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ОглавлениеDieses Buch erscheint als Band 1 der Belletristik-Edition poetis im Verlag des Institute for Science and Innovation Communication (inscico)
This book appears as Volume One of the Edition poetis published by inscico Institute for Science and Innovation Communication
1. Auflage 2017 / 1st Edition 2017
Das Buch ist unter der ISBN 978-3-9814811-9-8 im Handel erhältlich.
This book is available for sale under ISBN 978-3-9814811-9-8.
Alle Rechte vorbehalten
Die Weitergabe dieses Buches als Ganzes oder in Teilen ist nicht gestattet.
All rights reserved
No part of this publication may be reproduced.
Copyright © 2017 by inscico GmbH, Kleve / Germany
Cover-Foto: Robert Bräutigam
(Taken in a Ruin Bar in Budapest / Hungary)
For Eva, Maggie and Lila – my true inheritance.
Your feet will bring you where your heart is
An áit a bhuil do chroí is ann a thabharfas do chosa thú
Irish Proverb
Thanks
To all those who offered practical help and encouragement.
In particular:
My husband Alexander Gerber for formatting and production and for pushing me out through the door to my first writing group.
The Creative Writing Group in Berlin.
The Schreibgruppe, Culucu in Kleve, Niederrhein.
Erwin Kraut for editorial comment, proofreading and mentoring.
Louise Churcher for proofreading.
Vanessa Gneisinger and Fiona Kahlau for editorial comment.
To my son Dylan, my family and my friends for helping me stay on track.
Contents
Up Yours and Definitely No Surrender
Inheritance
A collection of rather banal memories
A Safe Distance
Making Small Talk in a Troubled Country
Tour Of Duty
Secrets
Green
She was invited to a wedding
After Noelle
A Walk In The Dark
Into the Light – Dia non Dul
Wishing Well
The last time I visited
In May
About the Author
Illustrations
Endnotes
Foreword
Whilst many of the pieces in this collection are based on real events, this is creative writing and not autobiographical. Names, characters, places and incidents are used fictitiously.
Therefore, whereas, for example, my son really did ask me about Bloody Sunday in an airport bookshop (Up Yours and Definitely No Surrender), my brother and I were never turned into thorn bushes (The Playground) and there was no insurance man called Raymond (The Big Brown Car).
Although I left Northern Ireland for good in 1990, somehow I am always visiting it inside my head. Always looking for that piece of myself I left behind. This is why I say I left Northern Ireland a long time ago, but Northern Ireland has never left me.
Sharon on the dunes looking out across The Channel to the UK.
Visits
Rattling down a road of my own making
still alone, chasing ghosts
from Berlin morning windows
March sunshine seeks me out
but I’m not playing
I can‘t
We stop
„Bitte entschuldigen Sie die Störung. Wegen einer technischen Defekt können wir die Fahrt voraussichtlich nicht weiter...“ i
But I can’t
Stop
Mourning
from Berlin morning windows
still alone, chasing ghosts
rattling down a road of my own making
Marching Orders
last orders
real women don’t drink pints
and swear at real men
or forget to comb the curls
at the back of their hair
so there
and anyhow I’m not good for you
and you’re certainly not for me
but I know this
so who cares
My head is full of words, and worries and other people’s questions. Cycling home through the woods, in deep and earnest conversation with myself I suddenly realize it’s The Twelfth of July.ii Fancy that, and I can still remember that one warm 12th thirty years ago, nineteen years of age, home for the first summer break from university. I fancied myself in love. With Rodney. A bad guy, not even a very clever one. But a beautiful one. Warm grass and kisses, grown-up drinks and blushes. In a hurry. Always in a hurry. The cows strung out along the foot of the hill, going home for milking. Sheep feeding and bleating on the blue-green Sperrin Mountains deep into the night.
In those days you could still cycle down the main road and survive. In the evening traffic was minimal, cycling to the cawing of the late evening crows, retracing the tracks of my first secret Catholic friendship. Calling in on my gran, playing cards with one of her slightly crazy sisters or my other gran sitting in front of a turned-off telly watching for signs of life outside the window. How often did I push my bike to the subway entry, turn round and wave at my gran still standing there anxiously waiting? And how I would love to do it now, then turn round, for one last wave. Before I am swallowed up by that subway entry.
View from my childhood bedroom of the Sperrin Mountains
Visiting Gran
Granny clacks her cameo rings, gnarled knuckles gripping scored and burn-marked surfaces. She’s dealing cards onto her coffee table.
„Can I maybe open the window?“ Me, small-child conscious, tries to prise, unpermitted, the window latch open. But it is stuck with years and years of smoked-out Silk Cut. The china dog guarding the plastic fireplace seems to be mocking me as I sit back down in resignation and am promptly swallowed up by a too-big mock leather sofa. It farts me out again just in time to stop my son from hitting his head against a chipped edge. He is trying to pick up cards, which have tumbled out of his hands, uncoordinated in anticipation, onto a deep-pile carpet which needs a good shampoo and conditioning.
„You’ve dropped your cards. Be careful.” Granny admonishes. „And there’s still one there!“
„Where?“
„There. By the poof. A Queen of Spades.“ she snaps. And I had been told that she was almost blind.
“Here. Let me.“ The card is greasy, smudges my fingers. I try to wipe it on my trousers before putting it back into the nervous grasp of my son.
„Mind ye don’t bend it. I’ve had those cards for ages.“ Granny sticks a Silk Cut in her mouth and squints over a lighter.
We’re going to play Blackjack. Granny goes first, looking for all the world like a dragon with a perm, she slaps a card down on the table.
„But I don’t remember the rules!“ I protest.
„Aye.“ she replies.
„No! I mean how does it go again?“ I glance quickly at her ears. She’s not put her hearing aid in again.
„THE RULES! HOW DO YOU PLAY IT?“
„Sure ah taught ye.“ she says.
Thirty years ago I think, but don’t say it.
„I’ve forgotten, Granny. Just tell me again, please!“
„Och!“ Her eyebrows snap at each other in annoyance. „Them aul things.“ she mutters under breath. Then louder:
„Yer aim is to get a hand of twenty one. Two to nine at face value. Ten, Jack, Queen and King are all worth ten. An Ace can be one or eleven. Blackjack is when you get twenty one with just two cards. That’ll be of course an ace and a ten.” She hacks up some phlegm.
„Er, ok.“
„Was will diese alte Frau, Mama?“ iii
„Dylan, das ist unhöflich. Die ist deine Ur-Oma!“
„Ja, aber ich weiß nicht was sie will!“
„Die Regeln erklären, natürlich.“
„What‘s that? What does he want?“
„For me to explain the rules, Granny.“
„Eh? A biccie. Does he want a biccie?“
„Oh Mama, darf ich eins haben?“iv
„No Dylan you had enough earlier!“
„Aber Mama, nur eins, bitte.“ v
„No, Dy-“
„Och let the wee cub have a biccie! Would you like a wee biccie?“ She slaps her cards down in delight. She gets up before I can stop her and shuffles over the shag pile onto the dirty carpet and out into the kitchen.
My son’s face is glowing with victory.
„Don’t get too excited.“ I say and feeling mean, add „They’ll be stale and soft and nibbled at the edges by mice.“
„Eeeh, Mama!“
„Oh shut up and look here. The aim of the game is to score twenty one. These cards here are worth......“
Visiting the Past
And so, I am lying in bed. In almost darkness. In between. I let them come. Images and whispers, snatches of thoughts and associations, just as suddenly snatched away again. I am tense. So tense that my right arm begins to go numb. I move, flinging my arm at some silly angle above my head. Free, blood assaults my veins. It hurts. A swollen sack of pain. Concentrate. I must concentrate. Images and whispers, snatches of thoughts.
It´s you – my namesake. Twenty nine years ago. July 1983. The second time we took up our friendship. In the mess of your parents’ house. Too much furniture, a pile of tyres, bin bags full of God knows what. The family dog, a young Alsatian, pisses in the hall against the telephone table.
„Shall I get a cloth?“ I offer, me, the good girl, the nice visitor.
„Och leave it be. ‘s good for the carpet.“ Your father says and pets the dog as if in praise. If he registers my surprise he doesn’t let on.
„Maggie!“ he roars „Wud ye put the kettle on!“ and goes into the living room to put the telly on. Maggie, a big woman spilling out of shapeless clothes, appears through a doorless doorway, sniffs the air, then seeing me, tries to flatten down her toilet brush shock of hair. Behind her, her spitting image, her eldest son Ian, smirks.
„Och it’s Craferd, aul’ Craferd.“
I stick out my tongue at him.
„Never mind him!“ shouts Maggie and pushes him back into the living room. „Go mik us a cup o’ tay, ye cheeky hallion, ye.“ And then to me „Sharn’s in the back bedroom tryin’ tae get wee Adele tae sleep.”
„Oh“
„Och sure ye’ll be alright. Go aun in. She´ll be pleased tae see ye.“
In the dim, curtains badly drawn, Sharon is bent over a cot singing softly. I make a big show of closing the door carefully, and am rewarded with a smile and a whispered invitation to come and look. An impossibly tiny baby, with big liquid eyes and jet back curls, is sucking on a dummy and staring riveted at her mother.
„She’s lovely.“ I whisper in awe. And indeed she is. Up until now I could never really see what all the fuss was about as regards babies. All this cooing and geeing and soppification. And then I stare too at her mother. Can this be the same girl who had tried to engage me in a conversation about my sex life at the toothpaste counter less than a year and a half ago? While I had blushed and stammered in my supermarket overalls, and tidied up rows of mouthwashes behind my weekend counter, she had looked at me knowingly.
„There are things you can use, you know.“
And while she was giving birth and learning to nurse I was drinking my way through my first year at university, learning little in the way of academic knowledge, but a lot about life. And politics, philosophy, unrequited love. And deeper meanings. Or so I thought. But now, perched here on the edge of a bed in a dusty cluttered room, I realize I know nothing. Nothing at all.
The meaning of it all
What is
love?
Frogs or
Aubergines bursting
at their purple seams
or me pushed gamely up against a small town wall
wanting it all
fuck hesitate!
fucking it up
in true film fashion
slipperless
pretending not
to believe in the myth
losing myself to learning lessons?
so then
what the fuck
is?
Me, aged six
The family garden in the 1970’s
Hair
Still there, still fair
pretty as the picture
I am looking out of
with my brother, and
a row of dolls, lined up
legs kicking the technicolour air
of the bright 60’s sunshine.
The family garden
still made of grass
stretching away behind us into the blue
Sperrin Mountains.
Idyllic you may think
but we are already old and worried,
discontent
posing for pictures
on a Sunday afternoon
The Protestant family album
Oh! How cute! Is that your brother?
Did he really have such white hair?
And weren’t you pretty, then!
Then.
And then we turned to play
upset the dolls
fists and legs flying in the air
For Gawd’s sake! Can’t a body
have a bit o’ peace around here!
Peace?
No!
Like the hair
It’s not there
Memory Tricks
Long legs hold me
I cannot breathe
sacks of flour in a dusty storeroom
we are hiding, but how?
Surely we are being missed
the dentist’s drill whines on children’s bones
the milk cart starts up
and out in the fields the smell of slurry
spreads, like the new healthy margarine
Tomorrow a magician will come
To trick coins out of children’s ears
From between their fingers
he will reward them with chocolate money
and orange lollipops
but you will get none
you will not be picked
again
amen
pull the cold leeches from the toilet walls
pick at your skin
don’t let them in
Exposure
Cold air
On cracked bone
The dentist drilling
„Open wide
Relax!“
Eyes squeezed shut
Spinning
Through the dust and debris
Of things past
A Northern Ireland sixties classroom
Palm outstretched
For the willow cane
For a pencil stuck
In a best friend’s head
For forbidden words
„Fuck you! You’re dead!“
Forbidden words
But worser still
The words left
Unsaid
Playing tig
In the schoolyard
Quickly caught, squashed
No room to breathe
„When a man marries a woman
He asks her if she wants
To make a baby.
She says yes, and then
He sticks his thing up her
Fanny“
No! No! No!
This is worse than custard
Force-fed in the school canteen
I run
The Journey Home
was ne’er much fun
A yellow bus, Mr Magowan
hacking and spitting us
all on board
for a twisty jaunt o’er
Gillygooley and Drumquin hills
I sit alone, mostly
Or with my brother
Counting rain drops on cloudy window panes
the others laughing, yelling, teasing
doing deals
and us? Small, so very small
waiting
in a vacuum of noise
every Protestant hedge
every Catholic tree
bringing us closer
and closer
end stretch
the yellow bus stops
C’mon get up, get out first
and maybe, just maybe....
But the seats have feet to trip us up
arms to hold us back
twisting and turning down the steps
schoolbags caught up in some
big thorn bush smelling blood
tearing for skin, demanding sacrifice
and the others? - laughing, yelling, pushing
my brother piggy in the middle bouncing ball
daring me to rescue
Still. I stand still. Where is the courage?
Blue. True Blue.
I hold on to the straps of my schoolbag.
And I run
And I run
And I run
The Playground
Sharon and her brother Mark circa 1973
Summer. School’s out for summer. Alice Cooper or summertime and the livin’ is easy, grass is jumpin’ and the fish are high. Or something Janis Jopinly like that. Yes, summertime – those lazy, hazy mythical days for swimming with friends in cool water, licking ice cream from between your fingers, falling in love and licking ice cream from between someone else’s fingers.
So far, so good. But it’s not good. For this is summer in Omagh, summer in a small town in Northern Ireland in the early 1970’s. There’s nothing to do, nowhere to swim and even if there were, it’s too cold and raining most of the time. I’ve spent all my pocket money in the first two days of the holidays on sweets and crisps. And I’ve eaten them all as I lie alone in the front room, reading and reading. Outside pouring rain. Inside, I read and read. But even with that I’m now bored.
And as for falling in love. Who would want me? For I’m nine or maybe ten, plump in all the wrong places and have wild red hair.
“You need to lose some weight.” said my mother’s sharp-tongued sister not that long ago, pinching at the fat around my waist as I stood in the kitchen reaching for a bun.
No, there’ll be none of this hot and wild smooch and sex business I secretly read through in the adult section of the mobile library when no-one’s watching. Harold Robbins “The Carpetbaggers”. What’s a fucking carpetbagger anyhow?
So yeah summer time. And a whole two desperate months of it.
“I wannae go tae the park!” whines my younger brother. Now that I’m old enough to be responsible my mother’s gone back to work part-time. And left me alone to look after my five-year old brother. What fun!
“Jesus!” I scream. He’s just hit me with his metal Tonka truck. I kick him. He kicks me back. I thump him. He screams hysterically.
“Am gonnae tell mammy on you, so I am!”
“You started it you wee bastard!”
“You said a bad word, so you did!” and he screams again. Louder.
Shit, what’ll I do? I decide:
“Ok, ok. Look if ye wannae go tae the playground, we’ll go tae the playground.”
So we go to the playground. At least the way there is free from danger. Up where we live, where the people own their own bungalows there is no room for a playground. The kids
down the road have their own slide and paddling pool, but they don’t want to play with us for we’ve moved from the park - about five years ago, but well, people don’t let go of the past so easily in Northern Ireland. So we aren’t good enough.
But down in the council housing estate, known as The Park, they don’t want to play with us either for we’ve moved and become snobs, and for that we have to pay. They love to bully us. We are scared and alone. They sense blood and love to hunt us wherever we’re going. Which is a problem. Especially today, as the playground is in The Park and my bloody brother wants to go there, doesn’t he!
At the top of the steps leading down to the twisted shapes and rides in primary colours, I say a silent prayer, then out loud.
“C’mon, sure there’s no-one there anyhow.”
And for a while we are alone. Just the wind and some rain and the whoosh whoosh of cars racing by beyond the bushes. And just as I’m about to bribe my brother with some baked
beans for lunch if we go back now, I hear the sound of distant laughter. And, looking up, I see it’s time to run.
“Oh God! How I wish I was a bush. A big killer-thorned blackthorn bush.” I mutter and close my eyes in desperation.
And well you know that saying that sometimes you shouldn’t wish too hard……..
Newsflash
Police are still searching for the brother and sister who went missing early this morning. They were last seen at the local playground. Police reported finding a cardigan snagged on some blackthorn bushes in the nearby playing field.
This is the third such disappearance in this playground in the last thirteen months.
Epilogue
“I’m hungry.” says the little blackthorn bush.
“Snap up a few midges.” replies a bigger bush close by.
“But ah don’ wanntae eat midges. I wan’ baked beans.”
“Don’t be stupid. You can’t eat beans, you’re a blackthorn bush now.”
“But ah don’ wanntae be a blackthorn bush!” the little bush wails.
“Be quiet or they’ll hear you.” The big bush shakes her thorns, shiny finey killer thorns. But the little bush continues to wail. They, the Park kids, pissed off at not finding any prey to bully, are sparring with each other. They don’t seem to hear the wails of the hungry little blackthorn bush.
“I don’t wanntae be a blackthorn bush.” he persists.
“Oh God!” says the bigger one, exasperated “I don’t either, if you wanntae know the truth.”
Just then, a passing fairy lands on one of the bigger bush’s magnificent thorns.
“I am sorry.” says the fairy, “but you did wish.”
“Well can’t you just turn us back again?”
“No, I’m afraid not. I can grant you another wish though.”
“You mean I have one wish, but I can’t be the way I was before.”
“No neither you nor your brother. Take some time and think about it.” The little fairy begins to groom its wings.
“Shame the Crawfords aren’t here.” says one of the Park bullies.
“Aye,” laughs one of the others. “They’re always a good bit of entertainment.”
“Did you see that face on her the other day.” chimes in one of the other park bullies, “when Sandra Watson pulled aul’ Crawford’s knickers down in front of everybody at the bus stop. Did youse?”
A chorus of ayes. They fall about laughing.
The bigger bush is horrified and turns to the fairy. “Ok I know what I want. I want you to turn those bullies into plants just like us.”
“You mean like blackthorn bushes?” says the little bush.
“Oh no, no, that would be too good for them. No let me think.” Just then a lawnmower starts up. Someone from the district council sent to trim the playing field.
“I know,” says the big blackthorn bush excitedly. “Turn them into meadow flowers and put them on the pitch right in the path of that lawnmower.”
“Wonderful!” tinkles the fairy and then off she goes and does just that…
The Big Brown Car
The big brown car. It’ll be there again soon. My mother likes its visits. Shoos me out to play:
“Have tae hoover. Tidy the place up. The Insurance Man’s comin’. Ye’ll only git in the way.”
It’s cold outside. My plastic wellies keep suckin’ at my socks, rubbin’ my heels raw. The leaves are turnin’ on their branches. I stick my fingers in my ears cos’ I don’t want to hear then screamin’ as they’re torn off and tumbled through the wind until the last bit of life is ripped out of them.
Big piles of mushy leaves everywhere. Yesterday Billy McCausland slipped on one, twisted his ankle and lay there, coped up, bellowing. I was glad. That’s what he gets for callin’ me names.
But now there’s no-one to play with. The Park kids are either off on mid-term holidays or inside where it’s warm. Inside. Where I want to be, with my books, suckin’ sweets, door locked against my brother. I stick a hand into the inside pocket of my duffel coat, finger the ghost of a big bag of sherbet chews. Raspberry flavour. My favourite. I can taste them. Desire makes me head down the driveway. There’s no-one around by the Thompsons, so it’s easy. They have no porch. The empty mineral bottles are crowded together by the back door steps, like a herd of frozen sheep pushin’ into each
other for shelter. I’m doin’ them a favour really as I slip as many of them as I can into my father’s duffel bag. Borrowed from a hook in the garage.
Anyhow it’s not a garage really. Yesterday it was a café and the day before a centre for spies with special powers. Once I’d unstuck myself from the pebble dash on the walls of our bungalow and made it safely across the patio – you could never be sure what was lurkin’ under the cypress bushes – I discovered the garage had become an agent headquarters and I was to be given a mission, a zap gun, and a handsome man spy to travel with. As I nodded and picked up my zap gun, the garage door swung upwards.
“What the blazes are ye doin’? Put that down! I told ye it was dangerous!” My father grabbed my zap gun.
“Lizzie!“ He shouted in the direction of the open dining room window: “Can ye not give that cutty somethin’ tae do. She’s been playin’ with the blow torch again!”
My mother made me dust the china dolls. All those miserable Parisian ladies trapped behind dull porcelain. Mirrored my own misery I thought. Anyhow today I had stayed away from the garage. Except to borrow the duffel bag of course.
So off I go. On my bike to the shop.
“You’re up and out early.” Mrs McGooley who runs the shop up the road. I colour a bit and heave the duffel bag on the counter which smells strongly of newspaper print from the stacks of dailies spread out by the till.
“Have tae bring ye some empties.” I say, already perusin’ the rows of sweetie jars, the boxes of lollies and crisps.
“It’s the deposit yer after then?”
I nod.
She begins to count and names a sum which is pleasin’ to my ears.
“Now then will ye be wantin’ the cash or a trade-in for some sweeties?”
“Sweeties! “ I shout and begin my selection.
Flyin’ through the damp air a whole lovely quarter of an hour of choosin’ sweeties later, all I can think about is the quiet of the front room. Me stretched out under a blanket with a couple of murders to solve and a ton of treats to suck on while I do so. A sherbet fountain, barley sugar, drumsticks, a jamboree bag, raspberry and lemon sherbet balls and a big monster gobstopper. A packet of Tayto Cheese and Onion as a salty contrast. The key to the front room firmly turned in the lock.
So great is my longing that even the sniggers of some of the older Park ones gathered at the foot of the hill leading up to our drive don’t inspire the usual fear.
“There’s aul’ Crafert.” says one of them pullin’ deeply on a fag. “Wanna drag?”
“No thanks.” I say jumpin’off my bike and pushin’ it as hard as I can up the hill before one of them can reach for my anorak and hold me back.
The drive was empty of cars. All gone to work. Nearly there at our own wee driveway, a ball suddenly flies out from behind a low wall and skitters across the tarmac in front of me. I brake sharply.
“Don’t run over me ball! “ shouts Davey McFarland, one of the twins from two doors down.