Categories
exercise fiction

The early makings of Virginia

I was born on a breathless Tuesday in January 1882. My mother wanted to name me Virginia, my father Adeline. They tossed a coin at the goose for him to choose.

South Kensington was all frocks, frills and crinoline. Our nanny had an index finger missing from her left hand and a right hand too quick to slap.

From the age of three I slept not in my cot but under it. Anything to avoid the glass eye of Ivory, the woman who polished the wooden floors on her hands and knees and emptied the potties. It wasn’t her fault but she smelt like my mother’s bottom.

I was the seventh child of Julie and Leslie. I didn’t learn their names until I was six. We weren’t a household on first name terms. 

May-Ann taught me Latin and Greek from books Father kept behind glass and up a forbidden ladder. I was fluent in both by the time I was ten, surpassing both May-Ann and Father. 

We did it for the first time in the maid’s cupboard just off the women’s library. I was fifteen and her kiss was all coal hair and inky fingers and cigarette snuffle.

Of course I wanted a goose of my own. What young independent woman about town didn’t – especially one who was known to wear trousers? I named him Morris. Mother refused to let him into the house after he’d built a nest in the kitchen woodpile using feathers pulled from Father’s prayer cushion. 

Was I lonely? Not with Morris. Although I would have preferred that Morris was a Maureen or, better still, a Mariah. Morris had a tendency to squawk and lunge when things didn’t go his way. Habits that I was to first copy and then adopt for the rest of my life. 

May-Ann preferred my Latin poetry to my Greek. Amo amas amat she said without moving her lips. May-Ann’s lips were sewn together with pig bristle sutures – or so she claimed I had written in Greek. 

May be continued..

Categories
Flash fiction

Perseverance

She is an old woman who sits in a high back chair beside a window ten storeys up. Although she lives alone, she is not lonely. Dressed in black, her stockings concertina around her ankles. The concertinas gather dust. The day she gets up from the chair, walks to the window, opens it, climbs out and stands on the lintel is the day the Perseverance rover lands on Mars. ‘It was the best so far’, Matt Wallace says of the landing. Matt previously worked on five other missions to Mars. The woman, her name long forgotten by those who live beside her and around her, puts one leg out into space and then another to shake the dust off her stockings. She is not wearing shoes. Perseverance travelled for 203 days, a journey of 293 million miles. The woman travels for forty seconds to the lintel, a journey of two metres. Standing on tip toes, she hesitates, turns to look at her reflection in the window, smiles at what she sees. Holding onto the wall she smoothes her hair with her right hand, adjusts her dress over her breasts, and steps off the tower block. The woman goes up and up, turning from woman, to blob to dot to nothing. Only the child in the next door apartment observes the woman disappearing into space. Nobody believes the child when she tells the story the next day at school. Then again, there are those that think Perseverance landing on Mars is also just a story.

Categories
blog

A coronation ride to Whiteadder Reservoir

How do you plan your cycle trips? By what you think your limits are? Or by where you want to go? And do your use apps, or a paper map or just follow your nose?

On Saturday 6 May an older man and his wife in England were crowned. Up here in Scotland there was bunting, outrage, apathy, protests and more interest in the ceremony than many were prepared to admit.

The weather was dull, with heavy showers and thunder forecast. I was six months on from my partial knee replacement. I wanted to go for a day’s cycle trip to avoid the coronation. I was also building miles with a view to doing a 100 miler later in the summer. Fifty or so miles I thought. I ruled out Fife. I’d been a number of times recently and it was time for a change. I ruled out the Dalkeith Country Park loop. I’d done that too often, too. East Lothian, I thought. Gifford I thought. The WhiteAdder Reservoir I decided.

The reservoir, in the Lammermuir hills in East Lothian, is 245 metres above sea level. That doesn’t seem much for someone who has cycled over the Himalayas, but that trip was in 2001 and cycling up steep hills is not something I’ve done much of in the last few years because of my arthritic knee.

Given the distance of around 60 miles return I chose my 22 year old pink Cannondale road bike over the heavier more practical Bob Jackson tourer. Light weight with no mudguards it’s fast and easy but not useful for carrying bulky waterproofs. It’s also not ideal on off-road muddy paths.

I looked for my Spokes East Lothian map and couldn’t find it. Not to worry, I thought. I was sure I would remember the route once I was on the road. I believed there was a national cycle network route to Gifford, and after that it’s pretty much straight up.

I set off without a paper map, without decent gloves (I could only find one of them), in shorts, with a woolly hat, an orange cap, and a windproof jacket that would last two minutes in heavy rain.

In Musselburgh I was forced into the door zone of parked cars by the male driver of a private hire taxi. In frustration I gestured to him as he bullied his way past. This turned out to be a mistake. He veered into a parking place further down the street, waited for me and roared abuse as I cycled past. He then pulled out and overtook me again. Again he roared. Finally he took off down a street to the right. I knew what he would do. Sure enough he was waiting for me up ahead. More abuse followed as I cycled past him. Shaken, but not put off, I pedalled onto the shared use path that runs along the River Esk up to Whitecraigs.

From Whitecraigs I joined NCN1, then turned left onto the route that takes you through a farm, up a steep hill, and up onto the Pencaitland railway path. It was oddly quiet, very few folk on bikes, just a couple of horse-riders and dog walkers. Was everyone watching the coronation? Were they put off by the weather? Or were they taking advantage of the long weekend and had gone further afield? The path, smooth red gravel, runs for around seven miles. It’s a pretty tree-lined route and it was busy with low flying blackbirds and floating white blossom.

There’s something meditative about cycling alone on a lightweight bike. I’d brought a bluetooth speaker for my handlebars and, when there was no-one else on the path, I listened to music, humming along, smiling, sometimes breaking into song. I got to the top of the railway path, stopped to watch a hare bounding into a hedgerow, found the NCN sign, turn left onto the road towards West Saltoun, cycled a few miles to East Saltoun and lost the NCN signs. I couldn’t remember whether the NCN continued to Gifford or whether it turned towards Haddington.

Without my paper map, and too lazy to use an online app, I followed the road signs to Gifford instead. While there was little traffic, the road was fast and several times I was passed by drivers who were too close doing what felt around 70mph. As a nervous cyclist (who wouldn’t be after being run over by an HGV driver) it was an uncomfortable ride. I pushed on as fast as I could, willing Gifford to come into sight. Despite the fear, it was exhilarating. Here I was powering myself through East Lothian on my own with my new knee. I felt strong, fit, liberated. What could possibly go wrong?

In Gifford, some twenty miles from Edinburgh, I stopped at the Lanterne Rouge, a much-loved cafe used by all sorts of cyclists. Oddly, there was only one other person there with a bike – an older man with an ebike who looked at me askance when I said I was going up to Whiteadder. It’s steep, he said, shaking his head. I know, I said, smiling. But I’d forgotten just how steep it was. The last time I’d been over the Lammermuirs it had been on an ebike from Dunbar.

It’s around nine miles to the reservoir from Gifford. I treated myself to avocado on toast with an egg on top and bought a fruit scone to take with me to eat at the top. I rammed that into my frame bag and set off up the hill. Google maps told me there were two routes to the reservoir, one that looped round through Garvald (11 minutes longer) and the shorter one that I knew.

I went via Garvald. It was the coronation. I was strong. I was fit. I was bold. I was a middle-aged woman at the top of my game. I was also clueless. I had no idea what was coming. The roads were narrow, quiet and beautiful. They were also very steep. There were at least two major fords with the road sweeping steeply down to them and sweeping even more steeply back up the other sides. Twice I had to get off. Not because I was out of breath but I simply didn’t have the strength in my legs to get the bike up what seemed like perpendicular roads.

Around a mile or so on from the second ford the thunder started and the sky smeared troubled grey. The air felt moist, thick.

I stopped, looked towards the hills. Looked back down the way I had come. There was no way I was going back through those fords and Garvald. I was committed. I pedalled up past a lone woman in a long skirt and walking boots (where was she was going?), we exchanged pleasantries, I continued up, and down came the rain.

It was a torrent, a maelstrom, a sudden dreadful sousing sent straight from the hereafter. There was nowhere to shelter. No sheds, no overhangs, not even a tree. I stopped, pulled on my hopeless jacket, and got back on the bike. Up up I went into the hills as the single-track road turned into a stream and then a river. My shoes filled with water. My black shorts slicked around my thighs. Thanks to my friend Al, I was wearing a Stolen Goat cycling cap. It kept the water off my glasses. I could see at least.

A driver loomed out of the dark towards me, flashed his lights and gave me a wave. I pedalled on. Each time I hit the crest of a hill another higher summit loomed into sight. And another. And another. I laughed. I muttered. I sang. I cranked up my speaker. Up I went with Shakira and Sonic Youth and Destiny’s Child and Beyoncé and Bob Dylan and Joan Jett and Patti Smith.

Still the rain came and still I kept going, the speaker spluttering in and out of life. I had no idea how far I had to go. I prayed that my tyres wouldn’t puncture. I prayed that my chain wouldn’t break. My legs pushed and turned, pushed and turned, and then, there it was, the slate glint of the reservoir on my left.

I didn’t stop to look at it. Didn’t stop to take a picture. I turned right onto the ‘main road’ and kept on pedalling. It’s one of the world’s great mysteries that the road is not downhill from there all the way to Gifford. There is however, a row of trees that provides a fulcrum of shelter. I stopped, ate half my damp scone too fast and hiccoughed.

By then my adrenaline had dissipated, my legs were heavy, my fingers red and numb and I was doused through. I was thirty miles from home. The music floundered and stopped. My phone died. I was less liberated and more fucked.

Up I rode towards Gifford. Up and up until the rain trembled and stopped and the sky breached. The downhill should have been a relief but I was trying not to get cold and trying to stop my brakes steaming and grating. Safe in Gifford I asked a local how to get onto the NCN. Turn right at the golf course he said. That turned out to be the same fast road (B6355) I’d come in on. I kept going. Losing my nerve I hugged the edge of the road, knowing that I’d only encourage the close-passers, which of course I did. But at East Saltoun I found the NCN again and I was on my way.

As I cycled back along the Pencaitland railway path I puzzled over whether it was uphill or downhill. For years I’d thought it was downhill towards Edinburgh until somebody recently told me the opposite. Cold and wet, my fingers now numb, I thought most of it was downhill. I do, of course, stand to be corrected.

Back in Edinburgh my hands were so cold it took me a minute or so to get my key into my door lock. It seems I am that person who no longer listens to limits. I cycle where I want to go. I cycle where I think I should be able to go. I follow my nose. I am hopeless at understanding online maps.

That night I ordered a new fancy waterproof cycling jacket from the Netherlands. There’ll be a Brexit bonus tax to pay when it arrives. In years to come we’ll remember where we were for this coronation. I’ll remember it fondly – on an old pink road bike getting a sousing on the Lammermuir hills.

The route I took is here. Take gloves. And a waterproof jacket. And shake that ass up those climbs.

Categories
exercise Flash fiction

Both of Him

We are going to see Jesus. Both of Him. 

Before we go, I sit and wait on the brown leather sofa. The sofa fits three small people or two big people. I am alone on the sofa and I don’t take up the space of three people or even two. Nobody sits beside me, they never do.

I sit on the brown leather looking across the coffee table, and across the grey sofa on the other side of the coffee table to the white bookcase backed up against the wall. Mam says the bookcase is a mess. The mess a strumpet makes, she says.

Mam can’t read because she’s blind but she knows a mess when she touches it. The bookcase has seven shelves. Each one is split in two by a central vertical partition. 

Jesus, both of Him, says there’s only one book. This proves both of Him have never been to this apartment.

This bookcase has 119 books, four cards with slogans on them, a painting the size of a large box of chocolates, and a game of Jaws. That’s Jaws with the upper case.  Jaws is on the top shelf. I can’t reach the Jaws game, even standing on tiptoes on the highest bit of the grey sofa. 

Mam has jaws with the lower case. Jesus, both of Him, might have jaws but I don’t know for sure as I haven’t met them yet. 

There’s a book on the fourth shelf from the top. It lies flat on its side and it’s called Ducks Newburyport. It’s a blue and white book. The fact that the book is lying on its side is an important mystery. 

Jesus lay on his side with Him beside him but there’s no more facts about that because the disciples didn’t write about it. 

I sit staring at all the books. Why did a strumpet take the time to disorder them? There are blue books and red books and white books and green books and a wooden angel the size of my palm with blond wooden hair and a red wooden dress but no jaws, not even a painted mouth.  

A tall bald man in yellow socks serves us chamomile tea in a transparent glass teapot. Dead yellow flower heads float about inside the pot. The man forgets the cups. There are no yellow books on the shelves, not even one. Nobody tells the man to bring cups. 

My bare knees quiver and shake because I am still on the sofa and I want to get going to see Jesus, both of Him.

Beneath my feet, the carpet is grey. It is covered in legs of chairs and tables. Some of the legs are short and some are long. All of them are wooden. None of them have feet. If they had feet they’d walk straight out of this apartment. Down seven floors in the lift. Straight out into the street to the bus terminus. The carpet would be left behind, with the bookcase and the books and the strumpet’s disorder.

I could say there’s a forest of chair legs and table legs but that would be a metaphor and Auntie Lorna says metaphors are showing off and she slaps the faces of show-offs leaving their cheeks crimson and their eyes bloodshot and watery. 

The painting the size of a large chocolate box is on the second shelf from the top on the right. It leans against disordered books. The painting, without a frame, is pale blue and pale violet and pale pink and pale mauve. Auntie Lorna calls this type of painting a bloody mess. I don’t let my eyes rest on the painting but I see it all the same.

I twist my head to look behind me. I look out of the small dirty window. Beyond the window is a street with apartments the same as this one. The apartments are close but I can’t see into them. The snow is silent, grimy. Snow flakes stick to the dirty window and slide down the glass. I want to wipe them away but the window doesn’t open.

Mam says it’s time. The bald man says, no really, no rush. Auntie Lorna stands up, ties her headscarf beneath her chin. Mam says, yes, it’s time. Time to get up and put your shoes on and your coat on to go and see Jesus, both of Him. Mam doesn’t actually say ‘both of Him’. Mam doesn’t know yet that Jesus has a twin. 

I don’t tell Mam I don’t have shoes. Or a coat.

Categories
exercise

Sing any hymn you like

It was a herring gull – sing any hymn you like.

Gull leads to landfill. Landfill leads to leaching. Leaching leads to leprechauns.

The herring gull poking around the misfits and, of the course, the bluetits soaking around in bloodbaths and, of course, the charlatans croaking about their titbits.

My herring gull is blue, shrieking blue on hue. 

Remember the day the colony fled, trash cans fled, landfills fled, toxic pools bled out?

Pluck the herring gull – or else! 

Gull flies, gull sighs, gull dies. 

Gull feathers as calamitous and ratchety and barbarous as a barbarous and ratchety and calamitous three-tier wedding cake. 

Herring gull! 

On the contrary, the gulls colonise, and we, we just stop and stand and stare up, fixated, locked in awe in shock, and the gulls, well they just quip on colonising. 

Grateful the gull, for her razor clams. Grateful the gull, for her Saturday night chips’n’brown sauce. Grateful the gull, for her red diamante dot.

Chips chips chips chips! This comely gull would jab at nothing more, nothing less.

The tall gull struts as the small gull shimmies and the middling gull ruminates.

Who are they who have trapped us in our apartments? The Herring Gulls. Who are they who have stormed our parliament, spaffed all over our decrees? The Herring Gulls.

All in all, they aren’t bad at soaring.

No, we mustn’t speak of it. The portly selkies that slithered up and out of the sea in the dark. That smashed up the eggs in every nest in Beach Lane. Shards of shell and spatters of yellow yolk all over the shop. No, there’ll be no mention of this, no mention at all. 

Herring gulls, paddling up lugworms. Kittiwakes, scoring contours across a soldering sky. Sanderlings, jostling one another’s dainty damp feet. Dog walkers, stooping to scoop up shit. 

The birder, out birding, snared the bird. He closed his eyes as he did it, but couldn’t block the sounds. Snap crack crunch.

And she, in her freckled winter plumage, lived off road kill and offal and grass seeds and orange peel and apple cores and starling chicks and song thrush eggs and voles and shrews and beetles and slugs and ants and mackerel and crabs and mussels and really anything that wriggled or sparkled.

A gull in a band is worth two in a rush.

Are we nearly there, yet? Absoherringgulllutely. 

All over Scotland herring gulls breed chicks and rebellion.

Image by Daniel VanWart.

Categories
fiction

Layla on the tiles

Tiles. Always tiles. Ever since her nanna had left Layla alone in the Italian tile shop at the bottom of Rosebery Avenue in Saffron Hill with an orange lipstick, a pack of crayons and a jumbo bag of gummy bears. There was a scene with the owner, Mrs Acerbi. Flailing arms and screaming and the police arriving. 

Put her in handcuffs the crazy little dame, shouted Mrs Acerbi. Layla, aged seven and small for her age, shook her red plait and held out her wrists with a trembling lip and knees bare all a quiver. The three officers of the law backed off and stood in an orderly line to inspect Layla’s masterpiece on the Calacactta Gold Premium marble tiles – a sticky lipstick wax crayon fresco of Michelangelo’s The First Day of Creation, with Big Bird in the centre and Dougal, Ermintrude, Dylan and Zebedee as the supporting cast.

Where was her nanna, Mrs Hodge, who’d taken her there? Mrs Hodge didn’t rescue her. Mrs Hodge wasn’t with the officers of the law and the howling Mrs Acerbi or the crowd who’d stopped to peer at the fuss and were making bets with Mr Fattore on what would crack first, Mrs Acerbi’s glutinous make-up or the shop front window. 

Was this just a naughty prank, a little girl going mad with crayons? Or was there something else more invidious? We can’t glean much from the notes her father Frank took during a series of medical appointments after the third graffiti display episode in as many years.  

When I interviewed him some years ago, Frank told me that after fifteen years in the gravel pits on the excavators with no ear protection, he struggled to recall instructions if he didn’t write them down. He frowned, patting his ears when I spoke. It’s just one of those things, he said, as he handed me the notes. He was circumspect when talking about his wife. Maureen, he admitted, couldn’t write, was always working and sent Frank to school meetings, medical appointments, and anything else where Maureen’s shame might out itself.  Frank, I’ve come to realise over the two decades I’ve followed this story, is a man who wants to do what’s right, but doesn’t try beyond what fate sets out for him. 

Layla, according to one doctor, had developed a marked disinhibition for inhibition. A tick, Frank wrote, keep an eye – come to nothing – talented –  danger – don’t leave strangers – avoid temptation – healthy diet. Some of Frank’s words were indecipherable, even to Frank. His pen petered out at critical junctures. Words rose at the end of lines, giving themselves up as hanging chads. 

Following the doctor’s advice, Frank permitted Layla to desecrate one bedroom wall (he tiled it with Arabescato Vagli marble using molar pearl grout after a week of tears and smashed plates), forbade her to enter shops and galleries alone, and cajoled her into eating greens, oranges, and yellows. Maureen banned the Saturday trips with her nanna and forbade her, her own mother, to visit the family unannounced. Layla spent her weekends creating and destroying frescos, carving impassive friends out of the candle ends Maureen brought home from work, and thumbing through the art magazines that arrived from an anonymous donor.  

In her first term at secondary school, Layla wanted to draw big, spread her arms, go beyond full-size into giant. Her art teacher forbade it. Stick to your pad, Layla Carlaw, Mr Williams told her every time she reached for the sky. If I let you do it, they’ll all want to and then where will be be?  And try something other than Sesame Street and the Magic Roundabout. 

Emma, then a plump girl in wire-rimmed spectacles who won school art competitions for her miniatures of fairies, fungi, and frogspawn, would lean across and squeeze Layla’s hand. Layla’s other hand would scratch and fret the eczema on her scalp until Mr Williams moved on to someone else. Layla didn’t or couldn’t give up trying. The sores on her scalp oozed and spread.

Years wore on.

Layla developed a susurrant sacrament, laying her hands and left cheek on the mute mineral wall in her bedroom after her morning shower, tracing the veins with her fingertips, burbling incantations.

Frank continued his extra shifts for the never-ending payment damages cycle to the Acerbis. His headaches spasmed and bellowed. 

Layla’s nanna, Mrs Hodge, continued arriving at the door with large boxes and heavy paper bags and continued being sent away by the scolds of her daughter or the urgent mutterings of her son in law, her trembling arms still full of whatever she had for Layla. 

The blue pencil lines on the hall wall marking out Layla’s height continued upwards in an orderly fashion, stuttered, and stagnated to a level well short of average.

Maureen stooped and sighed, continued to stroke the growing bulge under her right arm between cleaning shifts at the Premier Inn and scrubbing the bathroom tiles whenever Layla went off-piste with a gold pastel or a black kohl eyeliner. 

In the community centre at the end of the street, neighbours pursed lips and tutted over the Carlaw’s shrill shouting and door slamming. That Carlaw family always smelled of turps, they said to me when I popped into one of their coffee mornings last year to ask about Layla. Mavis Brown, the elderly coordinator, serving tea and Victoria sponge with more clatter than was necessary, was content to go on the record. That generation of women be damned, she said. Someone should have stopped them breeding. (The cake, I must say, although a touch on the dry side, was delicious.)

Layla was sixteen, according to Emma, when rooting through her nanna’s lavender-scented lace garters and blush-nude fishnets in the cabinet beside the coal skuttle, she discovered the truth in a newspaper cutting. There, on page three, under a lurid photograph of Layla’s original tiled artistic triumph, was the story of her nanna. According to two anonymous witnesses, Mrs Shirley Hodge, aged fifty-seven, a widow with two sons, a daughter, and one grandchild, had been out the back of Mármol Italiano del Sr. Acerbi in the cement store, knickers at half-mast, with Sr. Acerbi’s large Italian hands firm on her flaccid buttocks. 

Emma is sure that no one in the family had mentioned the humiliation to Layla before then, even when Mrs Hodge, never one to miss a commercial opportunity, had gone on to set up a lucrative hot-line business as an agony aunt for women seeking the thrills of both straying and getting caught. Mr Hodge, known by everyone as Granda, who’d spent much of his life digging graves and what was left of it tending Multiflora petunias, retained a dignified silence in his beige plastic urn on the Carlaw’s mantlepiece. What did Layla make of this? You’ll need to interpret her diary entry for yourself  – a line drawing of a woman in a polka-dot bikini, her back kyphotic and her belly concertinaed, a walking stick in one hand, a packet of condoms in the other.  

 I digress. 

After being expelled from school in her final year for lacerating the underpass with bloody renditions of Bert, Oscar, and Clementine, Layla did a combination course at the local higher education college in construction and fine art. Emma was on the art course, too. The reparation bond her father was forced to post to the college was lost following damage incurred in both departments in her first year. Psychologists were hired. Mentors provided. Professionals came and saw and left. The staff room was, one senior lecturer said later, abuzz for the first time in a decade as the pro-Layla freedom camp and the anti-Layla conservation camp went head to glorious head. 

The college provided a security detail for Layla, ‘to keep her safe’. While on campus, she was followed at an indiscrete distance by two stout women in navy polyester until the student union threatened the management team with a human rights challenge.  Layla didn’t seem to care. She attended classes, achieved decent grades, developed her own adaptive fresco techniques, ate her meals alone or with Emma, and spent most of her spare time at the brutalist fountain in the quadrangle or in the washrooms, studying grout imperfections.

When she wasn’t at college or making and crafting, Layla sat in her bedroom at home on a low stool holding the stiff hand of her life-size wax boyfriend, David. Emma believes it took Layla at least six months to sculpt him. David stood, brooding and biblical, by the end of her bed, staring unseeing at the fallen oak in the abandoned children’s playpark across the road. David was naked unless Emma was visiting.

As Emma, by her own admission, was not one for the flagrant display of male genitalia, Layla wrapped her companion from the waist down in a yellow-checked towel, securing his modesty with an iridescent fish-scale brooch she’d lifted from her nanna’s drawer. This was typical of her, Emma said later in an interview with Art Monthly following her own successful miniaturist exhibition in the Hague, she was always so careful of my feelings.

Maureen died when the lump overcame her. Or maybe it was Layla’s inability to ‘stop her spoiling’ that finished her off. Frank, without Maureen to defend and preserve, ebbed into a fog of fretful mourning and hasn’t spoken to Layla or his mother-in-law since. Neither parent attended her graduation. Mrs Hodge turned up to the amphitheatre with a polaroid camera and a pink fascinator, sat in the second to front row, and stood up for several seconds too long clicking and shouting and cheering well after Layla had left the stage.

A scurrilous two-page article in the local paper the following week slammed the college for allowing a wanton vandal to graduate. It included a previously unseen picture of Layla aged six, her red plait tied with a yellow ribbon, hunched over a drawing paper on the floor by a Victorian fireplace with pink and cream tulip tiles. The source of the photograph is unknown, but I’ve been told Mrs Hodge had a fireplace like that at the time.

Eight years after Maureen’s death, unemployed with a string of sackings and three police cautions behind her, and still living with her silent foundering father, Layla came into money. The source was never clear. Premium bonds or the lottery or a series of lucky flutters at the greyhounds with her nanna or some cumulative mix of them all. Previously absent aunts and uncles were suddenly attentive. Inglorious liggers proffered safe-keeping advice and pyramid investment schemes. Layla listened only to her nanna. Design your own destination, Mrs Hodge said. Carve out what you love. 

Layla, sucking a strawberry gummy bear, wrote a list on the back of a paper plate: 

Lipstick, Crayons, Pig’s blog, Marble,  Sesame Street, Grout, Screwdrivers, Claw hammers, Torsos, Garters, Candle wax, Drawing, ReImagining, ReCreation, ReDestruction, Nanna, Magic Roundabout, David, InDependent, Michelangelo

On the front of the plate, she wrote, ‘I saw the angel in the marble and carved until I set him free.’ That paper plate, protected in a toughened glass case, is now on permanent display in the Design Museum in the Layla Carlaw Room.

Layla launched LC ReDestruction with a tap-dancing drag queen, a display by the local car crusher (electric SUV, darling), and a graffiti competition for the over seventies on the newly tiled exterior rear wall of her premises. The Acerbis, all agog and ancient, were the first to arrive. The brass band was valiant in its blistering efforts on Tosca, Emma handed out flutes of peach bellinis, and Mrs Hodge, now reliant on a walking frame, conducted the speeches from a smashed up wooden dais. Layla remained out of sight, reportedly etching Grover out of the Crystal White marble tiles in the disabled toilet with a Philips screwdriver and pigment pots of hematite and azurite. 

As Mrs Hodge explained to the invited guests, the concept was simple. Walk into the expansive gallery. Provide your credit card details. Select a panel of Italian marble tiles from twenty options. Put on an apron, choose your make-up, art product, tool, and sticky sweet, and get to work. Once you’ve finished your creation, LC ReDestruction recreates the effect on the wall of your choice in your home. Layla, Mrs Hodge promised, would personally seal a signature gummy bear in the upper right-hand corner of every finished work to guarantee its authenticity.

Readers – as you all know, it took off. It started with a tweet here and there by those at the opening. Not by Layla. Layla was not one for public relations or marketing, preferring, as Mrs Hodge said in her speech, to let the redestructors do the talking. From Twitter it moved to Instagram. Hollywood A Listers did redestruction selfies with Bianco Perlino bathroom panels or Bardiglio Imperiale kitchens. YouTubers got in on the act, strutting viewers through their daubings, scratchings and simperings with vacuous smiles and decorated teeth, hurling fake pig’s blood onto fake marble panels. Tenors and sopranos popped up out of retirement offering ‘sung for your pleasure’ backing vocals for #SeeMeSeeMyReDestruction. Those that couldn’t afford the divas ripped off DIY sea shanties from TikTok. Marble-cracking hammers with spangle-laminate handles sold out at B & Q. Pseudo-Defecated grout could be bought by the ten-kilo bag at Aldi, with the genuine article available at every Waitrose in the UK beside the potted plant sections. 

Fawning features appeared in Home and Garden, Country Life, and Cosmopolitan. Grand Designs devoted an entire series to ReDestruction, as middle-aged high-income couples with big hair and matching fawn slacks allowed wrecker artists into their homes. Teary-eyed by the end of the episode, they stared straight to camera, gushing about their spiritual redemolishments and incorporeal sabotage.  Layla, who refused all interviews and guest appearances, was rarefied as a prophet, a visionary, a god. Statues of her rose in Milton Keynes, Skelmersdale and Peterlee. A chalk cutting of her face in profile turned up on a hillside a mile from the Uffington Chalk Horse. 

At some point in amongst this, under cover of darkness, Layla moved out of her father’s home. Commentators said she’d gone to Brixton, Milan, or New York. Or she’d taken up with the homeless under Tower Bridge. Or she was in an old miner’s cottage in Wales, happily wrecking. Occasionally she was snapped on a bicycle near her small office in Saffron Hill, London, her dark red plait now the length of her back, her signature white anorak always too big and too loose over her small frame. 

A rumour, started by the Mail Online, surfaced about Maureen’s ashes. A cleaner swore he’d seen Layla pouring ashes from a crematorium bag into the grout mix when she was installing her new interactive exhibition in the Turbine Hall at the Tate Modern. Layla had been crying, he said, and hadn’t let him comfort her. Told him to f*ck off when he’d approached. The Tate would not comment on the story, except to say they’d fire the cleaner if they identified him. I have been unable to ascertain whether the family ever picked up Maureen’s ashes from the funeral directors. 

Investigative reporters with more resources than this humble journalist followed the money. Mrs Hodge, the Times alleged, was building an empire around LC ReDestruction.TM Luxury peregrinations (coach, train, or walking), pre-chipped homeware, shredded clothing, mineral art products, even ReDestruction cakes and bakes all had the gummy bear seal. There was talk of shell companies and bitcoin. A limited-edition (500) of platinum hammer-proof watches with pre-shattered faces for £35k each sold out in twenty-four hours. Mrs Hodge was papped in the Four Seasons Hotel in Moscow, the Cayman Islands Yacht Club, and Annabel’s in London. Each time she had a walking frame more whimsical than the last and a rump of rowdy rinsed middle-aged men at her heel. She was never with Layla.

The backlash, when it finally thundered in, was graphite and pre-Raphaelite. Greenpeace hit out at the ‘wanton destruction of a precious natural resource that took millions of years to form’. #LaylaPlanetHater trended off and on for several weeks. The art critics, always one bend behind the curve, sniffed and censured and told everyone to move on, they’d said from the start it was plebetariat nonsense. BBC Radio 4’s the Moral Maze asked if ReDestruction could ever be Art with the clear intention that the answer was Certainly Not. One female panellist made an impassioned plea against misogyny but was cut off in mid flow as ‘off-topic’.  Enough of this, Middle England shouted. Enough of this, the Far Left agreed.

Emma and I got engaged. She proposed and I accepted. Say what you want about the age difference, it makes no odds to me. I stopped thinking about Layla, stopped following the odd story about redestruction and focussed on other projects. We moved to the country. We had a baby. She, Cleo, turned one. We invited Layla to celebrate with us, an intimate party, just for close friends. She declined. And that would have been that had Mrs Hodge not gone viral. Again.

Mrs Hodge organised a live feed statement, In Defence of Layla’s Realm, from the shade of an umbrella palm, cardboard or genuine I couldn’t tell. She kicked off by telling us, the world, that Layla was left-handed, like all creative types, and that’s why she, her loving nanna, had encouraged and protected her from the start. And then, she said, dropping her eyelids, there was that incident.

Layla had just turned seven and Mrs Hodge was babysitting. The pair were walking back to the family home, when at the other end of the street, a bus stopped outside estate entrance. A woman got out, staggered, tripped, and pawed at her stomach. The back of her coat was stained red, and red was smeared around her stockings. The woman was trying to cover the red with her bag of shopping. She struggled across the road causing some drivers to swerve and brake. Just as Mrs Hodge recognised her daughter, Maureen, Layla shouted Mum, Mum! Mrs Hodge grabbed the little girl’s hand, turned her around, and ran. 

Mrs Hodge, breathing heavily, her eyes damp, her slumping cheeks high pink, stepped closer in to the camera. She had to protect Layla, she said, and had taken her to the community centre, asked the team there to watch her for a few hours while she hurried to the house to help Maureen. There was an exhibition about Michelangelo, and a space for children to draw on paper pinned to the walls. Layla spent a couple of hours there and was taken home by the community coordinator for the night while Mrs Hodge did what needed to be done. She’s sensitive, went on Mrs Hodge, an only child with a tragic past. You can see this in her creations, her conceptions, her sculptures. She paused to clear her throat.

I implore the critics, the greenies, all of you, she said, to leave her alone. Snobs and hypocrites. Misogynists. Bullying her because she was brought up in a council house. What do they know? They’ve never picked up a hammer in their lives. The public loves her work. Every exhibition sold out. If you support Layla, bring your redestruction plans to me. I’ll see you right. And with a teary wink, the feed went dead.

Days after this live feed, a group calling themselves ReDestruction Sisters and Sinners flash mobbed several London underground stations, rendering the original tilework ruined with anti-capitalist pigment and a jack hammer. All wore Layla masks over scarlet balaclavas. The Turkish Baths in Harrogate were graffitied with lude images of savaged male genitalia and signed off with gummy bears. As the CCTV system was sabotaged on the night of the incident, no one has as ever been charged for the offence. 

Soon, at least according to the Daily Mail and that rag the Express, half the country was running amok, going the whole hog, despoiling their houses, moving on to their neighbours’ relatives’ and even colleagues’. Anything with tiles was fair game. Georgian council offices, Victorian schools, city fountains, even the snake house in Whipsnade Zoo. Politicians called on Layla to proclaim a cease and desist, to apologise for the pillaging mobs, to pay compensation, to take the blame. Layla stayed in the shadows. Kept redestructing. Mrs Hodge presided over the openings of new LC REDESTRUCTION branches in Birmingham, Liverpool, and Cardiff. The V & A hosted a pop up for three weeks in Dundee. The police kettled protestors and the pop up was shut down a week early, only to reopen again when the police were distracted by similar events in Aberfoyle and Leeds.

When Layla was finally tracked down and detained under what many human rights organisations claimed to be trumped up charges, and two years later found guilty at a trial without a jury, the foreign media referred to it as a kangaroo court. You all know what the British media said.

There are no tiles in Layla’s cell. According to a Ministry of Justice tweet it was a condition of her incarceration. A further tweet with a photograph shows the cell as elephant grey, the light scant, with a square window that looks out onto a concrete yard and a discrete electric fence. The glass is smeared on the outside with the remnants of Atlantic storms. There’s a built-in single bed with grey linen, and two white shelves above the pillow. In the right-hand corner of the photograph, we see the rear of a woman’s head and her back, the crinkled red hair in an orderly plait. The woman is wearing thick khaki canvas. Is this really Layla’s prison? Is this really Layla?  We have no way of knowing. 

Layla has been denied requests for lipsticks, crayons, and pencils by the Ministry of Justice. Further requests for Play-Doh and water colours have also been refused. Even paper plates. The Sun reports that Layla tried rubbing mashed swede onto her cell wall, which, had it stuck, would have been a milky pale umber. It didn’t stick, didn’t even stain. Later, one prison guard has claimed, she tried mushy peas, the fading green svelte of abandoned summers. It didn’t stick either. Anti-food art prison paint. Peak 2022.

Frank Carlaw has never been to visit. Neither has Mrs Hodge. Emma is the only non-family member with prison access rights. She doesn’t want the details of her visits made public. She has crowd-funded two legal challenges without success to get Layla out. But whoever detained and charged Layla, first under the Mental Health Act, and later under public order regulations and anti-terror legislation, knew what they were about. 

Layla has never done an interview or spoken in public beyond speaking to her clients. We must assume that Layla Carlaw means for her art to stand for itself. We, those of us that have followed her career, want her out of there. Alas, it looks like we’ll be waiting for decades to come. It was the institutions that got her in the end. Put at end to her art because she was putting an end to them.

Or was she?

Categories
exercise poetry

Sentenced

Connecting birds, he thinks she said, saying it was all connections, not that he feels selected, not with that bruised feeling not the healing he hopes for, but that said, they have this something this voluminous vertiginous fissure of affliction that keeps them both distant and entwined, only she is distant and he, tall and abrasive for his age, connected to her by a ravelled thread a reckoning a blessing almost, he alone is entwined in the ribbons of her, tangled up in the fantasy of her as someone else entirely, nonetheless she isn’t rude doesn’t slap him down not in public at least, whereas in the bathroom (him naked her naked) the way her lip curls as a parcel bow scissored is no gift, he knows, no sirree, he knows as well as anyone else she blames herself as he blames himself, his lame attempt to take the shame, drape himself in it, a cloak of disgrace his just desserts, but then it isn’t him that’s dead but Sonny, Sonny the name that shall not be mentioned, even the shrine on the kitchen cabinet bears no plaque no card no image no black rimmed lettering, just a violet jittery candle with a flame that will not rest, of course back in the day grief tore couples apart, too, split them asunder, an axe through a log, a fish eviscerated, and so he reminisces (eyes half closed) about the old days the gold gays of obtuse rainbows of crocks of bold and he would (if he only could be arsed), compare them historically to those couples who stayed the course despite the odds, although this may not be true for the Mr and Mrs whose fox cub went under a steam train, or the Mr and Mrs whose dachshund went poof! in a cloud of ash, remember spontaneous combustion? he does she doesn’t, conversely she believes in fairies, the gossamer kind all lace and no snickers, and somehow her naive notion of elfin folk ignites their furious disagreements about communists (there isn’t much left not even righteous left between them now), by the same token they split the electricity bill forty sixty he paying sixty what with being taller and more abrasive for his age, correspondingly she rinses forty sixty of the dishes, her slavish desire for cleanliness fractured by her fury over his height his slights the way he picks his teeth with the cherub handled olive pick and Sonny not even cold in his grave.

Categories
blog poetry

Socks that mock

Anyway, take socks that sit too tight on the portly ankles of tumescent womenfolk. 

They’re black they’re rust they’re fawn they’re blue slush they’re peach melba they’re mushroom they’re mildew they’re tusk they’re cask they’re sherry they’re Campari and soda.

The grippers with the too grippy grip. 

The graspers with the too graspy grasp.

Mocking socks are discriminatory.

Mocking socks are misogyny.

Mocking socks can fuck off back to the factory. 

What to do with socks that mock?

That cauterise and baudelise and turn toes mauve and ankles cantankerous?

Some say one should ship in the snippers, pinch each sock with two fingers and snip snip snip until the throttling stops. The trouble with the snipping is the inevitable unravelling, an unfurl here and an unfurl there until said socks have dropped beneath your ankles so deep into your soles you’re forced into a waddle that’s either John Cleese or excuse me dear where’s the nearest public facility?

Ach, I hear you cry. Why buy the mocking socks at all? Haven’t you heard of soft tops?

Soft tops are topsy turvy.

Soft tops are wrinkling monstrosities. 

Soft tops don’t fangle with frocks. (But they wrangle with sandals). 

Lock ‘em up the sellers of strangling socks.

Lock ‘em up dwellers of shrill ankles and sock bankers.

Categories
exercise Flash fiction

Mandarin Dream

On tiptoes on the second to top rung of the wooden ladder pushed up against the tree trunk with the twist of wire in a sweating palm reaching stretching reaching checking every piece of fruit, rejecting those too small, plucking those that fit neat through the hooped wire, dropping them into the canvas basket clung around my neck. Flies all over my mouth. Burn all over my bare flesh. Am I allowed to pick the hard half green ones if they fit? Forgot to ask. Look at the other pickers, can’t see through the prism of mean. Size, twist, pick, drop, size, reject, size, reject, size, reject, size, twist, pick, drop, size, reject reject reject reject. Earn what you pick. Pick what you ken. Someone singing Waltzing Matilda in a German accent nine feet up. Canvas strap too tight chaffing around my neck. Basket not even a quarter full already. Baby blue seersucker shorts gapping at my behind. Ruined. Picker’s crack. Someone yelling shut up shut up bloody oath mate, you’re murdering it! nine feet up. German Matilda waltzing a stutter. Swabbing the sweat off my cheeks with my red cotton bandana looped around my wrist. Flies in amongst my teeth.Turn to watch the others skipping up and down their ladders with their full baskets and their grubby cricket hats and their long sleeves and their long pants marching to the central crates emptying their baskets trotting back, how are they doing that, so fast, what’s wrong with me? Inhale the leaves with their sweet oily citrus scent. Red tractor gulping down diesel, farting out reek. Twenty of us, maybe. Fifteen on the ladders, two overseeing the crates in the centre of the row, two in the tractor, foreman smoking a roll-up under his squalid Akubra hat. Young Israeli on the next tree but one given up, spreadeagled on his back in the dirt, laughing and pointing at the boiled sun, shirt rolled up to his armpits, livid purple scar trekking between nipples burnt. They’re all too small my mandarins, they’ve given me the weakest tree. Bastards. Earth head earth spinning, trees turning to sky turning to dust turning to orange to not enough money. 

Foreman shouting something about lunch. Climbing down, steady now steady. Leant up against the trunk in the jumbled shade eating peanut butter and jam on curled up bread.  And flying ants. Gulping sweet lemon squash from a glass milk bottle. 

Later, he soothes me, the German man, lie still little cat, he whispers, fingers pressing in on my blushing shoulders, his head tucked low beneath the upper bunk. $25 for 12 hours work. Not a tenth of what the Vietnam vets earn. I don’t even know his name. Aloe vera bubbling and spitting as he smears it over my my brazed neck and calves. Blood rushing to my face hanging off the bed staring at the squeezed out Aloe leaves scattered about the wooden floor with pull twists and metal bottle tops and two silver empty condom wrappers. Nobody said you don’t use the sizer to actually size the mandarins, it’s just a guide, now I know.

The fastest pickers are the Vietnam vets, his mate on the stool across from the bunks says. Take a leaf out of their book.

On my belly and his hand stretching into where it shouldn’t and I want to say no, no but no words come and and his bare left toes toy with an empty Aloe leaf lift release lift release.

You’d be better off in the packing shed, sweetheart, the mate on the stool says. Orchard’s for the big girls.

His heavy hand reaching, sizing, twisting, picking.

Their body hair grows through their jeans, what with them never taking them off, not even in the sea, them Vietnam vets, the mate on the stool says.

How do I get in the packing shed, I ask the floor, pushing my belly down through the mattress, pushing me away from him.

Girl on the upper bunk leans over, dangles her arm, strokes his hair, chipped blue nail varnish, tattoo of a tiger on her palm. 

Gotta prove yourself, she says. 

He sits up, bangs his head on the upper bunk, rubs his scalp.

Fuck this, he says, climbing the ladder up to her. Stuck to his sole the Aloe leaf, a prism of clean. 

Categories
fiction Flash fiction

Mind that child

Even Tony is heading for the beach. On Giles Street, mothers haul kids out of oversized cars, men brush dog hairs off khaki cotton jackets, taxi drivers push sun-drunk women out of cabs. On Giles Street, Tony limps, side-stepping the dog shite, stepping over cracks. Careful now, careful. The bear, his mother had said, step on a crack and that dirty great bear’ll get you. He pushes past the Maxwell’s overgrown hedge, gives it a shove with his elbow. Thorns tear pink at the loose scoop of his skin. A momentary bloom of pain. The air smells of chip fat, Chinese takeaways and candy floss. Not the sea. Council tractors put paid to that. Ploughing and hoovering the seaweed off the butter-white sand every morning before the mobs arrive. The dirty great bear, his mother had said. He’d reached for her hand. For pity’s sake, Tony! And then the shove. His wee mouth popping in shock. He’d tumbled, legs scrabbling away from the bear. Did he scream? 

 A rabble of students pushes past him, forcing him further into the prickle of the hedge. All fake tans and canned laughter, blackcurrant aftershave and plastic bags of cheap booze, shorts right up their arses. Rude wee shites. Feels in his pocket for his folding knife. Strokes the wooden handle. Can’t beat a cheese piece cut from a polished blade. Remembering that knife grinder in the leather apron, shouting his wares as they got home from school. Flustered mothers sending running sons out with blunt steels. All the sons but Tony.

A blackbird lands on a garage roof on the other side of the street, bursts too much beauty too much tune over the whole damn lot of them. His father running his thumb along the freshened steel, the oozing blood an obedient pulsing track. Tony pauses, leans hard on the iron gate at No.5, catches his breath. A woman squeezes past him, her fat hip soft on his. A hot rush of human touch. His free hand slips to his groin. She’s sour sweat and Persil Automatic, belly cut off at the midriff with a purple t-shirt proclaiming GOD. GOD? No, DOG damnit. His mother swore it was the devil that summoned his father every weekend to the dog races. He wouldn’t have gone there on his own, she whispered. But it was God that sent his father home with an empty wallet and sick-sweet vodka sighs. Also fists.

He pulls his hand up from his groin. That sound, Greensleeves? He frowns, looks around. An ice-cream van pulls in, turns and parks by the promenade. That summer of the bear there’d been an accordion player bashing out Greensleeves. With a three-toed monkey and a red felt hat and a moustache that curled twice around each ear. His sister sucking on the stick of blue rock with black lettering down the centre that he couldn’t yet read. 

And now, look at that. A wee girl running towards the tinkling van on the other side of the street, a pink balloon tied to her gold plait, a note clutched tight in a pale hand. She is, perhaps, five. She jumps every crack. She knows. She knows about the bear. She beams for ice-cream. His father had held him low above the slam of the beer-froth waves. Swinging him hard side to side. Lower and lower until the sea was grasping at his back, yanking down his shorts, soaking his bare bum. ‘Heh Grandad,’ a bloke says to him, ‘going to hang onto that all day?’

Tony lets go of the gate. Shuffles aside. He hauls up his dodgy leg. Steps over the first crack, drags his leg, steps over the second. His father shouting and laughing. His sister calling from the safety of the sand, her hand tight in their mother’s. ‘Me, Daddy, now me!’ Tony praying away sharks. Tony dribbling fear spittle on his father’s wet denim sleeve. If he doesn’t step on a crack, the blackbird will survive the winter. If he doesn’t step on a crack. The wee girl stumbles, twists to look at Tony, smiles, regains her step, runs again. His father scolding his mother. He’s got to learn, Agnes. Stand on his own two feet. Don’t molly coddle him. His mother replying, her voice stuck on tremble. Show him some love, Arthur. He’s only five. Tony crouched in the cupboard under the stair with the reeking mop and the scum-rimmed bucket, covering his ears. His sister sat on the kitchen table sweeping a finger round the cake mix, her face a muddy chocolate blur.        

He’s tempted by the path that turns into the Samaritans, swept clear and wiped of sin. His dodgy leg aches. He checks his feet. Both feet on the crack. No, no. Oh Jesus, no. His feet together all neat over the crack. His full weight through the buttercup in the crack. The blast of a horn. A shriek from the blackbird. Every window from every Victorian house leaning in, aghast. The wee girl on the road. Red skirt and white socks. A pink balloon, a golden plait. Tony wobbling on the crack, reaching for the Samaritans sign, fists punching off the bear. The wee girl on the centre white line of the road. The driver’s eyes rolling white. Two white eyes slingshot black through the tinted windscreen of the black truck. Crying. Not his crying. Greensleeves trilling and jivvying. Didn’t cry over his mother’s missing hand even as his feet jerked and thrust away from the bear. People screaming police ambulance police! A herring gull swooping down beside him, stabbing a red crisp wrapper from the gutter, lifting off, giving up the bag in flight. All about him coconut sun cream and laughter, stalled. Taking off in the wind, the red crisp bag, so high, higher, spiralling down over the wee girl on the road, the wee girl spreadeagled face down on the road, so much noise in so much hush. Tony’s shoes glued to the crack. A Velcro strap come undone, over the canvas fade a loose tongue. 


Image by John Purvis.

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