Malachy
Flash Fiction
by Roisín Browne
He took
slow, deliberate steps in the direction of the bus stop, feeling he did not
have the right to make noise on the cracked pavement with his polished shoes;
hardly had the right to breathe at this point. His hand gave a quick tug on his
belt buckle to check. Yes, he had belted up with some speed, not wanting to
remain there a second longer, once everything had been completed.
It had
stopped raining but everything was wet. The late-night buses glistened from the
evening downpour and the street lights glowed an Arabian orange.
A
couple was coming towards him, laughing. The girl had a head of thick copper
hair while her male companion, bald and bearded, pushed a mountain bike between
them. His animated face, told some story, about somebody, Malachy would never
know. As the storyteller kept talking, she laughed louder and stretched out to
grab his tattooed hand, as if to stop herself from being propelled forward.
As Malachy
passed them, the storyteller glanced over and caught Malachy’s eye mid-flight.
Malachy looked away. He felt his neck getting hot, hands fidgety, so he pushed
them deeper into his coat pockets and dropped his head further into his chest.
The grey lambswool scarf irritating his chin. Could this passer-by know? Could
he sense it?
What if
Lucy sensed it?
A
poetry reading, he had said. The poetry of the Beats, in a small pub off
Talbot Street. He would go straight after work and be home on the last bus,
promise.
She had
hardly taken note of him, just nodded as she put the lead on Juno and shouted
back up the stairs to Ben to hurry up. He wasn’t being fair. She did tell him
to enjoy himself as he shut the door behind him. Those words made him feel
nauseous now.
The
other week, when they were out for drinks with the gang, she told them he was
becoming very high brow since he joined the local writing group, that she
didn’t know what to do with him. She ruffled his hair, declaring his EPIC
novel would be dedicated, of course, to her. The women smiled, while the men looked
in their beer. He was convinced he saw Barry mouth queer to him. Lucy
raised her glass and an eyebrow, telling them he was probably having an affair
and that all these literary evenings were a front. She gave him a crooked grin,
he pursed his lips and nodded, and then, being Lucy, planted a secure sloppy kiss
on his cheek. Later when they were in bed, slicked in sweat, a little out of
breath, she kissed his chest and said she loved that he was seeking his passion
and that Barry was a prized dick anyway.
Malachy
stood. His stomach lurched. The rain started to fall again. The last bus turned
the corner. He could see it.
He
could see it all; Lucy smiling, Juno pawing, Ben dawdling, Barry sneering, the Revolut
transaction, woodchip walls, lino floors, baby wipes, bargain-basement towels, wine
candles, purple lipstick, jasmine incense, the leather crop, whuh, whuh,
whuh,
as he
vomited into the night.
Roisín Browne lives in Rush, Co Dublin and has been
published in A New Ulster, The Galway
Review, The Stony Thursday Book, Live
Encounters Poetry & Writing,
Poetry NI, The Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Flare, MGV Datura, The Bangor
Literary Journal, The Irish Times, The Gladstone Readings and Echoes from the Castle Anthology. She
was commended in the Gregory O’Donoghue Awards in 2018 and shortlisted in The
Seventh Annual Bangor Poetry Competition in 2019. She has also performed her work
at the Sunflower Sessions, The Merg and most recently at The Fingal Poetry
Festival.
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