The Men in White start covering her with spray. Milena looks away, to the horses.
The horses are huge, white, muscled. The horses wear wraparound mirror-shades. It keeps them looking only at what their masters want them to see. They toss their heads and their smoky yellow manes dance. Horses are beautiful even in slavery, because no one has told them they are ugly. Horses have no demons.
Milena hears the sound of the spray. Thrawn will grow new skin, a new mind. She will not be Thrawn anymore. There will be someone else, living a quite happy, very limited life, with gaps in her memory. She won’t feel any anguish over what happened. A relative good then? Tell yourself it’s a relative good, then, Milena.
The only place Thrawn is alive is here, now, as I remember.
Saviour.
hey fish it’s me again!!!!!!
Milena finds a sealed oiled pouch, waiting for her when she returns from space. She remembers the spidery, shaking scrawl.
— well — they want the old lady to go back and she just doesn’t want to go! broke my leg again — well — my hip but it amounts to the same thing — now they want to get the old dam back — thats what they want — get her safely on some old sofa and we’ll bring her dinner whenever we remember
us polar types get old, fish — you don’t know what that means — it means you start to fall apart — but what it feels like is that all the world starts dropping away too, piece by piece — it feels like they want to take the sky away from me
I used to be young — used to lay out all night long, feel the air sting its way over my face like someone touching me and i ud look up into that clear air and all the stars ud seem to look back at me — like all the stars have a face—
hell, fish, i could trek over forty k to the stores and drink all night hot raw whisky and roll back all in two days with no sleep — there was old betty who used to haul the stuff in on her back — we used to bath in whisky, wash the old tin plates in it and spend all day shooting fire out of our paws — blasting the stones apart and smelt them for metal like we was making hot soup — set up a sound system on the ice —sound system on the ice and we ud dance and blast and boom and batter and hunt penguins with lasers!
we were so crazy — we ud go fishing underwater in wet suits with music in headphones and whisky in a little tube that went straight into our mouths — shoot that fish! sip that stuff! shake your tail to old Bessie smith, high and pure in the phones — it was like we could make life up like kids playing pretend — they ever tell you about bessie smith, fish??????????? — honey, go ask your virus, go get it to play you old bessie — that’s what we mined to in the dry rocks — bessie and satchmo
— singing to us in the blue blue sea — history alive in your ear singing like the wind on the ice — we ud go swimming up the innards of an iceberg like a smooth glassy cheese all full of holes and glossy light — light going up the cracks, catching in the bubbles and strange dead creatures froze right in the middle of it — fish, i was young — i was young for years fore i met my husband — had rolfa when i was 40 years old — thats how late i left it all that domestic stuff — the wallpaper the curtains the dishes the carpets and the four four walls
HELL FISH
they want me back in London — so I can be old — they want me to
shed the ice like snakeskin — they want me to lose the cold — lose the stars — lose the fire — i could trek baby and blast — they want me still not moving not hearing
it dont matter being deaf down here home in the cold — theres my dogs — they fetch for me — theres the sun on the ice and the fresh air — theres the post coming to bring letters and to talk
being deaf in south ken means being shut in with a little shivering squidge who thinks your going to eat her — im deaf fish and i cant walk — broken hip and joints that have ground to a halt — i have to crawl my cold little fish — so theyll ship me home like walrus meat — theyll fix my joints sure — and then say i got to stay in south ken till theres nothing left of me — just some old animated rug barely talking just reaching up for her little tipple with a hand that shakes — some old withered dam rotting like leaf mould just able to lift her head — with no light no sound no dance no cold no warm — nothing where we all head fish — where we all head and ive arrived here so heres what im going to do — im going to crawl — im going to crawl out onto that ice in the night — ill roll over and look up at the stars — i know cold honey — it settles slow — you just go to sleep — im going to go to sleep looking at those stars — by the time you get this fish ill be long gone
love is a torch you pass it on — tried to give it to my baby — my great singing lump of a kid — opera hell i hate opera — where ud she get it from ?????? just herself — love is a torch and you pass it on like someone passed it to you fish — you never told me about your mama but she must have loved you — or someone must have — so you loved rolfa rolfa loved you — you just dug your heels in — me too kid — this is happy — this is some old dam digging her heels in — into the ice — dont be sad this is the best
love
hortensia patel
Present tense, still present, still tense:
When?
This is me, packing for outer space. I’m running around my lacquered rooms with a tremor in my belly. I’m still afraid of Thrawn, of space, of The Comedy.
I’m worrying about my house plants. Who can I give them to who will not kill them with over-watering, or kill them with neglect? I am worrying over a potted plant of basil, which I use in cooking, and a hydrangea. This is my main concern at the moment, the chewing gum my conscious mind is recycling over and over until all savour of it is gone.
There is a knock on the sliding panels on my Tarty flat. They rattle in their runners. Is it Thrawn? I am Terminal, I am Terminal, I tell myself, and I throw back the sliding screens, one after another, through the Dead Space that insulates. I pull back the screens, and before I recognise who it is, I feel a band of muscle pull tightly across my chest.
Rolfa standing in my doorway.
She is covered in fur again, and wears virulently coloured clothes. ‘Hullo.’ she says. ‘No trouble to go away and come back if I’m interrupting.’
Why now? That is the director’s reaction. Yes, I would like to see you, yes I have been meaning to see you, but now is not a good time. Milena runs a distracted hand across her head.
Well Milena, you have now successfully communicated that it is a tremendous inconvenience, but that you are going to make the most forced effort to be gracious.
‘Just, just packing,’ says Milena, stiff smile, closed eyes, angry little shakings of the head.
Perhaps understandably, Rolfa makes no reply.
‘How are you, Rolfa?’
‘Oh. Not so dusty. Got to keep moving, you know. I won’t stay long.’
Milena the director is relieved. Mentally she is calculating how long she has to pack.
‘It’s lovely to see you,’ says Milena.
‘But,’ says Rolfa, supplying the qualification. She is hunched under the arched and lacquered ceilings. She makes the Tarty flat look like the kind of toy you give to a spoiled child. Rolfa is hunched and covered in fur, and she wears a brightly-printed shirt, brightly printed shorts, clean white tennis shoes and a rather rakish hat. It is a man’s hat. She still looks uncomfortable, awkward. My God, she reminds me of Mike.
‘Tea?’ Milena offers. Milena has forgotten to ask her in.
‘Beer? Whisky? Gin would suffice, if you had some lemon.’ Rolfa shuffles her feet, wiping them on the mat. Her shoes are huge and white and very clean. ‘And just a little morsel to munch, if you could see your way to finding it.’ Rolfa ducks inside the door and, rather awkwardly, removes her hat. Politesse. She strokes the short, bristly crew cut on the top of her head. ‘Needing sustenance. Long boat trip. My God, why did you move all the way out here?’
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