There There


Coffee makes clenched fists all down my arms – little knots of muscle and stress. I want to do some punching. But that’s all right. My fingers burst and reform, burst and reform. I should stop drinking coffee. It finds my twitches and sets them going, and it makes me jumpy, and it makes my thoughts into a chorus. And that’s all right too.

I am not scared of coffee.

I am scared of drink.

At the moment I am scared of drink and of what it does to me. For example, this.

I went home after a few drinks and though my tiny flat was empty I was convinced nevertheless that there was someone else in it. Not many drinks. Four or five perhaps. At a social event of some sort, I cannot now remember the details, probably a gig, probably something like that. Perhaps three pints, a couple of shorts. Maybe I had a whiskey. Maybe I had a whiskey when I got home as well. It was not a lot of drink. I was not, in any conventional sense, very drunk. To look at me you would not have noticed. To talk to me, maybe you would have noticed something, but not very much. And yet. And yet, when I got home, I was convinced that there was someone else there.

So I walked from room to room for hours until dawn, chasing this other person from room to room, unsure who it was, but not feeling particularly threatened. Annoyed, perhaps, a little, after a while. The sort of mild, frustrated but more or less cheerful impatience that you experience with children who insist that the game goes on. The game must go on. Such troopers, children. I thought it might be a friend, or a friendly ghost. It never crossed my mind that it might be an intruder or a bad thing. Or did it? I don’t know. Maybe it did. Room to room I went (there are four rooms, I suppose), looking for her, or him, and every room I entered this person had just that second left, flitting out somehow, into one of the other rooms, where I then proceeded, only to have her, or him, flit past me again, into the kitchen or the bedroom or the living room or the bathroom. And the only time during all this pacing and walking in and out of rooms, the only time when I felt at all spooked, was when it occurred to me to look inside the press in the bathroom where the water tanks and the complicated pipes are. No one could fit in there. No ordinary thing. No person. No child. And looking in there rattled me a little, because I had the same feeling about that little cupboard as I had about the other, full size rooms – that someone had just left it. Which was not possible, and I knew then that none of this was possible, and it bewildered me that it was not possible, yet here it was, taking place.

There is something there. So you look there. And there is nothing there. But that does not mean that there is nothing. It means that there is not the right there anymore, but is another there. So you look for the other there. Which is not the correct there either, now, because your eyes and your brain are too slow for this. So you chase the there. There is something there. There is always something there. And it becomes a matter of alighting not on the something, but on the there. Of all the theres there are, the there you’re aware of is only one. And there is nothing there. So the something must be somewhere else. In one of the other theres.

After that night I took a break from drinking. Not because it was under drink that I realised the problem of there, but because the natural slowness and stupidity of the human is exaggerated by drink. With coffee I can switch faster between the theres. I can scan more theres than I otherwise would. I am also taking Ritalin and, when I can afford it, some amphetamines. And let me tell you, let me assure you, that there are more theres than you can fathom, and in most of them, most of them, in most of them, let me assure you, in most of them, the vast majority of them, there is someone there.

 

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Meet the author

Readers are thieves. We break into books. We burgle them. We see what we want and we make off with it. This is ok. We’re burglars, it’s what we do. Sometimes there’s nothing in there we fancy. Sometimes we don’t notice the really valuable stuff. We fixate on the flat screen TV and miss the original Hockney hanging on the wall. We’re in and out. There are a lot of houses to burgle. And we know that many of them are packed with treasure. So we dash in and dash about, and we knock things over and spill drawers on the floor, and we forget that this is somewhere somebody has lived. For months or years. A writer has lived in here. Meticulously placing the coffee table in exactly the right place, carefully arranging the figurines on the mantelpiece. And what if, while we’re rifling through the kitchen cupboards he should suddenly return home? We freeze. We look around. We pick up the poker from the fireplace and we wait behind the door and we cave in his head.

 

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Eaglehammer, again

The problem with Irish literature is best embodied in the considerable disappointment that is Ridgway’s trajectory, from the promising collision of rural maelstrom and urban inclemency in The Long Falling, to the stuttering but elegant iterations of Standard Time, through the increasingly formless manipulations of The Parts, to his apogee as a sort of unstable distant point of light, possibly approaching but in all likelihood disappearing, in Animals, where he has the temerity to present to us a book about The Condition Of Mankind. News that his next book Hawthorn & Child is set in London – a city Ridgway fled over a year ago – and features two detectives on the trail of a writer, seems to indicate a final disappearance of the author up his own ampersand. As for Ridgway himself he is reported these days to be posing as an alcoholic in a Scottish town where he can be seen throwing himself out of the pub and into the North Sea on a daily basis like a rag around a rock. Though in fairness, these reports come from people who don’t like him. There are no other reports. Perhaps the best thing that can be said about this dismal episode is that it was brief, and hardly anybody noticed.

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The Unfolded Man

You are an unfolded man. You are open in the world like a door. And you wake beside others and they fold you into their warmth but you are the unfolded man. And they press against you and they find a way in and there is no gap between you for you are the unfolded man. The open man.

And the people who love you just love you. And they look at you and look at you and they look at you in the light of the world and they see what you are and they love you. And you are unfolded and you laugh. And curiosity is an endless engine and it hums in you and you see it in others and you sing when you’re with them and you weep when you’re not because you are the unfolded man.

And they come back. Or you set out to find them. And they are somewhere, all the time. And they know you.

You are loved and held and thought of and there are people in the world who would want to find you if you disappeared, and they are unfolded towards you, naked by your side, lovers and friends who are there in the mornings. Open. And your only fear is that this openness will admit more love and what sort of fear is that? You worry too much. And you look at them and look at them and you could look at them forever and never close your eyes.

And you are always only one. But you are unfolded like a page. Opened and read and read again, and there are other pages.

And you will be for love.

 

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The Refolded Man

You are a refolded man. You are alone in the world. And no matter how it presses in on you and shouts in your ear and licks your face with its dogsbreath tongue there is only one of you and nothing will increase you and nothing will infect you other than dreadfully, and you are a refolded man.

And the people who claim to care for you are useless and deluded for their interest is only in this peculiar view of themselves that they see in relation to you, through you, in the perspective you give them, of themselves, in themselves, and it could be no other way, and they have no expertise or competence when it comes to your workings, and they try to love you like a child tries to know a bee by cutting it in half and watching. And they go.

You are a refolded man. And you will be left on the shore of a sea as the night comes in with no way home and the cold. And you will simmer in the midday of a foreign country where you understand nothing. You are stripped naked and regarded, you are the dead man of someone else’s story, you are the body in the field, the passer-by, the jostled bather, the wedding drunk, the murdered sailor, the second illiterate cook. You are the schoolboy with the open mouth. You are a lover in the blink of an eye. Any eye.

And you are always only one. You are the refolded man. Opened and read and folded over and folded again, and put aside.

And you will be punished for love.

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Great Northern School Of Music

 

On Fonthill Road near Finsbury Park Station in north London, opposite the corner with Lennox Road, in faded lettering across the brickwork of three shabby terrace houses is written GREAT NORTHERN SCHOOL OF MUSIC. If you sit in Arianna’s Café across the road you can contemplate it freely. If you get there before 4pm you can still have a decent breakfast in Arianna’s. But at a fiver it’s pretty steep for the locale.

I knew the man who lived in the OF MUSIC section of the GREAT NORTHERN SCHOOL OF MUSIC. On the second floor of three. Cheap PVC windows. Old thin faded carpet. The bass thump of techno from elsewhere.

He and his brother came from Lodz. They had work in the neighbourhood. Plastering. Good work. For a guy their cousin had known in Poland. The brother wanted to set up on his own – more money. Harder work probably, but more money. And my friend, Jozef, he thought it would definitely be harder work, which he wouldn’t mind – of course – but he would like to enjoy himself too, you know? You understand? He would like to enjoy himself while he was in London, because life is short. No it isn’t, I told him, but he thought I was being funny.

The brothers argued. London split them and they became two. Jozef stayed in OF MUSIC. His brother moved further west towards Camden and bought a second-hand van. I met Jozef in Arianna’s, and he chatted to the girls and then leaned in and told me dark things about his brother. His brother, he said, was trying to kill him. What do you mean trying to kill you? Exactly that, he said. He is trying to kill me. I awoke and he was standing over my bed with a brick in his hand. A brick? Yes a brick, a brick.What are you doing I asked him and he laughed at me. Hateful laughter. And he dropped the brick on the floor and went out. Went away. But why, I asked him, would your brother want to kill you? And Jozef told me that his brother’s business was failing, and he was losing money, and that he could not really drive the van and had no insurance, and that he resented Jozef the simple life that he had stuck with. Plastering. Enjoying himself. But still sending money home.

When I did not see Jozef for a while I wondered if his brother had killed him. I sat in Arianna’s and stared up at the windows and the faded letters and I rearranged them into terrible sentences. I asked the girls once or twice if they had seen him. Yes, maybe, no, they couldn’t remember. They thought I fancied him. I did, but that was not why I was asking. I could not tell them that I was worried about fratricide.

Then Jozef turned up again, smiling, sucking his cigarette at the door, winking at me, and he came in to tell me about a woman he had met at a club, about a housewife he’d slept with on the job, about getting drunk and watching football. And he watched me listening.

He asked me up to OF MUSIC one day, and we lay on his narrow unmade bed and he smoked and giggled about his brother. Oh, he said, my brother, what would he say if he could see this. He would kill me for sure. He would cave my head in with a brick and he would leave me for dead. My brother, my brother, my brother. He made me tea and offered me some food and I smoked one of his cigarettes for no reason other than that it meant that I could lean out of the window. If you walked down Fonthill Road that day you may have seen a bearded man coughing and turning pale between the OF and the MUSIC.

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The Boy With No Head

headless

I know a boy with no head.

He has a body and he can walk and run and turn corners. He can jump and stretch and he can make people want him and he can make people hate him because he can make them want him, and he can do almost anything he puts his mind to (he has a mind). He has a laugh and he laughs, and he can smile at anything and he can keep up with anyone and he has all the world in the palm of his small hand. And he can swim and talk and tell jokes and make you suddenly brighten. And he can warm a room or a street or a bed simply by wishing it warmer. And he can dance and kiss and make love like he’s invented it, as if nothing else matters and no one is there. He can cook.

But he has no head.

And the chief drawbacks of this are that you can never quite tell what might be in it, or which way it’s facing. And he cannot wear a hat.

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No I Said

This is a radio piece commissioned by the BBC in 2004 to mark the 100th Bloomsday. It was preformed (beautifully) by Sorcha Cusack, but I can’t find a recording anywhere and to be honest I had forgotten all about it until today, when general Bloomsday chatter on Twitter reminded me. If anyone out there happens to have a recording, do let me know. K

 

 

No I Said

 

I’m off for a walk. I’m out the door and down the drive. I’m out of the kitchen, into my coat, across the hall, shouting I’m off out for a while, I’ll be back in a while, and I’m out the door and I’m into the air, the noise, the world, and I’m not stopping I swear to God I’m never stopping, the way I feel – that’s the way I feel and I can’t disguise it. Why would I want to disguise it? But I do of course, I do disguise it, it’s like I have two different lives, and who’d want that, but that’s what I have. Two different bloody lives, and both of them stopped, halted, stalled, stuck in that house like secret children, like secret bewildered aunts, miserable hidden souls locked in an airless drum. One of them doesn’t mind, doesn’t mind at all – one of them is a good daughter, happy daughter, at ease with it all; the other one has all her fingernails hanging off from scratching the back of the door. I have to force myself, force myself, not to slam. Having to close the front door gently is like a little Calvary all of its own, another one, a tiny one yes, but one of a million other tiny ones, to go with the small ones, and the medium ones, and the big ones, and the massive ones, and the overall one – the overall, over-arching, complete and comprehensive sacrifice I have made of my life for the benefit of another. And where is the kingdom? Which way lies paradise, my peace everlasting, my eternal bliss? Don’t make me laugh. Don’t make me tell you.

Oh alright then. It’s my mother. My mother. She isn’t dead yet.

I stomp down the road looking like an eejit. It’s the middle of the day. There’s no one around now but men in vans out to fix things or deliver them, au-pairs with prams, au pairs with shopping bags, au pairs in the prime of other people’s lives. They all glance at me, stare at me, and I’m so sick of it all that I’m sure it shows. I’m sure they know. Look at you, they’re saying. Running away from your mother. At your age. Good God I could walk to the edge of the world, the mood I’m in, I could stamp my way to the edge of the earth, I’m so disgusted with the centre. But isn’t that the problem? Wherever you are, that’s where you are. You’re always at the centre, never out of the crosshairs, never away from the eye of the storm. We’re always the centre of attention in our rotten little lives. Aren’t we mother? Aren’t we?

What day is it now? She has a thing about dates recently, as if waiting for one to come along unlike the others. It’s Wednesday, isn’t it? Wednesday? The middle of a scrappy June. The middle of a scrappy year.

I’m off into the park. Where else would I go? Out into the pale open spaces with me, with my muddy little feet clicking and clacking over the blankness, over the empty lawns, squelching and sucking at the black mud, dribbling through this tidied up, diminished world, just me, alone. Except for my mother at my back like an undone thing. I turned at the gate and looked back at the house. Just now, as I left it, in my froth. I do it every time. Every single solitary time. I cannot not do it. As if I have forgotten something and I turn back to remember it, but there’s nothing to remember, there’s just the house and its blank, bovine face. Can a house have a face, do you think? A bovine face? Is that possible? The door I haven’t slammed needs painting. As do the window frames. There are some roof slates dislodged. The whole thing looks listless, biding its time. It is in alliance with me, I know. Impatient and grumpy. Perhaps that’s why I look back. Because it calls out to me. Where are you off to? You come back now, do you hear me? Don’t leave me here with her. Don’t dare.

There’s been rain overnight. My shoes are turning dark. The radio is full of nonsense. She, my mother, has her ear glued to it since I arrived. I can get no sense out of her. She’s listening out for something. It may be another request. The last time she had that grotesque man on the mid-morning show play “Son Of A Preacher Man” for Frances – some apparently unspeakable private joke between them – and it was all she could talk about for days afterwards. About the phone call she made, and the girl who took the details, and the waiting, and the panic then, when he was reading out a request from someone called Frank, that the stupid girl had got it all wrong, but he played some opera for that, and the girl couldn’t have got it that wrong, could not surely have mistaken Dusty Springfield for some damn opera fatso, and the relief then, when the very next request was for Frances, from her, from my mother, and how he did it beautifully, got it perfectly right, and about how marvellous it all was, and how accessible the national airwaves are, to all of us, and what a wonderful resource really, one we should treasure. Today though, she seems less enthusiastic. She almost seems nervous. She’s quieter than usual. Oh don’t think she’s quiet, she’s not quiet, she hasn’t been quiet since the day I was born, I don’t mean she’s quiet, I mean she’s quieter than usual, which is still noisier than the rest of humanity gathered together, still nattering on about all sorts and nothing, about next door’s grandchildren and the cuteness of them, which she exclaims is to die for, but it’s just an expression, and the times the postman calls, never predictable, never the same, with his bundle of junk and brochures and the things she sends away for, she can never resist the licking of a stamp, and damn it now I’ve left without the letters she wants posting, and the parcel of God only knows what detritus for the earthquake victims. About whom she held forth for a good solemn fifteen minutes while I peeled the potatoes. Oh she loves a disaster. She loves catastrophe now. She wheels herself up close to the television and shakes her head at the wonderful misfortune of others, at the scale and the depth and the extent of the misery. Oh she moans, oh, who’d be a mother? Not me, mother. Not me. On the list today, the daily list, of things she needs me to retrieve – as well as a shoebox full of letters from the top of her wardrobe, as well as a dusty old novel from father’s bedroom bookcase – there was a photograph of us all taken, en famille as they say, in some kind of caravan, sometime far back in the last century, my father looking like he’s got the camera on a timer – will it or won’t it – my mother looking like he’s annoying her with his technical nonsense, me looking like I’ve had enough of it all already. I’m about three. What does she want that for? What made her remember it? Why was it hidden away behind a pile of crime novels on a top shelf in the spare room? But she doesn’t say. She has it on her lap. With the radio. She’s turning slow circles in the living room. Or was, the last I saw of her.

My mother, I should explain to you, is in a wheelchair. And I say that in the same way that I might say that I am in a rage, or you are in love, or so-and-so is in a coma. It is a state of being. She’s only been in it for about a year, but she shows such a terrifying level of expertise you’d swear she’d been in it since birth. Do I mean expertise? I mean that corners mean nothing to her. That the wallpaper’s scraped and the skirting boards are blackened with rubber and splintered like kindling, and she couldn’t care less. I mean that tables and chairs are shown none of the respect my father had for them. She clatters her way around like he never existed. She’s put a crack in the central stained pane of the kitchen door. He had that specially made. I mean that steps hold no fear for her – she jumps them, I swear to God, like a side saddle skate boarder. She gets up a bit of speed and goes flying off into mid air as if the worst that could happen has already happened. She is morbidly optimistic. And she has more muscle in her arms than a weight lifter. She can wrestle the machine up steps if she feels she needs to. A remarkable procedure, which I once witnessed, appalled, from the living room window, as she came in from the garden with a bunch of sorry chrysanthemums. She looked like she might burst. I watched. The net curtains tickled my nose. She didn’t.

She has taken all the carpets up and put down linoleum. In every bloody room. From the front door to the attic. It used to be a house that was entirely carpeted, wall to wall, gable to gable, many colours, many patterns, many textures – all my father’s choosing and planning and execution, warm and rich and his. But once she was in the chair she found the carpets heavy going. Had them all ripped up and the linoleum put in. She could get up some speed then, which is what she’s always liked, she can gather some momentum – down the corridor to the kitchen, back up the hall to the front room, spinning that corner like a rally driver, back out to the foot of the stairs, a figure of eight, back to the living room, a ferocious pace, her big arms just a blur at her side, faster than any upright person can manage. Moving through the house with her is like walking with a hyperactive child. She’s all over the place, under your feet, charging towards you, charging away from you, heading straight for a hall table disaster with the two old vases my father bought in Venice perched on top terrified, the poor things, and avoiding it at the last second, oblivious to the chaos in her wake. It gives me heartburn just to look at her.

Everything was always quick with her. She drove the same way. She keeps the car you know – it’s out in the garage, starting to flake with rust at the bottoms of the doors. She gets me to go out and turn it over every now and then. Which involves sitting in it with the engine on for a few minutes, wondering whether she’s encouraging me to kill myself. I can’t drive. I’ve no interest. Walking is better. Slower. She won’t let me sell it. Sure why should she sell it? As soon as she’s out of the chair she’ll be driving again, it’s only a matter of time.

The park is deserted. It’s not as warm as it should be, for this time of year. It never is.

She’ll never be out of the chair. But she won’t be told. She thinks, my mother, that everything is temporary, except life. That one of these days she’ll stand on her own two feet and walk out to her car and speed off to find a man to relay the carpets. Which are rolled up in the spare room like the dead sea scrolls.

She’s benign, my mother, do you know what I mean? Benign like a tumour. She’s not killing me, but I want her removed. Is that terrible? Is it? Is that terrible of me? There she is in the house, my house, by rights my house really, and she’s persevering, clinging on grimly, no actually, not grimly, if she was grim then at least she might be of the same mind as me – waiting for some release – but she isn’t grim, she’s cheerful. Rolling around the linoleum, in my house, talking up her chances of a holiday with Frances and Maud, to the Algarve would you believe, the three of them, a holiday for the girls, can you imagine such a thing? Frances is practically blind, and showing early signs of Alzheimer’s, I’m sure of it. Maud is due her third hip replacement next month and spends most of her days, from what I can make out, chatting to teenage boys on the internet.

Every day I have to come over here. Every single bloody day. When I get to the door I turn and look back down the drive towards the gate, at the world. Every time. As if I’ve forgotten something. I don’t know what that’s about. And then in I go, to a maelstrom of words and news and gossip and ideas, and a list of things in inaccessible places, remembered things that suddenly seem important, I don’t know why, I never know why, and an unquenchable thirst for living, for being bloody well alive, on her steel wheels and her linoleum, like a woman stapled to life, affixed with spokes and levers, propelled by her own strength. Damn her.

I should get back. I’ll have to leave the shoes in the porch. I love her of course. I do love her. But what good is that? She loved my father. My father loved me. What of it?

When I get back she has stopped moving. I think for a moment that she’s finally had the good grace to leave us, but it’s not that. She’s sitting in the middle of the hall, and the radio is gone berserk, with a woman’s voice droning on and on and I can’t understand a word of it, and my mother is clutching that old novel, Ulysses it is, Joyce, that thing, and the photograph of the three of us in the caravan, and there’s a tear on her cheek but she’s smiling broadly. At me. Yes, says the woman on the radio, a few times, and my mother mouths it with her, like it’s a song, and then there’s a long silence, and the announcer comes on and says what it is we’ve just been listening to, and it’s the book in my mother’s lap, the same book, and she’s nodding, my mother is, and the announcer says the date, June 16th, and my mother smiles at me, as if it’s significant, but frankly I’m not getting any of this, and then she asks me, my mother, she asks, with the photograph held up towards me like she’s meeting me at an airport or a train station, and she asks me, do you not know what today is darling? Her eyes sparkling so you’d swear she’s been drinking, or singing, or something good. Do you not know this date?

 

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The Constellation Draco Which Never Sets

He has a lot of books on his shelves and you like him because of it and you read the spines and you like the thrillers and the detective stories and you see the full set by a particular writer that you like, and he has arranged them in order so you like him more. Then you see when you turn around a much bigger book case full of DVDs and you like him less but scold yourself.

His carpet is threadbare and everything is landlord standard issue and you are ambivalent about this but you wish his flat was a little nicer, or had more of a personality, was a touch cleaner, had a better sofa, but you are glad that you are in his place and not yours.

He talks about politics for a minute and you like him more but then he reveals a view about the prospects for the forthcoming election that does not quite chime with your own and you like him a little less. Even though you are unable to articulate the precision of your own view or why the difference is important and you do not even try.

His kitchen is a real mess and you are ambivalent about this but he digs around in the dirty dishes for a knife so that he can make himself a sandwich and you have declined the offer of a sandwich and you like him a little less because he is so hungry but he does not care that you see that he is simply hungry so you like him a little more.

He offers you cheap blended whisky and you see that he has a bottle of single malt on top of his cupboard, and after the first glass of the blend you nod at the single malt and he frowns, and he doesn’t like it but he pours two glasses of it anyway and you like him less for giving in to you.

You think that a man like this who saves the single malt for himself is going to have a stained toilet bowl. A filthy disgusting faecally cluttered toilet bowl. And you discover that in fact the bowl is pristine. Unblemished. White as a full sky. And you have your piss and go back to the living room and you like him better.

When you kiss he is good at it and you like him more. And you realise that he has at some point done something with mouthwash so that you do not have to taste his sandwich, and you like him more. When he takes off his shirt you get a whiff of strong deodorant and you like him less.

He has a painting on his wall that you are not sure if you like or not. The sex is fine, a roll of less and more and more or less but overall you both come out of it okay and you like him better than you did before.

He doesn’t want you to stay the night so you like him less, but then you realise that you don’t like people staying either and you want to go home anyway, so you like him more.

He is very non-committal about meeting up again so you like him less. But he does ask for your number and dials it there and then so that you have his, so you like him more. You wonder would you have left without asking for his and you know that you probably would.  Either you would have forgotten to ask or you would have thought about it and not asked because you would have wanted him to ask. You think about that in the street where there is just the quiet night and a short walk home and the streets are old and empty and you think about yourself, only about yourself, and all the things you have said and done this evening, and you like yourself more and you like yourself less and you like yourself less and you like yourself less and the window in your bedroom faces the constellation Draco which never sets.

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The Higgledy Pig

Grass. Wall. There is some sky in the distance, and a cloud in the distance, and some hints of blasted houses and the remains of the town. Its ghost goes up and covers it. In the distance. There is the mud here, and the grass, and the grass is losing out, and the wall is crumbling but still a wall and the house it surrounds is partly collapsed and the roof still smoulders and the children sit out front on bits of furniture, sticks in the mud, huddled together with the last of the water and the taste of the beams, and the oldest boy whimpers quietly with his arm burned red and blistered and his sense of himself confused, so that he is mostly fear and failure, and he does not know what to do.

Arrayed as a front they watch the street for soldiers and pass amongst themselves the last of the water and the seeds. They’ve long since given up talking. Maybe thinking as well. And there is less heat now from the roof and the girl is shivering and she huddles with her brother on the sofa like they are listening to the radio and their mother they think is dead and their father is gone a long time, and they don’t speak of him though in each of their hearts he is always returning, coming down the road, coming up the street, his clothes muddy and maybe a bandage somewhere, but whole and healthy enough to lift them up and kiss their cheeks. He will lift them up and kiss their salty cheeks, and he will set them down by his legs.

Grass. Wall. Crackles at their dim backs. There is some sky in the distance.

Mud. Bricks. Snaps at his flayed back. There is some sky in the distance.

He sits in the mud and wants to sleep but he cannot sleep because of the noise and the smell and because of his leg and he sits in the mud by the river and they call him the Pig. The river is wide and it is full of oil and bodies. At his back the snapping shots. He laughs a little he thinks. Why is he sitting and not lying down? He looks at his leg. It is altered from the high thigh, where there is a puff of foamy blood and he can see the mud where his knee should be and his foot still seems attached by a loop of skin or some other local matter, but he cannot be sure if it is just the blood and that is all, that is all, he is bleeding to death and that is all. He looks at the river and that is all. He wonders why no one shoots him again or comes for his kit and his clothes. They call him the Pig because he snorts when he laughs. And he has clung to the name and laughed at it snorting, and he has kept it out of his letters so that he can tell them when he sees them, that he has been the higgledy pig, like the story he made up for them, that they asked for every night, that’s what they’d called him, the pig, the higgeldy pig, because of the snort when he laughed, and because he laughed so much. And why did you laugh so much Daddy, why? Because I was thinking of the time I’d be telling you that they called me the Pig, and I was thinking how you would take it, and thinking how funny you’d find it, and I was thinking of you, and that was my life, and I am thinking of you now.

And he sits in the mud and wants for nothing.

The children all died too, by starvation and the cold, one way or the other.
And this happened many times in that year, this year, who knows.

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