Page 2 of Night Caller

"No, I'm not a stalker."

  Hand in the first day's work covered in coleslaw.

  Our team is here to help you help ourselves,

  to hide away when counsel’s needed most.

  Boys,

  fear classroom shrapnel,

  intense emotions, felt

  tip pen stains that

  never come out.

  Be your own hairiness,

  your scritch-scratch junk-

  yard scrotum, the chink

  of torn-out pin-up.

  No need for clown noses,

  just ruby with drink.

  Soon, skin will hang

  like a clown's baggy pants.

  Enter your life here

  Through blinds, dark is thinning back

  to day - like your hairline. Cold shave.

  Microwave the day-old coffee, cornflakes.

  Watch the sky live on the morning news

  then put the umbrella you will never use

  into your rucksack. A voice says

  someone somewhere is opening a door

  to opportunity. Remind yourself that

  they only mean money, to double-check

  the house is shut before you leave.

  The self-help your grandad gave you

  recommends actualisation,

  not to sweat it. You wipe off

  the shaving foam you missed, grab

  your charging smartphone, unfriend

  a stranger. Click, then click again. Switch off.

  Under the sheets, you stirred

  like the first time twenty years ago.

  Now, you sit on the bus

  you are not driving, and feel

  empty like a camel long time gone and no way home.

  Passengers

  Your hand in mine, sand-

  grit hot, as the lights went

  down in the rolling carriage.

  The thoughts we spent

  in touch, stroking an idea to

  fire, love. Buttons uncoupled;

  hands clasped tight. Too

  eagerly we sought a suture,

  groping. Damp from the surf,

  lacquered in suncream,

  shedding skin, shorts

  like papyrus to the touch.

  As the lights came on, we pulled

  apart, not wanting to flesh out

  the line we had scrawled, firm

  a route from hope to ground.

  Lovers are but strangers just

  waiting to happen. When the train

  arrived, we were at different stations.

  Jane, 16

  Cropped, her crown

  makes a nosedive

  off the block, off

  the scaffolding,

  hewn.

  The axeman, alone

  takes a butcher's,

  no bodkin tight

  against his crotch,

  no thrall of throats,

  no locks liberated

  whose ardor burns

  his conscience,

  nor a swooning

  of ladies-in-waiting.

  No breast-beating.

  He inches out his

  axe, swoosh, scoops

  up the little runaround,

  holds it up for gloating.

  Politics, luteplaying,

  downfalls over bread

  and God, bloodlines

  don’t whet his appetite

  like his wife’s one pastry.

  No-one will remember him,

  nor record his sentence.

  A fullstop in sack cloth,

  is flung into the chapel pit

  with the other nameless.

  E&K Verse

  They think us sisters

  because we speak alike,

  “the toffee-nosed pair”.

  They guard their seats,

  ‘het up’ terse, no time

  for double-barreled

  names. K saws hers off.

  No more of the hotel

  we gave up or past lives,

  only life in lodgings,

  factory work to help

  the war effort.

  After packing and tea,

  the fall of Singapore,

  clocking on, one of many

  women beating all hell

  out of Spitfire, bomber.

  All into noise caskets

  are clasped, wed to

  crisis, resounding tattoo

  of spanners, animal

  cries from the men

  and the boys. Howls

  from the jockey who

  traversed five weeks,

  the Channel, the fall

  of France, now sailing,

  on the night shift.

  At dawn, the lathe

  is at sea, rocking and listing.

  The Czech boy is silent, head

  bowed, chubby hands

  barely up to the metal,

  all fifteen years of him.

  K bends her back,

  spinster to the lathe,

  crick in her bones.

  She’s bent double in the slips

  at the Oval for the King.

  In command, she straightens

  her back, relaxing, turns

  the lathe slowly, one of

  many rude mechanicals.

  Her only trial, boredom,

  she recalls five acts of

  memory, A Midsummer

  Night’s Dream, she learnt

  when 16. Repeats scene

  after scene. Sound

  engineering practice

  as looking around one

  sees everyone’s mouth

  is moving. E is in talks

  with the bosses, she

  always emerges

  triumphant.

  K intones lines aloud

  to the lathe. 'Now,

  fair Hippolyta'. No

  moonlight to be ill

  met by but neon that

  bathes each soul in

  ghastly green, bleeds

  all blue a violet hue.

  No magic but the Lord

  of Misrule at Yuletide,

  mistletoe, kissing pecks,

  lubadubs and bear hugs,

  up behind the machines,

  a swig of cocktail out

  of a medicine bottle

  to lay the love juice

  on some worker’s sight.

  Not a scrap of work done.

  We get on with it,

  rationing, browned

  off, the smallest

  double bed in our

  second cell, composed

  of bumps, a lumpy duvet

  and a nice little fire

  that toasts the legs,

  a withering Geranium,

  a portable wireless,

  coffee in a flask.

  Give me your hand

  and Robin shall

  restore amends.

  Welcome to the Cheap seats

  In the classifieds, I found it:

  A four-room one-floor flat with garden;

  the applause of passing commuter trains;

  a lodger-landlord.

  He lorded the corridor in his dressing gown,

  in his one room-cum-bedroom-cum-study,

  holding tea and rehearsals for plays,

  other times, we split beers.

  I slummed it in the rattling of

  a dying career, a journalist too nervy

  to pick up the phone, too unsure to

  check the facts, I drank.

  His world of regulated wakeful hours,

  the designated dose of washing liquid,

  the his and mine divide of musky rooms,

  lost to our bickering.

  In the classifieds, I found it: a dead career,

  hope in booze, and a struggling actor,

  bit parts for all to the tune of failure.

  A tune we all sometimes whistle.

  Laika comes home

  I remember Galin
a's glee coaxing her,

  that trembling animal from under the sofa.

  The dog, a mottled mane of hairs, shone.

  "How light she is," you said. Dmitry thought

  her heroic, and I laughed. "Dogs can't be heroic."

  Yuri got her to chase the yellow ball,

  her lashing tail gave the radio a spin,

  and it launched, spitting white noise. How

  quickly Laika turned, spiking up, and

  and into my arms, she ran. Darling, you

  called that trust, and I corrected you,

  "That is training."

  One of the assistants packed

  her away like I did the radio, silent,

  into her container. She kissed

  her wet nose, and said Bon Voyage.

  We know this is it, this glory

  we hear in the news, and her

  barking, barking, studio laughter.

  Tonight, she will be barking

  in Soviet space, a Soviet dog awaiting

  orders, pointing to the moon, ours

  for the taking. Barking and pointing

  to the one man who will watch her smiling,

  the hermit, hapless, and uncaring,

  we call the man on the moon.

  Can we call him comrade now?

  Will he protect her now that we cannot?

  I know I am just being foolish,

  now that Laika has begun her revolution.

  Pincushion heart

  Love plump, sat

  on the lap of

  the seamstress,

  a pincushion heart

  lies stuck full of needles.

  Fattened with

  towelling, chastened

  with ribbon, the heart

  of a woman - the heart

  of the seamstress.

  Plucked out by

  his wit, cast from

  his reason, the threads

  of her stitching

  now lost to love's leavings.

  Learning a 2nd language

  Between us lies the stretch of pool

  I suck in jagged breaths and gulp,

  the water ripples infinite

  and tensing up, I go to dive.

  As I submerge, you see me clear.

  Enough, you say. There is no board

  from which you dove, no pool to plumb,

  nor liquid to immerse into.

  And flapping helpless, I see true

  the cold deceit, and ridicule -

  the heavy length to go alone -

  I let words sink like rock and drown.

  John Doe, drowned

  He liked his books, I guess.

  Among the waterbound, the paperbacks

  'The Greatest Batman Stories';

  a faceless Thomas More's Utopia,

  property of West Glamorgan County Council.

  His words on cardboard:'Sleeping rough, thank you';

  a black sleeping bag; his London

  Shopper. So many letters, yet

  no name, only the Queen's head

  glinting in pound sterling.

  ###

  About the author:

  I am Raoul, a tutor who lives in Barcelona, a husband to Susana, a daddy to our baby, Pau, and a sock-provider to our dog, June. You can find more of my writing on the blog, Inklings and Devlings.

 
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Raoul Izzard, Sr's Novels