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Title: Back to the Rocking Chair

by Richard from Cheshire | in writing, fiction

No birds today, Caroline. All sand is swooping in through the door like steam or smoke. Our house is hot now. My shirt lies on my bed soaked with sweat. My belly is folded in my rocking chair. The fields are not much but sand. The flowers are being strangled by weeds. How do you stop that? The orchard was poignant in beauty. Smelled like elderberries.

Who were you, Caroline? How did you smile like that every morning? Walk past with that smell of roses at sunrise? I can only see a tangerine ebb from the field in my rocking chair. Are you doing that? How long do I sit here? Waiting? The porch is splintered and dusty.

- It's hot.
- Get into your bed.

The door snarls back. My silver chains from C are under the porch getting dusty and I get upset when that happens. I kneel under the porch and she's there ' twinkling from under the sand all wrinkled and beautiful. She's smiling from the left and then it's all empty on the right. CLICK. Closed. In my pocket for a few minutes, it's a few minutes. Nothing more

Where are you, Caroline?

What's he saying, Caroline? Don't you know? Is it your name? He take you down to the town and buy you the nicest silk from the store? Undress you and then later put the silk on you? Like he owned you like a dog with a leash? As far as I remember, C, you weren't a dog who was ever on a leash, Caroline. You were the prize rooster and the little life strutting past every door. You were every scurrying, walking, flying thing in those numerous crumpled, unmade beds across the unmade world.

I'd like to thank you for giving her that silk and giving her your hand and your heart. She collected hearts like crops from a field. I don't know if I was ever the man she liked best but I knew I was the man she loved best. She never scurried or flew or walked. Caroline smelled good next to me in our cosy little universe. Her brow was always matted with sweat and the harp sounded every time she looked at me. She'd turn back and over to her side, the sheets between us. Our eyes wandering somewhere else that I didn't know anything about. I wish I knew where they went.

Caroline did not refer to me when she talked of the magpie. She referred to all the other desperate men who had laid her. The magpie chases the sparrow and has its fill without the need for consent. She never needed to give consent. It was her nature to go with whatever the magpie did. At dusk I was given the leftovers of a long banquet shared by all the magpies I never saw glide past. Like the bony stalking vulture I had my fill. At dusk.

When all the magpies had gone.

Where were you, Caroline? When I was born to a symphony of splinter and sinew? Where was your hand on my face and your sweet breath on my skin? Your impertinent bare arms and your blessed eternal legs? Where was the gas to make me paler, and the spark to light a fire? So the rancid shed could burn me to the sand and leave but that broken skeleton? Why did you come from afar on the back of that cart that day and tend to my aching lips? Why had I become the vulture and not that passing magpie?

His large arms could do nothing now, nothing but flail in the midsummer morning. Words are nothing to me but drops of poison. Nothing but a foul excuse dribbling from the lips. Strands of grey saliva hang from my scalp, hanging and dragging in the wind. My arms feel so cold and ache, but my heart beats until this magpie is reformed.

- What's the noise out here?
- Get back into your bed.

Joshua's large arms held Caroline closer than mine ever could. His voice was sweet like strawberries, his poetry and words were the heavenly chorus to my hellacious banter. I found them grasping at one another's necks in the shack that should have been burnt. The blanket hid their beauty so no one else could see. Before then I had always seen the bare backs and fronts and the bushes. For once C had not shared something with me. I had always forgiven her before then. This instance I did not forgive her. I stared from the shadows with my talons sharp. I could smell happiness and she had deserted me.

That night I fled with a backpack and her sinful little fingernails clinched in the bottom of my fist. We fled to a heaven I had never dreamed of. A mountain loomed over the desert and the sun would rise over where the world was round. With my bare hands I scraped through rocks and broken wood and made a new shack ' a new home. The sand smelled of limestone and the mountain smelled of train steam.

- Isn't this what you always wanted?

From that day Caroline only smiled vacantly and sat by herself. She never uttered a word. Never discussed the sun or the birds or love. She was a blank page. She had become the house we now stayed in. I could not for the life of me touch her perfect skin again, only hammer the nails into my rocking coffin and drift away with the sand. With C smiling vacantly in our shack. All one could do was forget her beauty and do what she did ' forget the love and the past, forget the poems and the candle-lit night time. My blanket wrapped tightly round us as she lay warm next to me.

My wispy hair withers away with time. C is barren. Her promise to have children with me has been broken. Her man walks on a stick through the desolation and over the rocks and sand. In his coat he holds something hidden. Their game ' hidden. He creeps up the porch stairs with his coat wrapped round him. I click back the hammer and his eyes are all alert. I pull the trigger just as easily as anything and he falls back and moans on the floor. I change his face. His arms eventually fall by his side.

In the grass there is nothing but risk. I realised this when C had first taken me to the grass to wander and sit and speak. She had silver chains and silver bracelets. All covered in silver like a fresh new jewel. I made a promise that day to be the loving vulture. The nightly resurrector of the girl with hair like seaweed. The keeper. Keeper of silver.

I walk back to the rocking chair and take out my Caroline. Here you are.

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Leonard Cohen's book Beautiful Losers inspired me to write this, as did Falukner's gothic folk stories. After reading in on James Joyce I desperately wanted to write this story, try and reach the level he keeps for himself. Although I don't believe I've done that, I hope the inspiration is clear.

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