Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Thinking summer

He stayed there most nights
and imagined summers
the buzz of bees and lawnmowers
combining into a symphony

with the colours of pansies,
peonies and tulips, their lips
open to sun drenched afternoons.
Without a broom, the leaves stayed -

autumn vistors that gave the floors
extra crunch when he rolled
sleep an empty thing, floating past
like a dream he wanted

but never seemed to grasp,
another reminder that he
wasn't good enough for anything :
even the human basics seemed to fail him.

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Poetry by Heather Taylor

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Toes

"..five, thix, theven.."

Rebecca counted the toes over and over just like her Daddy told her to. 10 fingers and 10 toes meant he was OK. And OK meant he could come home soon. Yet still, every morning since the day they took her Mommy into the hospital, Rebecca played by herself in the playroom.

"Don't put anything in your mouth. It's dirty," her Daddy warned her when he dropped her off in the mornings. "You don't want to get sick do you?"

Rebecca didn't want to do that. If she got sick then she couldn't see Baby Jack and that was her favoritist thing to do. On bad days, they only gave her enough time to count his fingers and toes before she got sent back to the playroom. She hated it there, the place where she was scared to touch anything. Every where Rebecca looked must be full of germs. It was dirty just like her Daddy said, she thought, even though it smelt like the floor cleaner Mommy liked to use.

Even though she saw her every day, Rebecca missed her mommy. She never hugged her or gave her tickles or butterfly kisses anymore. She smiled even though Rebecca knew she must have been crying cause Mommy's nose was all red and her eyes watery. And Daddy wasn't right either. He never smelled nice like he used to - all spicy and lemony and crisp - and his clothes were all wrinkly instead of smooth and fresh. He almost didn't look like her Daddy anymore and it scared her. Why was everyone so different? If they all went home, they could have spaghetti and a big bubble bath and then Mommy and Daddy and Baby Jack could all get in the big double bed with her and they'd all read stories. Then no one would talk in whispers or have their foreheads wrinkle up or their mouths go in funny straight lines.

So she kept counting - fingers and toes - and drew pictures for Baby Jack's walls and told him stories about what their house was like and how much he'd love it. Rebecca talked about the moon and stars she helped put on the walls with Daddy, the ones that glowed in the dark. And she made all the animal noises of all the animals in the mobile that was above the crib she slept in before she got a big girl bed. The one that he'd sleep in now. She kept counting day after day until her Mommy's nose lost the red and Daddy made a smile that showed teeth and Baby Jack came out of his little glass box and they told her they were all leaving. Baby Jack was going to be all right.

"Of courth he ith," she said. "He'th got all the fingerth and all the toeth. He'th perfect."

Her Mommy and Daddy laughed for the first time since they rushed to the hospital that day 3 months too early for labour and motherhood. And as their laughter rained down around her, Rebecca smiled and did a little dance. They were going home at last.

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Fiction by Heather Taylor

The Way

Sometimes you lose it
Find yourself in a back streets
counting nickles to give beggers
Stop to help strangers with directions

The carefully drawn map
finds its way to the bottom, shoved
under trinkets, pocket books,
the expired coupon you meant to use

It takes one wrong turn on a back road
to spark memory, cause you to burrow
unfold the story of the way you were going
And see if there's a new way to get there.

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Poetry by Heather Taylor

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Moving On


Just yesterday it was filled with voices:
A warm laugh, a baby's first cry,
a mother mourning a first born
left home for his own happy marriage.

As the years had rolled on top of each other,
the weeks of making pickles and jams
absorbed in the walls; became a fond memory
as drives to shopping mall grocery stores took over.

The day oilmen struck gold on the families land,
Mom & dad breathed out dreams of even streets into air,
fantasy pavements that ran past neighbour houses
instead of grass-grown paths to endless fields.

It took barely a day to pack up heirlooms
and quilts to cram back car windows
as the front door waved goodbye in the wind,
work boots left behind in pursuit of skyscrapers.

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Poem by Heather Taylor

Into the Woods

It was three in the afternoon when they drove past. They wouldn't have seen it at all if she hadn't needed to roll down her window for her fifth cigarette. Five in one hour wasn't a personal best, but it was getting close. One hour. It was almost that long since they passed the last gas station. If Carrie knew it was the last one, she would've forced Kevin to pull over. She didn't, so she dreamed of peeing instead and tried to block thoughts of waterfalls as she tugged quick puffs from her cigarette. That is until she spotted the perfect spot.

Carrie had a thing about peeing in public and peeing outside was definately public. The fear of it came from a day of hiking through the woods with her Girl Guide toop. Just as she squatted to relieve herself, a unit of Boy Scouts rounded the trail. She didn't know what was redder - her face, the troop leader's or her bum after she realized she settled in poisen oak for her quick pee. It was the final proof that she wasn't cut out to hike or camp or do anything, anywhere without plumbing and central heating. So when she felt that jiggle, sloshy need to get to a bathroom, she wouldn't let him just pull into the ditch for a quick one. She needed shelter and shelter didn't come easy on the prairies.

The buildings were barely a speck on the horizon as they made their way down a overly gravelled side road. Kevin's teeth were grinding which meant he was worried about the paint job but she was beyond caring. All she could do was will the buildings closer and closer until they were no longer a mirage but reality.

Kevin had barely stopped the car when Carrie bounded out, hell bent for the most hidden spot as she unbuckled and unzipped her pants. She didn't notice the ground or the buildings or anything beyond the shadows of the leaning farm houses and her overfull bladder. Squatting, she let everything go and felt that rush of happy emptiness.

Shit. Toilet paper. In her haste, Carrie forgot her purse in the car. She hated dripping dry. It never worked and then she'd have to sit in slightly damp panties for the rest of the drive. Her eyes darted from the peeling paint of the sloping building - ouch - and onto the greenness of the wide leaves around her. Good enough for Adam and Eve, good enough for me, she thought as she pulled at the plants and wiped herself. Straightening, Carrie did up her zipper, button and belt and started her meander back to the car.

Ten steps in the burning began and then the slow itch. Could it really be? Why didn't she remember the tell tale leaves, the subtle markings. As her meander turned into a crawl, she pulled herself towards the car. She could see Kevin singing along to the Bangles' "Walk Like an Egyptian" which would have made her laugh if the itching hadn't taken over her brain.

It took almost a full verse and chorus before he saw her writhing on the ground. White faced, he ran from the car.

"Don't-" she screamed. "Don't. Come. Any. Closer! It's poison oak. It's poison oak."

Shocked still, Kevin looked her up and down as the Bangles countinued their ode to Egyptian dance. Much to Carrie's annoyance, the freeze lasted barely a second before he fell to the ground in silent laughter. The tears rolled steams down his cheeks as Carrie kept on with her itch relieving wriggle. As he slowly regained his breath, Kevin's smile spread his face into a grin and he finally said what she thought she'd only hear over candlelight, by a moonlit lake or when eating some sinful cake concoction. Her answer was supposed to be elegant and completely memorable like the one she'd practised in the mirror since she was 10. At least she remembered one thing from Girl Guides - be prepared.

"Will you marry me?"

Be prepared she learned in Girl Guides, yes. But here, as the poison oak countinued it's attack, all she could do was nod yes.

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Story by Heather Taylor

Friday, July 07, 2006

Jail

6 months I'm supposed to be in here. Six months is nothing right. So I'm planning to sit here, tidy-like, neat in my cell, do my time, and what's here? This fucking face. This face that's there just staring at me. First day here, right? First day here and I'm seeing this little etch-a-sketch stencilling and I think, hey a little company. Some guy was going loco and he's like this big Star Trek fan or something. Not an original but one of the new ones. Who else would put Warf on this wall here? Not that I'm a big fan or nothing just my mom watched. Like it's like she can witness the future way past what she'd live to see. I think it's kinda creepy but I'm just happy she's not one of those trekkie trekkers - what ever they call themselves these days, right?

Anyway so I thought, I'd ask around like. Not prying or anything cause you don't pry too much into somebodies business. I'm not some sucker fresh meat baby or something. I'm the Real McCoy like off those old movies and shit. But anyway, I ask, if anyone knew the kid who's in this cell before. I'm thinking he must be this geeky little thing that got mixed up in some shit but didn't mean it and liked Banksy or something. Wanted to be a right little artist, right? I'm thinking he could be like a little brother. Maybe he's out there and he can write to me and visit sometime cause my mom only gets mad when she comes in and she won't let my brother see me in here like this. It's not right she says - like I'm going to corrupt him through the bars or something. I'm not contagious. Plus she don't know what he's like anyway. A good little kid our Mikey - even gives me shit for smoking. Saying that, he'd better stay like that, keep out of my stash while I'm in here.

So I'm asking around and they tell me this guy, Pete, this guy Pete was in my cell before but no one's saying much right? So I'm thinking he must've been this quiet thing. Not talking or nothing. But still - come'on someone's gotta have some shit on the guy but no one's saying nothing. And everyday I'm seeing this sketch like, I'm thinking about my brother and so I get a little crazy about it and so I go to the big man, the one you don't go to but they find you? But I just don't care anymore so I go up there and say - Jesus man what's with the guy in my cell, the one before me. You lot can't bear Star trek geeks or something?

And I'm just itching for a fight. I don't know why, but those eyes just had bore in my head, those Klingon eyes and I had to know. And so he looks me up and down and gives me a smile and says, you remind me of him. And I'm thinking, is this a good or bad thing. And he tells me this Pete, this Pete is some pedo weirdo and I'm thinking fuck - fuck I thought he'd be like a fucking little brother when all he'd be thinking about is fucking my brother and it fucking makes me sick. And they're just standing there looking at me and I'm thinking they think I'm like this Pete guy and that's sick. I'm not fucking like that. And then, I don't even notice it but my fist rounds to the right and then a left and all I remember is someone dragging me and there's blood and I can't tell which is mine. So they plunk me back in the cell cause the big man's in solitairy. I guess they thought he could hurt me more but now all I'm wishing is to be in that tiny cell, cramped in quiet like cause these eyes. Those crazy klingon eyes. Staring at me. 2 more years they'll be staring at me now. Another 2 years cause of him.

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Story by Heather Taylor

Rapunzel

Square turrets
Open sky
Brick pieces
Jutting handholds
Shuttered windows
The grey of rain
Glimpses of hair
Shadowed visits
Mistaken voices
Whispered longing
Eternal waiting
Blindness
Forgiveness
Peace

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Poem by Heather Taylor

Dream

It was easy to make. A quick flick of black, the spray smooth and even. The red an afterthought to bleed into what she'd already done. Chuck had given her the stencil so it was only a matter of finding a space. There were rules here she never thought about : the wall had to be the right colour so the image would stick out, the place had to be hidden enough so no one would see what you were doing but had to be visable enough so everyone could see it when it was made, and everything had to be done at night.

Emily was never one for staying out all night cause it worried her parents. But since she ran away, none of that seemed to matter anymore. They wouldn't understand that she had to find herself and she wasn't sure how to do it but after Chuck...it's been easier. He said once that we make our own dreams but too often those are taken away by the government, our parents, people who like to flex their power. So we have to take a stand. He said that as they layed in bed, smoking a cigarette between them. His fingers, nicotine stained, traced their way across her body and soothed his thoughts into her. Made her forget that she hated the taste of his roll-ups, made her forget how long it's been since she layed in clean sheets and dreamed her own dreams. How long it's been since she'd been home.

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Story by Heather Taylor

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Sparks


We write our names across the sky
Willing them to the universe
Wishing on stars and blown out candles
For the one we want, are dreaming of

Our eyes burn in the glow,
us holding brief life in our hands
Those magic sticks that sizzle spark start
and snap dazzle their way out of existance.

Photo by Sarah Taylor; Poem by Heather Taylor