Friday 23rd September

160923

A CURVE IN THE CURB:

I will still be here when you’re long gone, watching when you think
I’m not looking, listening when you think I don’t hear. I will call
you in a minute, think of you every day, keep the faith without proof.
I will keep my mouth shut more often than open & endeavour not to be
so serious, laugh when I catch my reflection. I will be right here,
will take your call, remembering your name then forget it. Don’t get
upset, I forget everyone until they become pictures, remembering
pictures before words, make lists to remember everything I forget.
Now I remember what it was I was doing, watching, listening,remaining
here long after you’re gone.

Listening to Sea Interval – by Tom Arthurs / Isambard Khroustaliov

(K)

Sunday 18th September

190918

IS THAT REALLY YOU!?:

This is for Jack in the Ratboy T, stopped me on the street last night in Manchester. Clutching a sign that read ‘BEWARE STROBING LIGHTS’ & a shocked expression. Kept repeating “Oh my God!” As he shook my hand, testing me with questions, ‘was it really me?!’ Posed for a picture, arm around my shoulder, apologised for being a bit drunk then disappeared into the night chanting, “Oh my God!”

(K)

Thursday 15th September

190915

SUPERMAN:

She leans onto her knees, looks tired in uniform. A poster on the
wall behind offers help & care. A number to call & a question,
‘Is she really a threat?’
She sits beneath a surveillance camera, doesn’t care, they can watch,
they’re commonplace. She take off all her clothes & it wouldn’t
matter, everything is caught on camera.

We’ve been travelling for minutes, but it feels like hours. Barely
reached the outskirts of town & I’m bored. A woman in the next block
of seats checks her hair in the window, it’s black outside, all she
sees is her reflection, a mess of hair cascades. Nothing will
ever save it, but she keeps glancing anyway, trusting in miracles.

The woman in uniform turns out to be wearing a tracksuit she reveals
when she stands, uncovering a ruck-sac strapped to her back in
fluorescent yellow, the kind that glows in the dark. She’s a cyclist
or a fitness freak, but neither seem to be doing her any good.
I wish I was home, but I’m not, travelling back up the line, a
journey I’ve made hundreds of times & it never gets better.
I wish I was home now, I wish I was Superman.

(K)

Wednesday 14th September

190914

LEAVE A LIGHT ON:

The young Barista serving coffee to the same faces every morning
remembers he’d forgotten how long he’s worked behind the counter
until he’s asked by one of the regulars, the old guys who comes in
every morning to sit & write for an hour somewhere he can
see the whole room. He remembers it’s always porridge with honey
& tea with no milk & a metal (not a plastic) spoon. He remembers
it’s two years since he started here & can’t believe how fast
the time as gone, even for one so young. He remembers, with a
vacant expression, all the people who’ve come & gone behind the
coffee counter. The girls with pale powdered faces who breeze in
every morning, with nothing deeper than cheer to offer. Then he
remembers the girl he left in bed this morning in a tiny flat,
as he woke before dawn to cross the market square to unlock &
get his machines warmed up. He remembers his headphones
for company in the hour before opening, the bliss of an empty
coffee bar & a locked door. He remembers the thrill of first
moving in with the girl with the bird’s nest hair that he left in
bed, the night they met, & how fast the thrill faded, recalling
passing last night’s dishes soaking in the kitchen sink as he
slipped a jacket over his uniform. He remembers his last pay rise,
the money he’d planned to save to leave town, but never did.
He remembers there’s always more bills than he remembers.
He thinks about the old man’s question & exhales,
‘Two years…!phew’
He remembers how he hates the sight of his Barista brown shirts
hanging like corpses in the bedroom where he bets his girl’s still’s
sleeping. He remembers the refurbs, face-lifts, new uniforms,
introduced to boost flagging trade & how it all worked. He reminds
himself to remember to be grateful they did. Then he remembers the
glances, the looks, the ‘did that look really mean what I think?!’,
The chance encounters & fantasies of meeting the ONE who would help
him find the balls to pack this job & quit town. He remembers that
she still hasn’t walked in & the girl dreaming in his bed. He remembers
coming to this cafe when he was still at school , the thrill of buying
coffee for the first time & being allowed out on breaks that first
time. He remembers sitting at the big table that isn’t here anymore,
with his crew, school ties loose as card sharps, collars wide.
He remembers all their faces, the ones that moved away to college as
soon as school was over, to London & Manchester who back-packed through
Thailand, Australia, America, Europe, sleeping on beaches so they had
enough for food & booze & parties & raves & girls. Picking up work as
they needed, following whatever road they fancied. He remembers them
returning, tanned & radiant, worldly wiser, dropping in for one
first/last coffee, all of them surprised he was still here. He remembers
watching each of them leaving faster than returning to take up places
at the cream of universities…somewhere else. He remembers
his dreams when he was a kid, the plans with his mates in the school
canteen. He remembers what they all said they’d be doing when they
were the age he is now & how all of them did it except him,
he remembers. He remembers the bean grinder’s broken & how many
times he’s apologised for that already today & the late arrival of the
morning papers…again. He remembers to make a mental night to bollock
the night shift when they get in for not putting out the bins,
the stink when he opens up he never forgets.
He remembers they forget to wipe down the sandwich fridge again,
he wonders what the hell they do & makes a mental note to find out
this afternoon just before he leaves to see if the washing up is still
in the sink where he passed it this morning. And he remembers to
smile & leave a light on in his voice every time he greets me.

(K)