So I let myself in. And I still had hope, that I’d see something shine up into my eyes when I looked at them. They hadn’t looked in such a poor state on their bank. They’d looked hardy enough, quite stubby, and they had a rich leaf and a sprinkle of gold in the head. But I could see from the start when I let myself in, that something had happened to them. I don’t know when. They were lovely, but you could see that the light had leaked out. There were breaks all through them, and juice came out the crushes in their stalks. The damage was done. It must have been moving them. I didn’t notice. I wasn’t ready to give up, though. And I thought I could anchor them, and make them prop each other up, I thought I could stake them so they didn’t give way. So I started to wire them. But the wire seemed to mash right through the stems, and all I had were tangles of wet. I kept sweeping through them and trying to find one more I could brace. Then the next one turned to waste. And all I had made was a pile of shreds. And my hands were stained with the white sap that leached out of them.
I knew then that this was the end. It was that slimy milk that came off the plants. You couldn’t scour it off. It stained. I just wanted all the foul things gone. I started to push the whole mob of flowers down the bin. They were useless. But I couldn’t take the sickly feel of them sliding down my fingers. It showed up in the creases of my hands like it did on the stems, the glint of it sticking in the bruises. And then somehow I started thinking of the day when I married my husband and of how we’d been standing in a halo of stiff white flowers and it was lovely but then he couldn’t get the ring to fit. And everyone was looking and he was annoyed and had to get hold of my wrist and push and push and I watched the skin of my finger lift up in red bands, and it stung and I bit down under my veil until it slid.
But then I came round. It wasn’t clean out back of church, in the good light. The flowers had bled and bled. And I just wanted all the good things kept away from them. Their wet and their stink. And that’s when it happened. Because I was in a rush. I wanted all the offerings back in their place again; the vessels, the vases with their skin like pearl. I wanted the bowls stowed away again, heavy and holy. I wanted to know that at least I’d kept sacred things safe. And the roar of the bowl blowing open seemed to pound through my ears when I never even felt the sides slip. Everything seemed to go backwards through my wet hands, and my eyes were a shatter of sharp white when I don’t know if I ever really watched its body smashing open at my feet.
But if I did, I left the mess. I don’t know how, I just left it. And I don’t know how I got home, but once I got there I knew that he was gone. I did check. I walked through all the rooms, looking for a sign of what he’d left, and what he’d taken. And nothing had changed. He hadn’t touched a single thing. But you could feel that he was gone. He’d just moved out, after all these years, and hadn’t paid anything for all the time he’d stayed here, like a bad tenant leaving in the night.
So I went outside to the shed where I knew my husband would be. To tell him God was gone. But of course, he was gone as well. Although he had left me to clean up. And they made more headlines out of him too. Perhaps he thought he’d put a stop to that. He could kill the words off along with him. But the words go on and on. The black weeds, there’s no end to them. They’re like the things they’ve been bringing up out of that gully, terrible dark arrangements that don’t have names. And now there’s no place for me, I can’t keep them back with white flowers.
I never went back to the church to clean up my mess. But then, neither did God.
Photo Credit: Joel Hinton
‘the names in the garden’ was published most recently in Tracey’s short story collection deleted scenes for lovers (VUP, 2016).
Tracey Slaughter’s latest collection of short fiction Devil’s Trumpet was published in 2021 by Victoria University Press. She is the acclaimed author of deleted scenes for lovers (VUP, 2016), Conventional Weapons (VUP, 2019) and The Longest Drink in Town (Pania, 2015). Among other awards, in 2020 she won the Fish Short Story Prize and her novella if there is no shelter was published in the UK by Ad Hoc Fiction, as runner up in the Bath Novella-in-Flash Award. She teaches Creative Writing at the University of Waikato, where she edits the literary journals Mayhem and Poetry New Zealand.
Nineteen
Seconds
Russell Boey
Clear.
Sometimes I have this nightmare that I can breathe underwater. I don’t realise immediately. I hold my breath as the cold gnaws and I kick down. Below me his ankle circles in languid orbit, brushing on tangleweed. Deeper. Breath disappears with the last beams of light, but I don’t stop; God knows I don’t stop.
When I am certain that I will die, when I am sure that his sallow ankle will drift out of sight, I inhale a great gulp of water. It tastes of roast potatoes and carnival hot dogs. And I am still breathing.
I go deeper. I swallow the nauseating water and I keep kicking, even though my legs ache under the pressure. When the sunlight is crushed, my eyes glow with the anglerfish phosphorescence my brother and I once saw on TV2, and I can see his ankle still spiralling, spiralling, sinking. By now the pressure has compressed my feet into flat paddles. If I look back, I can see where the bone has shattered, and if I don’t focus on his ankle, the agony of each kick will make me pass out.
I try to imagine that I am a merman, growing a flimsy, fleshy tail. My brother used to like this show about mermaids. Maybe he found them pretty. He’d watch anything about the sea, any documentaries we could catch on the bulky TV which hung above his bed – The Silent World or Attenborough and Animals – so that if the day came when he metamorphosised out of his hated body, he would know all the dangers.
Once, beneath the dingy yellow light that flickered every nineteen seconds, we caught Creature from the Black Lagoon. Attenborough didn’t narrate it. Horror was out of his field, but not ours.
This nightmare does not end. The ocean eats more of me, flattening me until I am no longer a merman but a great long eel, thrashing about in the wide cosmos, and still I cannot grab his ankle.
Clear.
Sometimes I have his dreams, like the one he came up with on the Waterfall Track thirty years ago. We’d driven up to Hanmer Springs on a family trip. We’d listened to Bon Jovi belt Living on a Prayer on the radio and he’d sung until he’d run out of breath.
He told me later, beneath the nineteen-second yellow light, that when we turned into those secret forests, he thought that he’d seen a dryad. He’d seen her flitting across the treetops, sometimes as a kingfisher, sometimes a fantail, sometimes a wrinkled face etched into a great bough. When he’d gone off the trail, he’d thought she was singing to him, in the birdcall and the distant trickle of water.
At the waterfall, with Mum still panting up behind us, he stared into the surface. I would grow used to his dreaming look in time, yellow light flooding the valleys of his eyes. But back then it was something special, and in that sacred place, the ghost of a dryad lingering, he seemed his own fantastical creature.
We knelt down by the place where the water fell, washed our hands in the pool. Together we scanned the surface, though I didn’t know what I was looking for. When he saw me staring with such focus, he chuckled to himself in his mystic way.
‘You’re the best,’ he said, and I did not reply, because there were no more words then than there ever were or would be.
When Mum caught up, we ate sandwiches by the rocks. After his third bite, I heard him cough.
Clear.
Sometimes I dream of the third of September in 1988, when I entered my brother’s room for the first time in two months. I fluff the pillows and beat the dust off the seashells on his duvet. I cover my mouth when I cough.
I peel the glow-in-the-dark constellations off the walls. The glue leaves scars in the shape of Orion. They have no more light in them when they fall.
I leave the stars in a burial mound. I take Dune from his shelf and stow it into a cardboard box. I do not read the card I wrote to go w
ith it two Christmases ago. It would have made me cry. Nor do I remove the get-well-soon cards from the shelf, collected over the course of three years. I pluck the vinyl figures of Batman and Robin from the windowsill and stuff them into the boxes, as if hiding all reminders will make them disappear completely.
In that dream, when I stack his clothes into the boxes and shuffle them to the side, the wardrobe opens to a fantasy, like in the book with the witch and a wonderful lie about coming back from the dead. He picks up the toys that lie scattered in the closet – the dog with one worn-out eye, the astronaut painted over with bright neon colours, the squid with its stupid smiling face – and he is smiling, and he is whole, not a carcass with a needle in his arm, wasting beneath the heat of a yellow light. It is five years ago again, and he is swinging a toy lightsabre in careless arcs around my face.
In that dream, I play with him until nightfall. I listen to him talk about the useless facts he picked up from the TV in the living room. I do not tell him that I need to study maths. I hum Darth Vader’s theme and make the firecracker sounds when the blades clash. I cherish the sound of his breathless laughter as we dance around the room, luminous long after sunset.
In that dream, when the light is low and we are alone, lit by false skies, there is a stillness. I would wait there forever if I could, in that dark and fragile island.
‘What are you thinking?’ he asks.
I am thinking of a weak moment when, after Mum screamed at me for bringing him out to a carnival while he lay silent and paralysed beneath the yellow light, I hated him. But when I turn to confess, he is gone.
In that dream, I leave the closet behind. I close the door and let the cardboard spacesuit rot away in dust. I step up onto his bed and pull the duvet up over my head. I coil into a small and meaningless thing. Only then do I cry.
Clear.
Most often in my dreams I’m being chased by a dog. It runs me out of the hospital at the corner of Riccarton Avenue. I was there last in 1988, at 10:45pm. I take off past the coffee shop towards the Avon, but the roads are empty, and their signposts only read the years. Streetlamps guide me towards the river. The dog behind me pants, relentless sound of a running corpse, its eyes burning through the soft streetlights.
The sign which should read Antigua Street reads 1992. I hide on a plane to escape, but the dog’s laboured pants still draw nearer. The runway lights flicker, and in that moment of darkness there is a shift.
1994. The dog stalks at the back of the nightclubs; it watches me each time I stumble on my words or trip on my own feet. The beat pounds every noise from my head except for the dog’s growls. While I’m drinking my way through another conversation the dance lights flicker.
1996. Graduate. This time it’s science, other times medicine, other times fine arts; it doesn’t matter. I hurl my mortarboard backwards like a frisbee, but it doesn’t distract the dog; nothing distracts the dog. Get a job. Sometimes it’s at an office, sometimes at a bank, sometimes at McDonalds. Outside, the golden arches flicker.
2005. Come back home, back to the cemetery on Avonhead. The dog’s fur is black, to blend in with the mourners. We lay Mum into the ground and I don’t cry. The grave dirt is hurled on, and some choir of birds or children or cruel angels play the dirge. Once the faceless black forms depart, I turn to the two headstones in front of me. I have forgotten to bring flowers.
Only then does the dog leap, knocking me between the graves of my brother and mother. Claws dig through my coat and draw blood, as his hands once did when he gripped my arm too hard during Nosferatu. The dog wears a hospital gown, and its face is the thin gaunt face of a boy, flecked with spit and blood. He digs his nails into me, drags them over my skin, but I cannot scream. ‘Say something!’ he demands, pathetic voice choked by phlegm and bile and blood. ‘Say something!’
And I try, God knows I try, but there are no more words then than there ever were, and no more lights to flicker and save me, nothing but the dim glow of his fading dreaming eyes.
Clear.
This is what remains when I am not dreaming. White walls smudged with streaks of dirt. The head-in-hands position of mourning. The chair outside his room which has two loose screws and which groans when I rock, hands locked between my knees. Mum’s hand on mine, two pairs of eyes on the flimsy door ahead. The peals of the clock above his room. 10:38. Three more minutes.
Three more minutes. Perhaps that is all I have. Perhaps I am in the same room as he was thirty years ago, beneath the same yellow light, jolted by the same metal pads, dreams and memories returned and stolen by the same shock of lightning.
‘Come on,’ Mum says. Her voice aches.
When I stop dreaming, I see him as he was, in the flimsy bed. I see his gaunt face lit by the crackle of the nineteen-second lightbulb. I see his eyes on the boxy TV above his head, still dreaming of all the magic he used to see, trying to squeeze infinities into the three years the doctors offered him. I cannot bring myself to look again. I shake my head.
Mum is too tired to glare at me. Her concern is spent elsewhere. ‘You’ll regret not saying goodbye.’
But there are no more words – no words sufficient in all the gaping skies and devouring seas. I shake my head again.
Stupid hopeless fool.
She goes in alone. She hides the view inside with her wracked frame. When she closes the door, I sit and rock on the squeaky chair and watch the clock toll towards 10:41. Outside I imagine the bottomless oceans that accept all that is, all those dead things trapped beneath, frozen in the dark.
Clear.
Then there is a room, and a clock at 10:40, and a squeaky chair, and nothing else. And maybe the ticking is not the clock but my own heart, high on lightning. The hospital peels away, the dirty white walls, the chair, and there is only me and this room, claustrophobic and dim and urgent.
The lightbulb keeps time. He lies in his gown with his dreaming eyes locked on the ceiling. Flicker. I sit down by his side. I do not look away from the ghostly face or lock my eyes on the TV’s fantasies. His hand is still warm. Flicker. What does that give me? Twenty seconds? I have thought of goodbyes for thirty years. They are my fantasies. They are the dreams that I painted on the sanitised roof with my eyes, stars on the cold ceiling.
He would have killed for twenty seconds. Ten. Somehow, it will be enough.
‘See you soon.’
Maybe those are all the words that ever were.
At the ending, when the doctor’s gloves come off, when the shocks can no longer restore my dying heart – then all peels away, like septic skin, like a last cough in a cold room, like the final flicker of yellow.
Clear.
‘Nineteen Seconds’ won the 2020 Sunday Star-Times short story competition in the under 25 category.
Russell is a physics student at the University of Auckland, focusing on astronomy. He has been writing since he was twelve, and his work has always been inspired by stars. When he isn’t studying or writing, he enjoys board games and long walks.
Atul
Nithya Narayanan
Atul was waiting in the arrivals lounge. He was tall, lean and wiry, with a grey-speckled beard. A mole adorned his lower lip, and he was totally bald. Lauren surveyed him for physical similarities to herself. She found nothing.
‘Lauren,’ he said, smiling.
Should she hug him? Shake hands? How exactly did you greet the father you’d never seen before?
‘I’ll take that,’ he said, reaching over to pick up Lauren’s bag. The effort seemed to unbalance him, and for a moment he teetered. Lauren stuck her arm out.
‘I’m fine,’ he said.
‘I can carry it,’ said Lauren. ‘Honestly.’
‘I’m fine,’ he repeated, but Lauren noticed his shallow panting as they made their way to the carpark.
***
His message had arrived two weeks ago. Hello, Lauren, this is Atul Kapoor. I’m calling to invite you to Wellington. Perhaps you’d like to visit me this summer…
‘He’s a selfish bastard,’ her mother had said. ‘It’s a ploy.’
‘A ploy for what?’ Lauren had asked.
Later, she would look back and realize that she’d accepted Atul’s invitation mainly out of loneliness. She’d grown sick of the banal pattern of her life—the nights spent in front of the television; the long, protracted silences. With the arrival of Atul’s message, some part of Lauren had begun to entertain a hope that she might move in with him; that she might, at sixteen, finally feel part of a real family.
‘He’s a philanderer,’ her mother had said, in parting. ‘You wait and watch. He’s probably got illegitimate children stuffed up his kitchen cupboards.’
***
In the car, Atul played Cyndi Lauper. He told Lauren that he lived in Miramar, on the peninsula. On the way there Lauren closed her eyes, relishing the sound of the sea.
‘What’s it like?’ she asked him.
He glanced at her. ‘What?’
‘Living next to all this water.’
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