I could outrun them, if I were fast enough.
They're so fast that unless I really run
they catch up with me
the moment I turn the corner, and pile back on
(this one with the claws in my shoulder is what I feel is expected of me, and
this too-tight-hug of massive arms around my chest is my asthma, and
this little guy with the suckers attaches itself to the roof of my mouth and whispers the names of the people I've had to leave behind, and)
But
if I were fast enough
I could outrun them, and I know I could because
I can outrun my wheezing lungs for fifty metres of air-light sprinting
leave my problems and my frustrations and my breathlessness for dust
just muscle on the pavement and the wind in my streaming eyes
my tiredness catches me first, but I know that she's the fastest and she's not so heavy
and it's round the corner, she and I in the lead but the pack is closing, and still I know
my depression's still finding his legs and
my fear hasn't even gotten started
Bam Bam Bam
feet slamming into concrete
juddering my lungs into submission, and here comes the front-runner in the trailing pack,
asthma
slamming into me hard and pulling me back
and then I have to slow down
to take a breath
and stop
and they all catch me and it feels like I've tripped the way you used to when you were a child, where you catch one foot with the other and go down in a spinning tangle of ungainly limbs.
They pile back on.
Hey guys.
And I know
it's a stupid thing to sprint
I know
it's a stupid thing to dance every dance until the small hours of the morning
I know
it's a stupid thing to sing every song along with the radio until my voice comes out as a
squeak
But I do it anyway
even though I can't be fast enough
because when I pace myself
they never lose their grip
I'm Alex Patterson- also known as Mother Jackal when I've got my game designing hat on- and this is where I put my short stories, flash fiction, and little pieces of writing that I'm not sure where to go with yet.
Pages
▼
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Tuesday, 8 May 2012
Tree rings
Underneath
his skin, there lives a younger man.
He knows
she sees him sometimes
in the
edge of his smile when he sees a certain production
which is
not a play to him, but three glorious months of hell
of
forgotten lines and secret kisses and never enough sleep
until he
finally plucked up enough courage at exactly the wrong moment
to
suggest the banality of coffee and a chat
in the
bounce of a curl descending from the pristine plowed field
of his
moon-and-stars hair, a coil of twilight grey
that
transforms his face, wiping out wrinkle and fatigue, echoing
the
midnight coil that fell from the same place on that pale afternoon
he met
her
in the
bunching of his muscles as he lifts his daughter
(so heavy
now, he used to marvel at the lightness of this masterpiece
that sits
solidly in his arms, becoming more and more her own)
and they
remember- we used to row and climb and box
where now
we only lift and curl and lift and curl again
in the
slight, ever-so-slight, widening of his eyes
when he
picks up a complex kit that promises
it will
take at least a full day, even now, to put together a perfect scale model
of a jet
or tank or battleship, and he can almost smell the glue
frustation
and achievement and lost skin from youthful fingers
Underneath
his skin, there live a thousand younger men,
concentric
men that never fade away
that only
grow distant
and are
never quite gone.
Tuesday, 1 May 2012
Beast
Fairies are not to be trusted.
We are told as children that we should not listen to the
fairies, should not look at them, should not enter their rings, should not taste fairy food or drink fairy
wine. Every child makes mistakes, of course. Most are lucky, and are simply
ensorcelled or bewildered for a couple of days, and learn their lesson. The older a child is when they finally make a mistake, the harsher the penalties the fairies
exact upon them. I made my only mistake upon my twenty-first birthday, and for
that I am now locked in two cages. My newest cage is made from white elm,
carved with a cold iron dagger and secured with a silver lock. My oldest is
this body. My hands are black-furred paws, my mouth a muzzle of granite teeth.
I can see- I can always see- the points of my oaken horns. Could I speak, I would tell two things. I
would tell that fairies are not to be trusted, and I would tell the townsfolk
that they have imprisoned the wrong beast.