The Sound of Bells

I once saw a bright spark in William’s eyes, a purpose wanting to be spoken, how bright his eyes shone, and our world so dark, his spark drew moths and critics so he dared not speak. Smouldered so long in the pit, it eventually grew faint, an idea at the edge of memory, nearly forgotten, its forgotten name, an object that occurred outside the body, away from his self, my eyes could not see where. There was an opening for a carillon player in Hamilton, many years later, as some weak apology against the sins of poor timing, its cruelty. I asked him about it, would he apply himself, take up a different fate than that which had come to him by accident. His eyes searched the distance, the spark’s new home invisible to him, searched, as if the light in the distance could be his. He thought, and decisions were always hard to make. The progression of time weighed on him, as his spark once did, a burden of existence, broken, as we are from our trials. The ground wept with realisation, we must age unlike it, and with it, we change faces though our lives cannot change, our passage inevitable, told to us through stories since the beginning. A semblance of control brightened the spark, then died. I left him after we ate and nothing had changed, but the ground a bit damper than we remembered, our feet a little heavier, our joints harder, our eyes dimmer.

Black Clothes

Boy wearing all black looks cold. He is wearing a long black coat. Under, black shirt, black pants, black underwear. Skinny stick man figure in all black, limbs like pencil markings. Boy in all black thinks he is invisible (only in the night. The sunlight makes him stand out,) so boy looks grim-faced in the morning.

“My round belly is a sign of the times,” he says, while the rest of us eat dirt.

(Woman wearing all black in standing at the street corner. She is going to work.)

Spring

The air was crisp and cold with all the excruciating happiness of seeing the first blue sky of spring. A child screamed. No, it was a bird. A small brown fluff hopping around madly, as though his wing had been torn off. Standing over him was another, the proud black shadow stepping luxuriously over the paving stones. In his mouth was something small, a brown fluff with twig-like legs. The other one scratched at him and jabbed, but Death would not release his prey. He flew into a tree, followed closely by the other, screaming, crying, afraid, and Death began to eat. He held a wing under his right foot and tore at the flesh with his nose. My mother screamed and cried as they took my father away in his coffin. She shouted insults, apologized for things she had not done, prayed violently in an effort to plead him back from the dead. The air was bright and clean. I began to smell the scent of death, rotting and sharp musk, though I was sure it was not present. Soon it will be gone, and I left quickly because the scene frightened me. Death with his long nose and black eyes eats, tears, eats.

The Gate

I stoop through the domed archway
Visited by the shadow
fearing
I fear without cause,
the same nausea that I felt last time
it hasn’t left me
as I had hoped.
Spoken gently he said,
..
and I followed him
through the domed archway
paused a moment to observe the ceiling cracks
visited by the shadow
hasn’t left me,
as I had feared
and how far deep they sounded in the dark.

There is this and there is that,
he said.
And I could not choose between them.

Spider

When I was five, my mother put me in a bath while she did the ironing. After a while I noticed a spider floating in the water and I screamed. My mother ran into the washroom to see what was the matter. I pointed at the spider. Bravely she scooped it up and stuck it onto the side of the tub to show me that it was only a piece of sock fluff. Ever since that day I have had a fear of spiders.

 

Johnny Runs Away from Home

He took with him: twenty-four dollars and seventy-five cents earned by selling his stash of candy to his classmates at school, plus all the money he had found on the ground over the past two years; his favourite book, a picture bible he had borrowed once and never returned; his toothbrush and a half-used roll of toothpaste; a bar of soap in a plastic bag; Kit Kat, his plush cat; his school backpack, carrying everything inside. He wore a fresh set of clothes, his runners, cap, and coat. Seeing there was nothing left for him to do, he went out the front door, locked it with the key he usually carried on a string around his neck. The key he dropped through the mail slot, carefully so it wouldn’t make a noise. Continue reading

Antkeeper and the Sky

Antkeeper watches the birds fly by,
Seek shelter from the rain
and stare at the soil
(until it turns to mud.)
Antkeeper says, “Isn’t it fascinating?”
I’ll nod and he will feel proud of his observation.
But when Antkeeper, looked to the ground,
looks up, he tells me,
“Oh! Such a tiresome expanse,”
and sighs and looks down again.
I cannot remain silent and he shouts that I am simple-minded.
Then I’ll nod and look up, the tiresome expanse before me, simple-minded person,
and become fascinated.

Two Brothers

I’ve been carrying this idea around in my head for a long time. It was supposed to be a longer story, but I’m tired of thinking about it.

 

His younger brother was going on a trip with their mother. It may be forever until they see each other again. He always hated his brother, but today he thought that he will miss him. With one hand, he held his younger brother’s shoulder. With the other, he placed it against his brother’s chest and pushed very, very hard.

“Ouch, that hurts.”

He pulled out a piece of heart. It was small with rounded corners, shined as though it were wet.

As his brother was leaving the next day, both pretended that nothing had happened. Many years passed before the youngest finally remembered the piece he left behind. He returned and, miraculously, each brother recognized the other.