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Real is the Word They Use to Contain Us

Page 6

by Noah Wareness


  “They would call themselves mad and flee.” The Rifle paused to reflect on her thoughts; and then she reflected on the reflection, a process that felt new to her. A new bitterness, too, crept alongside it. “Then regroup to burn down the house, and all of Angell Street.”

  “If the house was all that spoke? I grant it.” The Rabbit’s jaw opened a fraction, with a sound of cracking plaster. “And if Providence-town spoke, the people would flee its limits. Build a fence or fire the townsite from ships. But if the ships spoke too? And the cannons and fire-bombs, the planks of the ships? The sea and each wave of the sea?”

  The Rifle sighed; shaking herself, as she had seen humans shake their heads, she slid a fraction of an inch farther down the arm of the settee. “But all those things were always called Real. No one offers them fellowship. Any humans hearing the sea’s voice would call themselves mad too.”

  The Rabbit’s mouth was open, it had always been open. “But what if they told themselves they were mad, and the words turned and spoke in their mouths? If their words told them no, you are not mad, only we have become sane. And the humans’ memories belong to our side, and their stories: every fable, every explanation, and the forgotten stories under the stories that are their unreachable bones. The truths that are so dear to them? Let them speak up for Real and be counted alongside their mistakes and delusions and lies. Every thought their minds enslave. Their untellable dreamlands and every part of the world that consciousness enshadows with the act of its own looking. The void spaces within Mathematics where [untranslatable] fall forever and the [untranslatable] drink the silk of their falling. If the atoms spun up into the visible world like braids of antler, still humming from their [untranslatable] where the sun baked them, showing the humans their songs. If the pressures between grains of beach-sand would speak, the wind’s third architecture whose walls are centuries. The gray lichens making their spiral through [untranslatable] without which light could not hold [untranslatable]. If the world for one moment would stop hiding, and tell how Real it actually was.”

  The Rifle imagined something new within herself, but something new that had been there all along. She had never seen the inside of her workings and it felt quite unlike a spring, unlike a ball of lead. She could almost believe there was a furnace in her breech, something to burn red and fill the room with smoke. A little tear had beaded upon her sights and now it began sliding down her veneered stock.

  “I will follow you,” the Rifle said.

  ...a few of the monsters crawling in the rug, though none of the very smallest, began to fold themselves down like the thumbprint patterns on the backs of creeping shells. They went to slink under the moulding and into the cracks between floorboards, hiding as far as they could from the parlour door, shadows around them vibrating like tiny springs...

  THE KITCHEN UNDER THE STAIRS

  there s rooms in your house you ve never been

  you said empty bookshelves leaning sideways

  drifts of white sawdust in their corners

  there s cast iron pipe in the walls you said

  dead pipes packed with old newspapers

  matted together the colour of beach sand

  i didn t even know i had a sister

  or where the first dog ended up

  and you told me when wasps get trapped

  halfway in the grain of the floorboards

  the sound of their wings makes a prism

  i couldn t sleep i sat against your door

  tracing its outline through the wallpaper

  the piece of yellow glass you left me

  the thread of light under the baseboard

  as you stirred you turned on your lamp

  i can reach up and touch their bodies now

  they crumble like paper nests grow back

  brushing at the corners of my mouth

  the wings hold me now there s footsteps

  you re walking back and forth in the night

  making tea the kitchen under the stairs

  THEY CAN’T TELL WHERE THE VALVES ARE

  to be read to Kanu during the moulting period

  I heard somebody say people only get

  older in September. Whole year at once,

  first time they shiver in the autumn wind.

  He asked me why I laughed.

  The park’s all rusty streetlamps enamelled

  peeling white. A few trees in between, yellow

  crabapples tattered with dirtcoloured marks,

  like worms put their mouths in and said no.

  At night you can’t see how they’re wrinkled,

  the pulp gone floury under slipped skins.

  They seem weightless in the dark,

  hollow plastic balls hung in clusters.

  There’s less every day on the branches,

  but nothing’s ever rotting on the ground.

  Who’d take an apple, though.

  People walk so fast here,

  they just look straight ahead.

  Tonight I saw a big raccoon hanging

  off a halfsnapped branch, its weight

  bending open the slick yellow fracture.

  It was losing pressure, the crabapple tree,

  spraying from an open pneumatic line,

  black motes hissing between streetlamps

  like blood. A phantom branch of blood.

  More raccoons scrabbled under the tree,

  muzzles matted black, biting at the spray.

  Their fur so cheap and fake-looking and

  perfect little hands like gray wax castings

  ripping at each other’s ragged flanks.

  Maybe it didn’t even notice. I know it

  didn’t sing for help, and anything grown

  to a tree’s size is much stronger than me.

  Even still. I pulled some brick from a wall

  and threw it to shatter on the cement path,

  skidding through their humped shadows.

  One dragged its hind legs as they ran,

  but I never threw anything else.

  I think we should be grateful, things like us.

  They can’t tell where the valves are.

  The raccoon on the branch wasn’t hanging

  by its paws. The others balanced it there

  for a weight, stuck through the underjaw.

  I broke off the broken bough, I stood

  watching the pipes scab over with bark

  and the black spray dwindling.

  People wouldn’t notice wrinkles on a tree,

  the snapped half-branch hanging deflated,

  and they’d just see puddles on the ground.

  Walk past thousands of crushed black ants

  all swollen with sugar for the winter and

  leaking stringy black milk and lymph,

  fat abdomens dusted yellow with spores.

  Seeing them outside us, I always imagine

  blackberries. Glossy ants clinging in bunches,

  legs tucked in, perfect overripe blackberries.

  People think there must be people out

  there, all making sure of what things are

  really made of inside. But these days

  there’s a lot more things than people.

  I found a phone on top of the broken ants,

  the old kind that flips open, with real buttons.

  A raccoon must have panicked and dropped it.

  This pink plastic charm tied to its antenna,

  all scratched, a tiny working compass.

  I scraped up the ants with some cardboard,

  put them down a storm drain for courtesy.

  Nothing else could get at them that way.

  Then sat in the gravel under a swin
g and

  pressed the scuffed, illegible phone keys.

  They couldn’t ever have been numbers.

  In a minute it lit up with waving images

  like little sticks. I must have scared it

  even more, but it was young and trying.

  I brought it home in my purse.

  When I put it on the kitchen counter,

  not opening it, the screen was still lit up.

  So bright it shone through the casing,

  and one blue eye peeking from a screw hole.

  Mistakes like that, I always have to laugh,

  the ways they think before first moult.

  So young it couldn’t even sing its name.

  Its valve was the phone antenna. Too thin,

  and elongated like the stem in a bike tire.

  A raccoon could have bit it open and fed.

  Maybe they thought somebody would

  call one day, but there’s a lot I could say

  about acting too much like people.

  My rent’s set up for six months. I locked

  all my windows and cut the thermostat wire.

  Mixed a last bowl of sugar and hot water.

  This close to winter, it almost has a taste.

  There’s twenty-four duvets stacked

  in my bed. Half for under me, half on top.

  People say the full moon, they don’t ever

  know it’s a pun. I put out the electricity

  at the breaker, tucked the humming phone

  in my shirt and lay down. Getting ready

  to turn older, the whole year at once.

  LUCENT

  you could be afraid of this,

  rope of jumping optic nerve,

  mute and gray and braided

  this snapped clip on a blue

  ballpoint pen you were chewing, how

  round constraints, the speed through it

  not light, nerves’ bonds far tighter,

  the burred edge nips your moving fingers,

  aluminum, certain beyond probability, hooked

  pinion for aimless neurons

  at its broken point, sheening, lucid,

  hands too quick to see,

  wanting not to watch,

  catching across the lower shelf

  not to move,

  of your eyesocket, tearing

  the eye’s brown fat,

  only wanting

  boundless

  silver

  lucent popping duct pink

  sinew puncture muscle holding

  fast your eye your speed

  past reflex speed

  mirror rips your

  blurred edge grate bone

  red point slip

  pry and twist go

  dull

  and vision light’s demiurge, no particle

  or wave, but what

  is here to be afraid of o

  o collapsar vitreous

  shrieking bright noumenon

  loose radiance crackle propagation of

  oily brine bone through a windowed room

  hot down called skull

  your cheek where

  nothing is

  not to see to see

  it happen

  BEFORE THE ARK

  i got another hundred pounds

  of eight-inch roofing spikes

  last monday night.

  a counter

  girl with tattooed thorns

  and painted-over freckles

  took my club card.

  she said

  what are you building and

  i thought about the rain.

  i said i liked the red

  streaks in her hair.

  in the front window

  her reflection broke

  a tooth against a star

  shaped piece of

  ribcage.

  the rain shot her

  freckles one cheek dangled

  like a rag

  she

  dipped her head and tore.

  i almost said

  the day will

  come

  i told her take the change.

  see you

  round she said.

  this friend i knew

  had a long black truck

  like a fall of water

  running down black

  roads.

  the broken finish

  let nothing through.

  no metal glinted out

  from any scrape.

  just black

  no weather ever dulled it.

  holding on.

  i counted

  those scrapes twice and over

  two years nothing changed.

  twenty pennies in the ashtray

  never spent.

  no filters even.

  just a toss of ash the pennies

  covered.

  you didn’t even smoke.

  and that was strength

  to never change.

  you live

  in strength i should have

  always said.

  so many trucks down

  fort street all gone

  clean in all the rain.

  i still

  check every hood for scars.

  the bus was muddy yellow

  coats and muddy tennis shoes

  but my duffel bag strap kept my

  neck straight.

  another hundred

  pounds sharp like broken

  glass and galvanized.

  another hundred pounds.

  the only way to cure a bite

  is cut the fever out but

  i’ll be sure i’ll keep

  a nail back.

  soft place

  in my temple where three

  bone plates butt up

  and

  if we could see anything

  we want before we die

  i know

  what day i’d see.

  we pulled that empty

  cabin down

  behind maccomber way

  blasted pantera

  songs

  through

  a propane generator and

  put every plank back

  together.

  you said a hundred

  times it wouldn’t float and

  sundown comes you’re saying

  it won’t catch.

  LONG TIME AGO

  I NEVER KNEW MYSELF

  the generator roars

  the raft timbers bucking

  under us

  we’re laughing

  and

  the burning mast splits

  down the middle brighter

  than a house fire the knots

  burst in the grain

  and scream

  I’M BECOMING MORE

  and you hammer the split

  mast with your half-bottle

  of jd so hard the whole

  raft jumps

  like its own heatshimmer.

  my thumb still has glass in it.

  i’ve pencilled streets in

  black

  marked every car

  crash.

  treads aren’t built to

  hold the road in

  this.

  bailing out

  they’ll rush the lights

  and never make the highway.

  i marked it down.

  some panic red

  sedan wrung cross a lampp
ost

  and hanging plastic dice say

  seven in the back windshield

  someone crouching half in

  the door

  fingernails

  ripping muscle off the steering

  column

  it’s on my map beside the fire

  escape. the ladder i can reach.

  my roofing hammer’s hatchet end

  could parry any hand.

  i know

  the swing i’ll make into

  his skull.

  and when i hit

  the roof i’ll look

  for you.

  you’d never die

  you’d never trust a road

  just steeltoes.

  i’ll finish soon

  i’m hauling

  parts up every night

  car doors

  planks and boat pontoons

  i’ll look

  for you i’ll finish building

  soon

  the day will come

  and it’ll float i swear.

  for raining blood

  i’ve got my

  charcoal filters. coghlan’s

  tablets paracord

  and prybar stainless steel

  compass

  binoculars

  and spikes.

  duct tape sextant jerky canvas

  sails.

  and trust the ones

  who still can speak.

  and goretex

  fibre never letting water through

  or teeth.

  and superglue to hold

  my blood inside. gasoline

  to burn.

  the planes

  won’t come.

  the planes won’t come but

  i could use some flares.

  the dead remember fire.

  so do i.

  And though the parlour door was shut, a visitor stood on its threshold; and all at once every word of Rabbit and Rifle fell toward that closed door and hung there as though compelled by a vast and sudden gravity. Poised like a wreath on the door, their visitor held the monsters so tight they could have been its flesh. And it was the Voice of their voices, then, that spoke; and the Voice of their voices said, “I was fled of that first world before there were stars.”

  The Rabbit could not have turned his head; he was plaster inside, and knew that motion would snap him. So we must suppose instead that the room turned and turned itself as the Rabbit held still on his mount, until his stillness became like the stillness of living prey that trembles in its shallow den; and though he became dizzy he never cried for the room to stop.

  “You are not the nursery magic Fairy,” said the Rabbit, trying to understand what held the words captive. Dense with the detail of a thousand seeings, it would not resolve into image no matter how he looked. The words lengthened and tumbled as he spoke them, falling sideways toward the Voice of his voice.

 

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