Sunday, 14 February 2016
A glimmer of something new
Saturday, 13 February 2016
The boy with the sea green guitar
The closer they moved the louder the rhythm grew until it felt like it were the beating heart in Pandora’s chest; it overwhelmed her and before she realized salty tears fell from her tired eyes, rolled down over her dirty cheeks and fell, vanishing into the darkness around her. Some dried on her cheeks, the heat of the fire as it licked at the blackness of the night, drying them before they had a chance to flee. Pandora stood before a white building that could have been a church but no cross sat atop its roof, nor was there a board advertising the day's sermon. Instead embossed atop the arched door way were the words ‘Community is Faith’ after reading the sentence Pandora took a long step over the threshold of what she had decided was the village’s community center. Inside the fire burned so hot she felt like she might be walking the long path into hell, the flames crackled and spat embers at them as they walked through the randomly set table and chairs toward the stage where the man sat. No matter how close Pandora grew he didn’t seem to notice her or he chose not to, he simply stared down at the shimmering sea green guitar in his bloody hands, picking out a melody so melancholic it cut short Pandora’s breath.
“Hello?” she called though she had barely used her voice for so long in fear of being heard that she thought it had been a stranger whom had called out the greeting. He did not acknowledge her. Pandora moved closer, she could pick out his features now, his blue eyes so sad they resembled the sea after a storm had ripped through it and turned it upside down, its water casting murky and dank. When she looked around him Pandora realized what storm had ripped through his life, why he sat and played in spite of the growing fire and the lurking surge; around him lay the other members of his band. They were all dead, the singer lay on his stomach, to Pandora it looked as though he had been beaten to death, the white of his skull shining through his mass a dark hair, the fire reflected in the pool of deep crimson blood that had formed and thickened and the microphone it looked as though he had attempted to use as a weapon lay beneath him. Toward the back was the drummer, still sat at his drums, one hand still clutching a stick, he looked young; the youngest and it looked as though this might have saved him the same brutal death as the lead singer. The back of his bright blonde hair was mashed with blood and brain matter where the bullet had torn through and behind him Pandora spied a bloody hole in the wooden cladding. She cried for him as she stood there letting the music wash over her, she cried for all of the things he would never do, for the loss of talent and promise, she cried for the sheer unfairness of it.
She was frozen in time, everything felt like it had stopped, the flames, the smoke, the music; nothing seemed to move, Pandora could stroke the fire, feel no heat, no burn of her flesh, she could walk through it, pass through the pain and the fear that couldn't touch her any more and take his hand. She could break him free of his melancholia, his sadness and lead him to safety. In a perfectly supernatural world that’s what she would have done but in this broken and torn world though her skin had thickened, it could not protect her from the fire nor could it help her save him. The fire had climbed the stairs that led to the stage, it crept toward him but still he played; he picked a tune for the wicked to dance into hell, a melody to carry the virtuous into heaven, Pandora could almost see the souls dancing around him, marching to their destiny.
“Please” she screamed as the fired began to strum its own harmony, she watched the strings burn and snap, coiling, the end searing hot and burning bright like a star in the night sky but still he didn’t flinch,
“Oh god” she gasped as the flames touched his fingertips, she moved forward, the heat was overwhelming, suffocating, she couldn’t fathom how he sitting there, statuesque and silent, he had stopped playing now and had set his guitar down, given it to the flames willingly. Pandora grabbed his leg in hope that human contact might break him free of whatever trance he had fallen into but nothing passed. She wondered if he was even alive or if he had died up there with his friends and if all she was seeing was his soul, waiting to move on. She shook harder, her nails digging into his calf; still he bore no reaction. Her hand fell back to her side, her heart ached for him, for the emptiness that filled his eyes; tears streamed from her eyes, Pandora could have fallen to her knees and wept but instead she wiped her tears free, not only had her skin grown thick but she had learned that she could not dwell; her life and Boos depended on it. When she looked back up, her eyes sore and her skin burning like she had taken a walk on the sun’s surface, he was staring at her, his eyes bore into her but he didn’t speak,
“Please come with me” Pandora begged, “please” but he still didn’t respond instead he stood and he smiled down at her, a smile that wished her luck, that said ‘I hope you make it’ and then he turned and walked into the flames. They swallowed him like a hungry lion devouring a deer; he made not utterance of pain or fear but just vanished like he had never truly existed.
Pandora left the burning building behind her, she hoped deep down that a voice would call to her, his voice calling for her to wait, to take him with her but it never came and the further she moved from the village the father the thought was pushed from the forefront of her mind. Pandora wished she’d taken a wide birth around that village but as she ventured back into the clogged woodland she began to think that there would be no avoiding death, not any more.
Tuesday, 2 February 2016
A procession Of Spectres
Thursday, 21 January 2016
A snippet of something on going
Thursday, 7 January 2016
Alfred and the Heart monitor
Saturday, 2 January 2016
Maude's Story
Monday, 28 December 2015
Charlie's story
Charlie looked back, his eyes locking on his brothers as they car moved away painfully slowly over the gravel driveway of their home, he had climbed as close to the back window as he could and his nose occasionally bumped the dirty glass but he didn’t care; if he could Charlie would have jumped from the car and run home, begging to stay, pledging to be a good boy forever, as long as he could stay but those words had left his mouth before, they had fallen on deaf ears and Charlie, even though he was only 6 years old, knew that those ears would remain deaf to his sentences. Charlie hadn’t cried when his mother ans father had told him what their decision had been,
“you’re going to have to go and spend some time away Charlie” his mother had said in her correct British tone, Charlie had the same tone, he had always liked that he and his mother were so alike; he shared her bright blue eyes and golden blond hair, his skin was pale, soft like hers and decorated with a gentle spatter of freckles on his nose. His brother had been drawn as a complete opposite; he had dark hair and even darker eyes, his skin was not pale like Charlies but always had a slight tan as though the sun forever shone down over him, he looked like their father. When his mother had broken the news to him Charlies brother had been in the room, he had stood off to one side watching silently as silently as Charlie had remained when his mother had said those words and Charlie had remained silent until he had been bundled into the car not even a day later though when he had spoken it was not to cry or protest but simply to bid his brother good bye.
The car journey was long and tedious, tedious only for the fact that Charlie spent the whole time considering what it was exactly that he had done to wind up in the car with his father silent at the wheel, being driven away from his mother and his big brother; his best friend. The more Charlie thought about what had happened in the playground that day the more and more frustrated he grew, his seat belt began to irritate him and the silence in the car grew so loud that it became piercing,
“Daddy!” he yelled over the waves of screaming silence that crashed against his skull, “I didn’t do anything” he added when he felt his fathers eyes reflect upon him through the rear view mirror,
“Listen Charlie darling, this will only be for a little while, me and your mother and your brother too will all come and visit you and then when you come home we can have a party to celebrate” his father's words rang dull and promise-less and Charlie despite his young age knew that he had said them just to appease him. He slumped back in the seat his mind again running through the events that had happened on the playground.
Charlies big brother was only 3 years older than he was but he was taller and broader and when Charlie looked at him he saw a titan. That day in the playground all Charlie had wanted to do was play with his brother, it had seemed like a perfectly simple thing however his teacher Mrs Pierpoint had responded to his request by pairing him with another boy his age a boy that Charlie didn’t want to play with.
“I don’t want to play with you anymore” Charlie forced the words over gritted teeth, his hands stung and pulsed with every heartbeat
“Charlie no!” his brother voice broke through the thrumming in Charlie's head
“Oh dear god” His teacher's voice followed soon after, it was fraught and filled with horror like in the voices of the women in the old horror film he and his brother watched late at night when their parents had gone to bed. Charlie froze, he felt his brother hands close around his and then he felt himself dragged backward,
“Charlie Black what do you think you are doing” His teacher's words were now coloured with shock, Charlie looked up from his bound hands, he dropped the wooden handled skipping rope on the floor and looked at her, she held the other boy who shook with sobs, his cried rang out across the playground and others had gathered to watch,
“I-I was playing, I was only playing” he whined innocently, his brother still held him tightly, he began to cry, though he was not entirely sure why “I-was-only-Playing-Miss” he uttered between sobs,
“My office now” this voice was different, it was strong and laden with authority, “everyone, Miss Pierpoint please call the parents” his head teacher added before leading Charlie and his brother back into the small school building.
Charlie had been told to wait in the small room between the reception and the office, his brother sat beside him silently, tears lingered in his eyes just on the brim of cascading down over his cheeks but they never fell, he held Charlie's hand the whole time that they had to sit there. As their mum and dad arrived and fussed over them, as they sat and waited and watched the silent play unfold before them; the head teacher said something and Charlie's mother had broken down and cried, his father had hugged her and 20 minutes later they had left, neither had looked at him; he remembered wondering what he had done. He let his brother lead him from the room, from the school, he let him fasten his seatbelt and then held his hand the whole way home; no one had talked. That evening his parents had argued, his mother had cried and Charlie had slept in his brother bed and the next morning they had told him he wasn’t going to school, he spent the day playing in his room alone, his mother still couldn’t look at him as she handed him his jam sandwich without the crusts and set his juice down beside him; he had wondered why. Then when Charlie's big brother had returned home from school with a bloody lip his mother had sat him down and told him the news.
Charlie was brought back to the present by a pothole in the country road they travelled down, he studied the interior of the car for a few second before meeting the reflection of his fathers eyes,
“I was only playing with the rope daddy” he said “and then I didn’t want to play anymore, I didn’t want to play with him anymore, I wasn’t going to do anything with the rope, I-I just didn’t want to play anymore” the words were met with silence, a silence that remained for the rest of the long journey. Charlie couldn’t understand why nobody would listen to him, he just didn’t want to play anymore.
Tuesday, 2 July 2013
The one...for right now
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| Image by gubgib at freedigitalphotos.net |
The one that’s all fine and well but do I need to meet the one at 24, some people do and they have, many people have met the one long before they turn 24 which I think is wonderful for them just not for me, i’m just not ready for the one yet and then I also wonder what happens when the one turns out not to be the one and ends up breaking your heart; you curse, you cry and you bawl and then along comes the one, again. So the one isn’t really the one and if there’s only one great love out there for us then what do we do when we find and loose our one great love.
So there I sat after reading my horoscope thinking about love and the one and great love and how many great people have fallen in and out of love and written about it for all of us mere mortals to read and swoon over. The decision I have come to after only a few hours of contemplation and two 80s high school romance movies is that with love no matter how great or insignificant you might be to the world there are no rules, you make your own. Also maybe, just maybe in life we do find the one but before this, before we find the great and everlasting one we meet and have the chance to love many, many other smaller ones, many little great loves and eventually this yellow brick road of the ones lead us right up to our final and last one great love. We all get the chance to write our own significant and one of a kind love story, there’s not another out there like our own. So maybe there’s a chance my horoscope is right this week, for once, maybe I did go to an event as a favour and maybe I met one of my many ones in life, the next paragraph in my little love story; the one…for now.
