach the deaf ears of oblivion.

There is no mortal death that could snuff out its vibrancy.

In its deep death, it is too alive for this world.

In its tenacious vivacity, it holds too much lively death to live here,

And in the scorching light of its life, the dark is extinguished,

And there is nothing. It is nothing.

For the light and the dark of my love cannot live here.

There is no life force capable of sustaining it.

So great that it could not be.

So entirely everything, that it could only,

ever and always,

be nothing.

It is so beyond life in its non-living that it is death itself.

beyond perishable, so dead that it can never know life.

You would have me try to murder my love?

So you can mourn at its empty grave?

And rejoice for the life you imagine it lived?

For all the evers through which time has flown,

My love can never know, yet knows all, all too well.

The never of my love would be the most present absence

So suffocating in its absent presence, it would devour,

And in its non-existence, would swallow up always.

The always here could not force its longevity upon its never,

Nor could the never of here destroy its perpetual foreverness.

It’s always is no moment, not ever, not even at all.

For in its lacking brevity, never is all time,

all moments, and all.

My love for you could not move here, nor could it be still,

For it is the sluggish-slow drag of the noiseless crawl

And the echoing shriek of purity,

at the mercy of the plummeting fall.

This world could not prevent its motionless plunge

into the unreachable depths of a life-lit pit

filled with the fluid of bleached black stone,

where depraved restraints hold virtuous freedom.

And you would have me blot out its innocence?

Strip it of its murky light?

And rape it of its radiant corruption?

So that it may lay it at your feet, life and deathless,

So you may fixed it there, and call it stable and purged?

It is a void filled vacancy; the most absent of presence,

So vast in its everything, that it could only be nothing,

And so singular, that it is everything and all;

All at once, everything and all, yet nothing at all.

Yet you, you would have me reduce everything?

And make something out of nothing?

You would have me house my love here,

In the illusory ramparts of this reality?

It cannot be, for it does not exist.

It cannot live here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I Gave You Fire

 

 

I gave you fire to fight this world.

Before you were born, it belonged to you. It was the only gift I had to give.

Growing bones, blood, and brain; you grew from flames.

Infused with the fire I grew for myself.

You fed from MY furnace.

 

I tried to teach you to summon flames to lick at the sharp edges of this harsh life,

to singe the outskirts of all that may try to extinguish you, so only you

can define and distinguish you.

I tried to teach you to use its force as your fuel.

I have been to hell to save you the trip, with my visitor’s pass, and each time returned,

burned; skin stripped, branded with ripped raw scars as souvenirs.

 

You would do well to remember: my fire knows yours too well.

It reared it, forged it for you, stoked it until you alone could keep it ablaze.

My fire feels your heat, and smiles proudly at the trail of embers that flare

and swirl up from the gust from the slammed door, or feels the burn

from a mouthful of your flames.

 

I gave you fire to fight this world, infused with the fire I grew for myself.

You fed and grew from my flames, and now,

for your greatest weapon,

I take the blame.

For your formidable defenses, I can only say:

 

Take care.

Beware.

The forger of fire

will fight you fair.

Six Hours

In six hours, I have destroyed and devoured you, and bolted down my core from your rearranging ways. I have invited you in, only to send you away. I have cooked, bathed and blessed you; built an empire for two. I’ve ran my finger up and down your spine, countless times.

 

In six hours, I have waited at the front row, waited at home. I have been your devil at 3am, your lover all night, and the source for you other women advice. I’ve thrown some knives, and caught none. I have woken up next to you, in my mind, a hundred times.

 

In six hours, I have loved you for a lifetime, and left you a million times. I’ve frozen up, given up, and held you up to the light to check for imperfections. I’ve discounted you over and over. I’ve recounted your skin, scoured your bright surface for sin and found some, but none that dims the shine.

 

In six hours, I’ve written Fanmail, scrubbed out lines… said everything, and nothing, and rehearsed goodbyes. I’ve been yours, been twenty-five, been more your type, been the perfect wife, and seen that we’re nothing alike. I’ve loved in the face of your pain, polished your framed fame and burned in the flames of your fever.

In just six hours, I have thawed in seconds, melted in minutes, and evaporated into your incredible.

 

 

The Lie

 

Time does not heal a thing.

All those wise types with comforting

Voices in soft, sympathetic tones,

Declaring the magic of time.

Well, they lie.

Time heals nothing much.

Time is not magic.

It is what it is. An invention.

If the wound is scratched often enough,

Day by day-

How can anything heal?

The scab picked at, mithered over,

Almost healed. Pretending to heal.

Itching from underneath.

If you are lucky, the damage site does not spread,

You are left with a scaly silver streak that once wept

A blot that time only teases at.

A constant reminder, but mocking time.

Deceptive, aching, viscious time,

Does not really heal a thing.

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.

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”

 

 

 

Our Game

 

And our game is

the glide and the drop

that we play for.

Its the start and the stop

our time dearly pays for.

 

The win, lose, or draw

as we ignore scores

in a playful war…

 

Its the torn between

tournament and team,

the torment of miles between

where close covered hands are seen

by the threat of the fold of the dream.