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My father's obsession became increasingly apparent with every visit I made to him. The clocks, their hands, their beautiful, twisted fingers dancing to the co-ordinated sound of ticking - he couldn't take his eyes from them. Over the years I began to see his irises shifting like clockwork, miniature minute hands beating at the doors, ticking ticking ticking. They are knitting, knitting a fabric so tight it's a shroud, pulling it over his head and waiting for him to sink into the waters of embalmment. Epitaphs, mad men entitled to nothing. He formed the millions into gears, expectation of a smooth, working machine which he could grasp in his fingers and hold up to the ***** sky, moving, scurrying, ticking. A better place, or so it seemed to him, where men didn't speak in tongues and life answered to something beyond chance. It was different when he first came here but then so was he, it was a version that made more sense. A version where black birds with missing feathers patrolled the skies, where he ran his hands through his hair to leave straggled clumps between his fingers - balding velvet. He forgot so much more than he had remembered, even me. Eyes still glazed white looking right at me, he was cold-limbed and vacant and filled me with a filthy, cruel hollowness that takes and takes, relentlessly, for no gear, or system, or rhyme, will pull the books from the shelves. I won't find a ransacked home with shattered furniture and broken glass littering the floor, only a clean, aching, vague room that is blue and sterile and so empty it leaves trails of goosebumps along my arms and burns its way into my dreams in the depths of the night. I won't find you crying over empty photographs, only a shell, staring, dead, at the whitewashed walls.
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Oct 24, 2017
Oct 24, 2017 at 6:38 PM UTC
The Shrouding
My father's obsession became increasingly apparent with every visit I made to him. The clocks, their hands, their beautiful, twisted fingers dancing to the co-ordinated sound of ticking - he couldn't take his eyes from them. Over the years I began to see his irises shifting like clockwork, miniature minute hands beating at the doors, ticking ticking ticking. They are knitting, knitting a fabric so tight it's a shroud, pulling it over his head and waiting for him to sink into the waters of embalmment. Epitaphs, mad men entitled to nothing. He formed the millions into gears, expectation of a smooth, working machine which he could grasp in his fingers and hold up to the ***** sky, moving, scurrying, ticking. A better place, or so it seemed to him, where men didn't speak in tongues and life answered to something beyond chance. It was different when he first came here but then so was he, it was a version that made more sense. A version where black birds with missing feathers patrolled the skies, where he ran his hands through his hair to leave straggled clumps between his fingers - balding velvet. He forgot so much more than he had remembered, even me. Eyes still glazed white looking right at me, he was cold-limbed and vacant and filled me with a filthy, cruel hollowness that takes and takes, relentlessly, for no gear, or system, or rhyme, will pull the books from the shelves. I won't find a ransacked home with shattered furniture and broken glass littering the floor, only a clean, aching, vague room that is blue and sterile and so empty it leaves trails of goosebumps along my arms and burns its way into my dreams in the depths of the night. I won't find you crying over empty photographs, only a shell, staring, dead, at the whitewashed walls.
scarletniamh
Written by
Oct 24, 2017
Oct 24, 2017 at 6:38 PM UTC
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