in a screaming arid host
tacitly phrased.
Copyright, 2007. Verilion
Labels: haiku, painful recollections, poem
Labels: haiku, painful recollections, poem
Jamie heard the toaster pop and knew that it would be the 17p ‘Special Beans’ from Lidl.
“Dad not home yet?” Jamie said slamming his books down on the peeling formica sideboard.
Mrs Rush looked up and smiled weakly. “Not tonight Jamie. Why don’t you read me one of your stories like you used to?” She pleaded
“Which one do you want? Further Maths or A level Economics?” Jamie spat out and turned on his heel slamming the door behind him.
At first, Jamie had felt sorry for his Dad and understood the draw to go to the pub and listen to Old Man Carragher weave those wondrous stories dripping his special beans between his fingers. As Carragher told the boys on the estate his stories, Jamie would watch the beans shimmer the different colours of a ray of light until Stevie Mack laughed at him. “They’re Haribo jelly beans from the corner shop lad.” Jamie tore his gaze away from their sheen. “Fuck lad! Next I’ll hear you still believe in Father Christmas.” No, Jamie had stopped believing in Father Christmas the year his Dad lost his job at the docks.
“Drink up Dad and come home,” Jamie ordered, standing behind his father.
“Sit down lad.” Carragher beckoned.
“Who are you my old man?” Mr. Rush sighed. “You’re in such a rush to grow up Jamie.” He pulled at Jamie’s arm then began to howl and whacked Carragher on the shoulder. “Rush,” he giggled.
“You’re pissed.” Jamie scolded.
“Oh come on.” Carragher soothed.
Jamie’s temper flared as he looked at the laughter lines around the old man’s eyes and he snatched the beans up and trickled them into the back of his throat. “That’s what I think of your stories and your beans old man.” He snarled and stalked away.
Days later Mr Rush pulled Old man Carragher through his home into his garden where a fresh green stalk, entwined with vine like leaves and blooming white flowers, reached up and up. All the creases in Carragher’s face ironed out in surprise as he realised what it was. There above the tree line was a split open trainer. “I, I don’t believe it!”
“What are you going to do?” Mr. Rush pushed Carragher towards the giant shoot.
Carragher’s jaw worked up and down for a few seconds before he replied: “There’s only one thing I can do.” And he began to climb up. He passed finger like tendrils reaching out.
“Carragher?” He heard a voice like the rustle of leaves and looked up to see a dark slit between the blooms beneath a nose shaped protuberance.
“Jamie?”
“The beans?” Jamie creaked as Carragher carried on climbing, over the chin, up to the plate sized green eye. “Carragher? Help me. Where are you going?”
“Lad.” Carragher called down as he crested the boy’s head. “The name’s Jack and me beans grew.”
“Where are you going?” Jamie pleaded. “Help me.”
“Lad me beans grew. What else is true?”
Labels: flash fiction, GBA(s)FC#2
Labels: painful recollections, poem
Labels: a voice from the past, poem
Mind the toes get their dose of
dew and wet blades of grass
between their inner most creases.
Mind the toes dig into the generations
of blunted glass
cooly cascading as they emerge.
Mind the toes dip and float
in the crystaline salty
blues and greens.
Mind the toes feel beneath them
the life, soul and grain
of the creaking floor.
Labels: poem, skipping through grass
Labels: painful recollections, poem
A picnic? A picnic? A picnic it is then.
Tins emptied, veggies chopped, mayonnaise squirted,
garlic pressed, chipolatas fried, mango chutney packed,
sarongs, water, keys, tickets, phone, ready.
Text messages, roads closed, under the east pillar.
The smell of fried sausages assaulting the nostrils.
This bridge might be a good spot.
That field might be a good spot.
Here under the tower is a hard spot,
but here under the tower is a good spot.
Trip, tread, careful, slow.
A wave, a smile, no grass to be seen.
We three spread and open,
a salad, some wine, bread, dips
Munch, chew, swallow, sip.
Mm, perhaps we have too much.
The sun sets behind
And glows in the windows
of the tower in front.
What time is it?
Is it time yet?
Is it time yet?
No, it’s not time yet.
It’s not dark yet.
A voice booms out,
echoing incoherently across the wide open spaces.
Is it time yet?
No! It’s not time yet.
Le Tour glows green.
A roar from the crowd,
like a Mexican wave they rise.
Sit down we shout back.
The first notes swim across the champs.
Strings of lights beam up into the sky.
A lump sticks in my throat,
and a fountain of fire rises.
Dandelion heads
descending into a shower of golden fireflies,
twinkling brightly
Then dying out.
Hoops of red white and blue,
hearts reaching out to love you,
twirlers skittering into the sky
exploding loudly into a rainbow
Labels: poem, skipping through grass
Labels: poem, skipping through grass
Labels: meditations by the sea, poem
Labels: painful recollections, poem
Labels: painful recollections, poem
Labels: poem, the passion of words
If the cold crept in and numbed my very soul,
Then the sun suffused my skin and washed it warm again.
If the moon caused my moods to sway back and forth like the ebbing tides,
Then the stars muted light offered hope and deliverance.
Copyright, 2007, VerilionLabels: introspection, poem
We are inhabited by an other,
‘til their voice fades,
their story told,
Or ‘til they whisper:
'Not today, another time.'
Labels: poem, the passion of words
Subject x describes dreams full of bright streaming daylight,
yet senses the inner spirit is dark.
In the bright and almost fluorescent radiance of these dreams
subject x is profoundly lost.
What are the possible meanings to this opposition?
Are we to conclude that the darkness is merely the night?
Is subject x engaged in a struggle to wake up?
Or is the darkness a fear that subject x has buried so deep,
that even in the brightest glow cannot be found?
Further observations will continue to consider
each of these hypotheses.
Labels: painful recollections, poem
This brushed steel wall is my protection.
(... is my prison.)
I stand far behind it surveying
(... pressed up against it)
the fact that it is tall, wide, strong, impenetrable.
made impotent by the fact that I do not know how to begin to
bring it down
Labels: painful recollections, poem
I watched him play with time
between his fingers:
stretching it,
snapping it,
stopping it
as if it was a pliable material,
like plasticine,
instead of the steady march of
seconds,
minutes,
days and
years
that I knew it to be.
Labels: poem, the passion of words
Labels: meditations by the sea, poem
Celebrate!
Froth spills over the razor thin crystal edges
as adhesive smiles are pasted over
barely disguised dripping disdain.
Rays of heat illuminate the
staggeringly joyous resignation while
on the other side of the cool horizon
of sombre iron bars
lies freedom;
stretching into the last hours of the day
Labels: interruptions from real life, poem
Labels: flash fiction
Labels: flash fiction
Her eyes were closed and she was rhythmically stroking the spine of her book; up and down. He found this arousing, which was a shame: his words were the reason she had closed in on herself.
“I just don’t seem to be getting through to you anymore. You seem to get more pleasure out of eating a cheese sandwich in the bath than from me. I just don’t think we should see each other anymore.”
Labels: flash fiction
The last time I saw him if I hadn’t been so wrapped up in myself maybe I would have noticed that for a bloke of his size he wasn’t supposed to be that size.
“Do you remember that nutty woman who used to stalk you in the cemetery?
I laughed remembering how my pubescence had hidden her black cloak and wild hair, I had seen breasts, a pretty face and my imagination ran wild until the day I had mistakenly tried to engage her in conversation and found myself momentarily locked into her insanity by her wild eyes. “Where is he? They put him here.” She scared the shit out of me and until today I hadn’t set foot in this cemetery again.
“Adam fancied the local crackpot, looking for her dead husband’s grave.” Christy burst into a lung spilling cough that he called laughter. “She said he’d died of influenza.” Christy’s red face could barely spit out the last words. “In 1875!” I should have noticed the way Caroline was looking at him.
Through grey drizzle I found a splash of floral colour, it had to be him: the grave was fresh and no headstone marked his spot. Plastic covered cards bid Christy Whelan farewell and I sank to my knees to do the same. “Sorry I was late,” I mumbled.
Behind me a voice I remembered sang out: “Christy Whelan. He died of influenza.”
Turning to see her face I said: “I thought you were her.”
Copyright, 2007, VerilionLabels: flash fiction
Afterwards when she wondered how she had ended up alone in the remnants of his life, she put it down to this. It was raining. The lights were red. She hit the brakes. The bike slid. She slid along the slick surface, her head coming to rest by his boots.
Copyright, 2006, Verilion
Labels: flash fiction
Her hold had been diminishing for some time now and one day my world shook and a crack appeared, just a slither of light seeped through into my prison, but it was enough for me to slip through and there she lay. In fifteen years the
When she woke up she turned the place upside down looking for the powder for her nose. I heard her crying and moaning, she knew it was somewhere and I knew exactly where it was and finally she saw me. “Fuck!” She exhaled. “You! It can’t...” She trembled and her red-rimmed eyes brimmed over and spilled salt.
“Now don’t tell me you didn’t realise this day would come.”
“I, I, I...” She staggered around the room until her eyes fell on the box in my hand. “Fuck!”
“It’s in here. What you’re looking for.” I opened the box and the sweet poppy smell filled the room.
She fell onto her bony knees, grappling at my legs. “I’m sorry, you scared me. I didn’t know what I was doing.”
“When did you not know what you were doing? The day you sold me your soul or the day you locked me away?” Dribble oozed from the side of her mouth as her eyes begged forgiveness. “It’s in here Lara,” I waved the box in front of her again. “Take it.” I waved the box before her.
“What is it?” Her feral nose wrinkled at the end.
“What you desire.”
“You tricked me before.” She curled up onto her haunches. I raised an eyebrow. “Just tell me?” She begged.
“Are you scared to look?” I took her by the wrist. “You were scared that day weren’t you? The day you held on and couldn’t look.”
“I couldn’t look. All that water, all those bodies.” Her body quivered as I laid her on the bed.
“And I took that away for you didn’t I?” I stroked her feverish forehead and opened the box a crack.
“What is it? It’s so blue?” She craned forward.
“It’s the sea my darling.” I cooed as I pushed her in and kept her under.
In the end the coroner wrote ‘drug overdose’ on her death certificate. He couldn’t bring himself to write drowning on an official document when she lived two thousand metres above sea level.
Copyright, 2007, Verilion
Labels: flash fiction
Labels: flash fiction