3 June 2017
Alien
I’ve got my tourist face on
all curiosity and confusion
with a little hopeful mistrust
the world is tilting south
so I strike a jaunty angle
by way of compensation
I must look like a drunk
not too far from the truth
I’m fairly close to home
but my surroundings are foreign
I’m a prospective alien
in my own home town
the carbon sky bleeds grey
the deluge tumbles down
and ink is now streaming
from my dubious credentials
my identity is in doubt
and confidence is waning
the bus is two hours late
and my welcome’s running out
.
30 May 2017
Stricken
I met my morning with a lithium flush
the crew preferred the traditional libations
we stood unfurled in our own skins
before an unscheduled eclipse
and stumbled blindly in the dark
our confusion fuelled by hard liquor
and assorted oriental confections
I tried for the great indoors
but my inside was out
as my doors had been confiscated
during the last epic iconoclast
doors are bourgeois affectations
and privacy has been banished
here in the electric society
we are mere avatars for the combine
we do our shit and eat our bread
then watch the highlights on TV
that’s where we’re at now
nothing is real unless it’s been on TV
the tube has seared our minds
so we turn to moonshine and jimson weed
to enhance our perverse new benedictions
consequently many have been struck down
with the dread psycho reflux
but no-one cares for the stricken
no-one feeds their beasts or tills their soil
while they are lost to the great no no
for a man must make his own meat
to earn his fraction from the combine
.
29 May 2017
Richard
3 May 2017
Alky
I know the stuff is poison, but I neck it anyway. It’s a psychic shield against the vicissitudes of strife. What a happy delusion to carry around in my head. A soft and fuzzy lie I like to bathe in. Get me to my bed where I can adopt my cloak of dreams. I don’t care what shape the world is in – I don’t want it banging on my door 24/7. There’s a place I lay my head where I get the peace that grants me immunity from the combine.
21 November 2016
Forgiven
Big
Malky went down hard. He took a hell of a beating before he cracked, but crack
he did. After a couple of hours of relentless punishment, he was sobbing like a
baby and pleading for his life.
“Please Mo – there’s no need for this. You dinnae huv tae dae this. I’ll go away – you’ll never see me again. I’ll gie you money – anything you want – just dinnae dae this.”
His words burbled in his bloody mouth and I was both disgusted by the display and elated by the sense of power it produced. The once mighty Malcolm McTear, the last man on my list, begging for mercy – crying like a schoolgirl. I let him go on for a while, but the final word went to my 1911 Colt 45. I whipped the big pistol out and without a second glance tapped him on the forehead – right between the eyes. There was blood and brain everywhere. I was pleased by the action – solid and professional like.
“Did ye see that boys? One slick movement – like a fuckin’ samurai.”
I was determined that everyone on the list would be dispatched before the old man’s funeral and I had achieved my goal. The old man would be pleased and I imagined him watching from on high with a big smile on his face. He was a wise one my father – not only was I visiting vengeance on his enemies – I was clearing the ground for increased business. He knew that these scumbags would try it on with me after he was dead and that the wisest thing for me to do would be to liquidate them before they became a nuisance.
The whole operation had proven to be much easier than I had anticipated. We caught them napping – they thought their troubles were over when they heard that the old man had snuffed it. They were soon to be proven wrong. Most of these so called hard men had pleaded for mercy and I had shown it through the barrel of my gun. All except Jimmy the Flea, he had stood his ground right up to the end.
“You cunts had better kill me – cause I’ll be coming back for ye. You Mo – you’re scum just like yer dad. We had a party to celebrate when that dirty old fucker died – and mark my words – you’ll be following him soon enough...”
I silenced him mid tirade – he was boring me, but he went down fighting and I respected that. I made a mental note to take care of Flea’s two boys – if they had half the bottle their old man had they could become a problem. For the time being though my work was done and I could focus on dad’s funeral – it would be the biggest the city had ever seen with faces from all over the country coming to pay their respects.
The day
the old man died the whole family were gathered around and mum was insisting
that they send for a priest. The old man was against the idea until mum said to
him that she’d miss him should he end up in purgatory. He eventually relented
and Father Mulligan was sent for, but the old man was as awkward and stubborn
as ever.
“Do you renounce the devil and all his works?”
“I do Father.”
“Do you forgive your enemies?”
The old man did not answer but lay there staring into space.
“Do you forgive your enemies?”
Again the old man did not respond.
“For the sake of your immortal soul Jock – do you forgive your enemies?”
“Aye, alright – I forgive my fuckin’ enemies!” rasped the old man.
He then turned to me and fixed me with his steely gaze.
“But there’s no need for you to be forgiving anybody Maurice.”
19 November 2016
The Cuckoo
She had turned
her dressing table into a shrine and it broke my heart to see; there were
photographs, postcards, letters, jewelry, trinkets, and all the bric-a-brac of
romance. Two years after Paul’s death and she was still in mourning. The flat
they once shared was a mausoleum to his memory; unchanged since that fateful
day.
I once fostered hopes that she might turn to me after a suitable term of grieving, but I had become that most pitiable of species – the best friend. I longed to tell her how I felt, but I dared not because I knew she would be horrified. She trusted me and I felt that at some basic level my love was a betrayal of that trust. My love for her was just another of my guilty secrets and something best left unspoken.
When she told
me she needed a hand sorting out old clothes for some charity shop I briefly
hoped that she had begun to clear out some of Paul’s old things; that she had
perhaps started to move on. When I got to the flat, however, I discovered that
it was her own clothes she was throwing out. Looking at the assorted jumble of
clothing I wondered if she was not divesting herself of the last remnants of
colour in her life.
“Thanks for coming around Pete, I really appreciate it.”
“No problem Marie; anything I can do to help...”
"There’s bound to be better things you could be doing on a Friday evening.”
“Not really – unless you count my busy TV schedule.”
“You need a girlfriend.”
“You’re probably right.”
There followed an excruciatingly embarrassed silence which lasted a heartbeat, but which filled an eternity. She had taken to these pronouncements lately and I had never formulated a decent retort. I should have found a girlfriend and gotten on with my life, but it was already too late. Paul’s death wrecked both our lives and we orbited each other at a discretionary distance – both of us alone in our private grief.
After dropping the clothes of at the charity shop she invited me back to the flat for a coffee. I was hoping she would. We wound our way up the tight concrete stairwell and I recalled the nightmare of hauling their furniture up those steps – Paul and I heaving and cursing with every footfall. But we were laughing too; those were happier times, before he got ill and dragged us all into hell with him. On the top landing to the right of the flat was the door that lead to the roof – it was padlocked now, but that did not stop the memories from flooding back each time I saw it.
Paul had been an outgoing and vivacious character and was always the first to see the funny side. He was the perennial joker and the life and soul of any gathering, but Paul began to change. He threw malevolent tantrums and sulked in deep depressive funks which were counterpoised with manic highs when he lost all sense of propriety. Marie nearly left him then, but when he was diagnosed with Bi-Polar Disorder she thought her place was by his side fighting his dreadful affliction.
That day Marie had called me and asked if I could pop by and check on Paul because she would be delayed at work and he was not answering the phone. He was prone to ignoring the phone, so there was nothing untoward in that, but she worried nonetheless. When I got to the flat there was no answer, but the door was unlocked so I went inside. There was no sign of Paul, but his typewriter was on the kitchen table and initially, I was glad to see that he had been writing again.
A man acquainted with sorrow,
weary of the
world, tired of life,
has no faith
in tomorrow,
no taste for
endless strife,
sorrow rules
his heart,
and measures
every beat,
tears his soul
apart,
and turns his
flesh to meat.
It seemed such a sad hymnal that it gave me a chill inside. My friend was fighting for his life and I was impotent in the struggle. He was not in the flat, but I knew where he would be – I found him on the roof watching the traffic flow by below.
“Hey, Paul – how you doing?”
“As well as can be expected.”
“You writing?”
“Only obituaries.”
It was so hard to reach him sometimes – every inquiry only threw up negative responses and sometimes they were chilling. I really felt sorry for Marie. She had to deal with his blank numb ripostes and his suicidal ideation. I could see it was crushing her spirit, but Paul did not seem to notice, he seemed on a track of his own and oblivious to the world around him.
“Well that’s something – at least you are writing.” I smiled hopefully.
“It’s pointless.”
“Why do you say that?”
“Everything we do is pointless. We steal our days while we fend off the inevitable. I just wish it was over.”
I don’t know what came over me. I was angry with him, frustrated by him. I’d had enough. I charged into him and gave him a hard shove. He toppled over the side of the building and landed with a sickening thud. My only thoughts then were that I hoped he was dead and that no one had seen me.
3 November 2016
Bone Men
13 October 2016
Lynching
my
head hurt like a long loud scream she hit a vein right away the
black wind blew the relief was palpable some
men prefer love on their haunches I just
steam on in all suited up the man
of reason a man with guile
I ply my trade with ruthless charm anticipating
all objections to the angles of my craft it's catch
as catch can and I’m ready for a
fight but I never underestimate the sincerity of a lynch mob they
have a job to do and so do I
11 October 2016
Johnny Friendly
3 October 2016
Unleashed
I missed out on the sexual revolution – there wiz nae sexual revolution where I stayed; if ye goat a lassie up the duff ye were fucked fur life. I widnae change a thing mind you, but every now and then a man gets tae thinking about excitement, adventure an that.
See these birds noo they are up fur it just as much as we are. Wiznae like that in my day; ye were a whore if ye went wi a man out of wedlock. We all did it and we a’ goat caught tae. Back then nae decent lassie went oan the pill so we were stuck wi rubber johnnies; it was like making love in a wet suit. It was Russian roulette if ye went without though, but everybody did; the majority of new brides had a bun in the oven. I doubt there’s been a virgin bride round here since nineteen sixty three.