My little Miss

The thing was, I couldn’t take her with me any more. Please understand. That frozen November morning, the ground was too hard for a burial, and after I had cried a while I searched through an old storage shed for a spade. Having tried the hard earth, and despairing of a proper grave, I wrapped her thin body in many layers of plastic from a roll that I had found there. The broken house next to the shed once had a rock garden, and its members were put to good use in building her cairn.

In late September we had met, she the first living creature of my kind fortunate enough to be here still, in this outpost of desolation. I had been aimlessly following the railway tracks, and had spotted a far off station.  I quickened my pace, thinking to find food and shelter there.  On the platform she sat, all dirty, with dangling legs ending in two different shoes.  Maybe nine or ten years old.   She was trying to crack acorns collected in a shopping bag, then saw me, dropped it, and began to run down the tracks.  One shoe came off and she fell, crying and picking pebbles from her wounded knees.

Approaching slowly, I held out a bottle of juice and a can of sardines from my pack.  She allowed me to pick her up and set her once more on the platform’s edge.  The crying had subsided to a hiccup-like sob.  She said nothing as I got our meal ready, but ate and drank readily.  I tried her with questions, but no.  She would not, or could not, speak.  I never knew her name, I am sad to say, and so I just called her “Miss”.  I think, now, that she was not a mute, but had been forced by the horrors to travel deeply into herself.

The station platform did, in its way, offer food and shelter.  The food was from a vending machine full of chocolate bars and chips.  I smashed it open by pushing it off the platform.  We enjoyed our unhealthy meals for a time, then had to move on.  Little Miss, with renewed energy, ran ahead of me many times.  Other days, in the weary cold, I carried her piggyback.

Just four days ago, I think, after a long and fruitless journey, we had come to the last of the food, a bit of roasted rabbit I had saved “for the end”.  Missy had become very lethargic of late because of the short rations and the creeping cold.  I had made a fire to help warm us up, and we had our best meal in a long while.  When dawn came, I awakened to find that we had come in a circle.  In the foggy morning, I could make out the decrepit station and its violated vending machine.  I confess that in my weakness, I hung my head and cried.

That night, I made a fire on the tracks, and contrived to build it around one of the railway ties,  so our blaze was very warm and merry.  Later, the snow started in earnest, and we had to shelter in a small maintenance room whose door I had forced.  Gone was the warmth.  We each had a blanket roll with us, but it was poor comfort from the cold floor and icy walls.  Through the night, I awoke to a strange silence.  The storm had abated, but so had something else.  My little Miss breathed no more.  I prayed stupidly to the lord of the starfields.

I am beaten now, I think.   That silent soul, that Someone I needed, and who needed me, gone without a hope of a loving word.

How can I…..
How can I….

My God.

An angry fall

Sleet on the windshield
The road’s first glaze of ice
A Van Gogh vortex of winds
Vacuums up colour
Spews greyness

The Maple Leaf flag whips, rips, then sails
Hold onto your hat!

Do that windy pantomime
As you grope the door handle
Hah! Inside at last!
(As it slams behind you in a fit of pique)

Just get me in bed
Plug in that blanket
Bring me a tea
And, in the morning,
Pretty Please
Would you just
Warm up those long johns
And fill up that travel mug with something nice and hot.

Something isn’t right here – Candice Louisa Daquin

TheFeatheredSleep's avatarWhisper and the Roar

As a woman, you’re taught

To speak frankly, but not too loud

Consequences for girls are worse

So I learned

To whisper in a roar

And when I cried, I showed nobody

Using the tears as fertilizer

For my wild garden

I am not a person who believes cruel answers anything

why ruin someone just because you can? As a punchline?

once I was called ‘too nice’ and I am often referred to as ‘sweet’

which are probably both gentle character assassinations

I admit it is not so great being a gentle soul, because people admire

bitches, sarcasm, sass, verve (is that still a word?), spite, caustic(ism) and other

signs someone is strong, because if you are cruel

you are seen as hip in this society

even my neighbor likes it when we shoot the shit and she gets that

glassy-eyed affection for tearing people down and asks me all…

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The mechanics of falling

the knee bone’s connected to the thigh bone
but neither’s connected to the eye bone.

what once the sinews did remember
without resort to math
is now in doubt, in life’s December
we walk a crooked path

trusting not our gyroscopes
that used to keep us balanced
trying to keep our highest hopes,
but vertically challenged

at the stairs on weakened knees
we grip the wooden railing
we used to take them by the threes
but confidence is failing

crocs and socks and velcro shoes
are all the rage these days
be careful of the path you choose
and watch your wending ways!

Twenty… this dream of anxiousness.

I turn around to an unfamiliar sound.
My strange neighbor stands in my yard.
He has a hose, and sprays casually,
glancing furtively in my direction.
The water is warm.
He turns his back to me, then quickly comes around.
Spraying now a fan of fine white sand.
I run for a broom, a shovel, a hope.
i return to backyard dunes,
as over the fence he floats, gone.
I slide open my back door,
admitting encroaching sands,
and run through my house to the front room.
Someone has laid a dead rodent on the white pile carpet.
It smells as i pick it up, and leaves a stain.
A face appears behind my front curtains, then flees.
An image of a long dead niece.
From behind the sofa, a giggle.
I bolt through the front door.
The street is dunes of white.
There is a plant pot placed in my driveway.
A single stick, bereft of foliage, sprouts from it.
And, hanging from a branch, a furniture tag.
It bears the word ICARUS.

number 19- the King of pain

On a wooden bench in a long darkened hallway I sit, in contrived cold dimness.
Shivering in shorts,I look down, dribbling on the bright dog tag hanging from my neck. Number 49. To my right and left, sibling sufferers, all in mourning.
Mourning for lives given over to pain. We, each of us, counting, enumerating, cataloguing its forms, its art. Moaning it out in sad violins, tubas of torture, oboes of woe. We, each of us, think we must be King. Flaunting, pointing inwards, saying see me, do you see me? We nod to one another, in fatuous fondling sympathy, waiting. Waiting to see who will be chosen from amongst the courtiers, and exalted to the royal standing. All at once, there is a hush. The house lights dim to darkness compete. A shuffling and a clanking is heard. A silvering light admits from above, coating a figure grotesque. In a gait at once jerking and shambling, he picks his noisome way, sparing all a proud burning glance, freshets of blood his tears. In fractures compound his bones protrude, splinted over with leg hold traps. The flayed flesh of his back dangles in ribbons. He makes not a vocal sound, but works meaty jaws to spit smoky pools upon the floor. He stops. We stand. Those eyes of his tilt upwards in seeming worship. Upon his head, a crown of Mercury. We bow, prostrate.

It answers

I venture a question:

“What is life?”

It answers (from many mouths) :

A long slow knife.

Another, then:

“And its meaning?”

Suffering and strife.

Surely, there is more?”

A test of the spirit.

A measure of the faith.

‘Twas not the mud that made the blind man see,

nor magic in the water turned to wine

nor the weave of the baskets that fed the multitude.

Faith alone these things will do.

Night wings

NIGHT WINGS

In Mercury’s merciless day I burned.
His night was crystalline.

On Venus,
I rode a ship of ice immutable,
thick in its soups of sulfuric rain.
My heavy zeppelin floated slowly
through landscapes of red vulcanism.
Well past the boiling point of earthly tea.
Things of sponge grew and decayed in comic time lapse,
waving in the crimson fume.

The Martian dawn was cold and arid,
but a true trickling could be heard in the canyon.
There were balmy afternoons
where icy hangings would sweat,
and in flat rocks I have seen likenesses
not coincidental to climate.
The rusty sand envelops.
In storms, it permeates all.

The Jovian giant
is unfathomable.
Untouchable.
Unknowable.
A cathedral of violence,
storms both ancient and permanent.
Shown forth in bands of glory.
God’s enigma.
Its girth draws the soul.

No further do I dare
this night.
For I am filled with flickering light.
The power and the glory and the might.
Shown me, this perilous flight.

Paved with good intentions

Be very careful when eating mushrooms.
That is my best advice at this time.
I do not know how long it is that I have walked and wandered, sometimes just laying down out of weakness, hunger, and despair.  I have been poisoned nearly unto death from wrong choices.  Sometimes I have left my right mind, trying to get back, get back, sensing a thousand year journey of complexity.

I am a caveman of the modern day, surviving on dull wits.  I remember pieces of useful information, helpful household hints, Boy Scout wisdom.  How to butcher a rabbit without getting the meat tainted with its urine.  How to build a simple trap to catch something live, then bludgeon it.  Roast it over a deadwood flame, ignited with sunlight shone through discarded spectacles.

It is temperate here, mostly, and I cannot count the years.  Such seasons as there are seem mixed up, mottled.  For days at a time I may stumble along in dirty fruit-of-the-looms, then awake in a frozen stupor, stiffly seeking shelter.  I have tried to carry garments, old blankets with me, but often discard them out of tiredness.

I have not yet met any of my own species that I could talk with or walk with.  Mostly they are dead, swollen, cracked.  There are some shambling things, born, perhaps, of poisoned wombs, in the first days after the flashes.  They do not speak my language.  They are more aimless than I, with flippers for arms, or with too many heads.

Old friends, I have taken the time to write this because I have found a standing house.  I have eaten all of its old food by smashing cans against rocks.  I must soon leave its shelter to find something fresh with blood.  Everything is open here.  Foliage has given way to mostly fungus.  Animals are hard to find and wary.

What if I just lay down now?
How long would it take just to go away forever?

I think I am on that fabled road that is paved with good intentions.