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Laura Blaise Feb 2011
It was always hard to know
Who hid in the hedges
Who flickered like flames out of sight
The end of the garden
The crackle of the night

It was hard to see
Through the branches and the sounds
And push away the leaves to where the secret fires burned
To think what might simmer
In the cauldron of darkdreaming

And I could never go
To the end of the garden
Not on my own, with my net and my penknife
Only with you, and your eyes snapping bright.
Laura Blaise Feb 2011
(The river is watercolour, and I wish you could see how the colours blend in summer
Through the light rain I can’t bear to hear the whispers of the city... I just look into the water It’s transluscent like your skin, blue as your veins. It moves at lightening speed in this rain.

I want you to come and see... but they can barely leave your curtains open for fear you’ll catch something from the light, the air. Your delicate complexion would only be tarnished.
I want to see you here in this painting but you seem so far from everything now, how am I meant to find you when now everything, everything I do feels like falling. )

The river is so gentle this time of year when the rain falls like feathers and fills it right up to the banks. It’s a water colour painting, all pale green and blue and as I sit on the bank it reminds me of you;  your transparent skin, your pale green eyes and blue veins visible...
You are paint with too much water in it, now. Diluted, wasting...There’s a swan pecking at crumbs on the bench where you should be sitting, next to me. Did you  know a swan can break your arm? Not that there’s much of you left to break now. You can barely leave your bed, without summoning fatigue to gnaw on your bones.
It’s hard to sit knowing that however hard I grip the bench it won’t bring  anything back and knowing that I can never hug you as tightly as I’m clutching the wood because you are made of glass now.
The trees are throwing their leaves off in sudden gusts and they flail in the air so the world looks like fire. Their flamebraches flickering menacingly. It has an energy that you will never feel again, neither in your bones nor beating against your skin.
You are protected now. Like signets beneath their mother’s wing. You feel no wind nor rain, nor sunshine, no ecstacy in your veins. Everything is white... Artificially dyed flowers stand ridgid at the foot of your bed. I know they bring you no comfort.
A storm is coming. The swans retreat to their shelters, the people trail off into the distance, their faces hidden by dripping umbrellas. The trees tear off all of their leaves in fiery rage until they dance furiously in the naked wind. They are angry because you are not here to dance with them. ******* you, they hate you for it. For lying there, tormented and tired as the wind screams that ‘LIFE GOES ON AND ON without you.’
I stay on the bench, immobile. I am soaked right through to my lungs, feel rain drops running down the ladders of my ribs. I look like I have just crawled from the river, as leaves stick to my skin. I grip the wood tightly still.
Once it was sunny. It was bright, cloudless and you stood here next to the bench. You laughed at how the swans always looked so angry, like ballet dancers concentrating too hard. The trees had all their fresh young leaves, wrapped  in their velvet coats.
The swans don’t look angry today, just sad, brow beaten. Their beaks point down as they huddle from the cold.
I hate you for not being here.
I let go of the bench. The storm rages.
I dive head first into the dashing water. It is deeper than usual but still shallow.  I keep my head beneath the stirring water for as long as I can. I feel the cold rush against my skin, filter through my clothes and encase me in it’s breath. The air inside me screams to be released, threatening to burst through my back like wings.
I broke the already shattering surface and hauled my numb body onto the bank.
I felt then, as I lay on the soaking ground, that I knew you were never coming here or anywhere else you loved ever again. I thought I could feel your ghost in my hands,  in my throat. Slipping awa.
The next day, the day you sat up and the doctors said you were a miracle, the day the nurse took away all the ugly flowers, the trees by the river had never stood so still, so wonderfully still.
Laura Blaise Feb 2011
There are hooks in you
I am only fickle finned
I cannot swim fast enough
To **** my mouth onto yours
Because-  
There are games in you
A hunting sport
A terror red ravaging game
You relish it as the juices drip down your chin

There are hooks in you
And I am only fickle finned
Pulling me into you
Teeth and claws sharper, gashing deeper
-Secret pleasure in the raw raw flesh

There are rumours shrouding you
Bullet words hurtling through my skull
Plumetting through leaves, through everything I know
There are hooks in you

And I am only feather winged
I cannot float fast enough
To embed your bullet in my chest
Because-
This is a game to you
A hunting sport
A biting, sinking, blood filled game
There are hooks in you

And all this hunting, swelling, biting
All this heaving, sweating, fighting
All this terror, flying, swimming
All this hooking, shooting, chasing
Does me no good,

For I am fickle finned
I am feather winged
And this is a game
To you.
Laura Blaise Jan 2011
I painted you in shades of blue and hung you up to dry
But by morning you had faded and
Your eyes didn’t shine.
Laura Blaise Jan 2011
When the night wrapped you up early
What was left?
Bones, shut eyes,
Your clothes, your flesh

And your words
Still caught in your throat
They missed the last train
Sank the last boat

Never made it to the island
Of crushed wood
The safety of the ink
To be understood

Your bones lie still now
In your designated spot
But your words reached the island
And they will never stop

For whatever world you’re in now
It’s not the same
As the ones on the paper
As the words in your viens

Oh you’ve been carried off by swans
Into the dusk
--But I’ve only just begun
To cling to your words
Laura Blaise Jan 2011
When the sound of your parents talking about politics over powers your sense of right and wrong

And the sounds of treebranches clashing outside your window drowns out the song on the radio

Every strand of hair on your head makes noise against the next as you drag your fingers through in frustration

And your skin is tired and you can hear the sound each time you blink, each time your eyelids kiss

When your breath hits the glass of your mirror like a fist on skin, it leaves an opaque patch, like a bruise deeply spreading

When your words hang in the air like icicles and you wish they’d turn to steam because they’re stabbing everyone they can reach

And then when your feet stop clicking, padding and stamping, and your heart stops faltering, flying and clapping

And your lips part to let out a stampede of words all tripping over each other

That’s when
And only then
It’s time to switch the light off.
Laura Blaise Jan 2011
Cracks creep
Snakes on the wall
Into the darkest patches
Where the light fails

From my bed, I can see
The shadows of the lizards
And the damp
In the trees

I can see the corners of the bed posts
And the humming of wasps
They have a nest near by
Fierce

I can taste the corners of the world
From my bed
I can feel the cracks
Creeping

I can hate the very deepest darkest split
In the paint
And vow to get it fixed
Someday

Or I could sleep
But that’s no good when there’s
Dirt on your shoes
And there’re no flowers this time of the year

I can see around corners
From my bed
But the snakes creep higher
And the trees become damper
And the sky sinks down down deep in the ground

And it comes back up, around all the corners
Clutching diamonds.

— The End —