Tuesday, 19 December 2023

One Flash Fiction Piece & Three Poems by Wendy Webb

 




STRANGE ARTISTIC TEMPERAMENT VANISHES

Flash Fiction
by Wendy Webb

 

C permeates the place, then B flits in. A pair, possibly.

‘Do you think I’m fat?’

‘Whaaa?  You...’ twitters B.

‘No, me, I’m not fat, just stretched.  S-t-r-e-t-c-h-e-d to far.’ C was not convinced.

‘Faaa? What, you? You’re stretched.’

‘No I’m not.’ C, fluidly. ‘Not at all stretched. I’m thin. People see right through me.’

‘See you. See you. See you there, and that bit.’ Who could argue with B?

‘I shall get angry. Then you will see my thundering rage.’  Wobbling and distracted, C’s appearance was unacceptable, to them. A one-off, with a strange perspective.

 

‘Rage, rage, raaa... A thunder is loud and red.’ No doubt artistic B was preparing something – visual. Something difficult to interpret. She had wandered off, scuffing the ground.

‘Not red. I’m not red.  I’m grey and pewter, ink and midnight.  Do you like me red? C grew abstract, obviously.

‘Red? You’re not red. You’re so cold; so there; so, everywhere.’ For a gentle spirit, B was getting animated. It would wear off soon.

‘Everywhere? I can’t be everywhere. I’m there; not here. Is everyone there? I wish someone was here.’ C was irate, almost beside themself.

‘Here! No-one’s here, that’s anyone. Are you anyone? Cos if you are, you should be there.’ B was colouring the waters again. Artistic temperament.

‘There? I’m not there. I’m blue really. Why can’t anyone see my true colours?’ At last, C recognised their limitations. Nailed it. But would it last? Honestly?

 

‘I wish my friends were here, then we could go up town.  Have a coffee.’ Creative cafĂ©, appealing to bird, time for chatter.

‘Coffee. Coffee.  COUGH. What sound does coffee make, cos you’re not making it?’ C had to be practical. Pedantic, more like.

‘I would, you know, make it...if only...’ her face steamed.

‘If only what? You haven’t made coffee, so I bet you’re not going to.’

‘I am, you know, I’m really going to make it.’ With that, B vanished in a flap. Gone for hours. No-one was sure where.

 

‘Make it, I just can’t make it. No-one is here to make it. Will you?’ C picked up where they’d left off. Stubborn and pleased at B’s return.

‘Will I what?’ C was determined to stir B.

‘Make coffee?’

‘Make coffee, why should I?’ Bird was not interested in coffee, no matter where she’d been for hours.

‘Why should I make it? Who would notice anyway?’ C was getting darker.

‘Notice? You notice. You don’t notice me.’

‘Me, I notice. Notice what?’ C was impatient to move back to themself.

‘Kaaa-ah! You notice nothing. The notice, notice that.’ B must be working on a portfolio.

‘I notice, really I do. I’m so blue, I must, I MUST concentrate.’ This was interesting, C’s complexion had changed.

‘Concentrate. Them’s purple. No, them’s yellow. Yellow. Are you frightened?’ B jumped backwards. It was surprising.

‘Frightened of yellow? Oh, no, I’m falling now. Silently and cold.’

‘C-c-cold, so cold, so can you see my prints now?’ B shivered.

‘Here! There’s something. Something cold. Too late.’

C froze.‘B-B-B, you noticed me? You did, you noticed me here. I could die happy now, one day...’

B lay down and died.

‘OH! There’s something on this notice. Perhaps I’ll go there, sometime, somewhere, anywhere. So fat and thin, and broad and long, both grey and blue... and only red at sunset. Bye, little bird, you’re gone, you’ve flown from here to nowhere.  Floating, floating, cool and slow; ephemeral as air.’

They always move on, eventually.

 

A woke up, giggling. ‘Fancy asking a bird to make coffee!’ Sleep vaporised.

 


TO AUTUMN’S PLEASANT SOUNDS OF NOTHING OLD (Prose Poem)

[Inspired by Autumn poems of: John Keats; John Clare; Emily Brontë; Robert Frost; William Butler Yeats; William Shakespeare]

 

A hustling of weaves round the wheat fields and bolder hedgerows grumbling brambles. Rats’ eyes in barns and flurries round haystacks, barrows of manure harvest cows at milking-time. Bustling thrusts of twigs and raging branches, stiles gust spinning debris. The oak-storm pops acorns, then whooshing birds fling berries. Throngs of hay-dry grasses perish, too late for rest or trying to hide in bare-swept rushes. Fizzing gawking ghost-herds lean for shelter where they’re stood. Horses in paddocks, crows gushing down. Robins and sparrows grapple whatever’s arrived. Ground-mud features of spit and trample, as spirals swing for nuts on bird feeders. Gunshots of acorns beg for burial and forgetfulness of teeth and claws. Wipe away summer’s thrill, for dirt is the new clean. Singing among rubble and street building sites. Don’t cheat, just write, and frame the mourning season. Glister in cobwebs on a moody dawn. Nurture is fickle and wild with shades of grime, choose colour that fades gently. Belief in earthly paradise holds power to subsidise the keening of pale wind. When Paradise was rank with bloated fruit, worn flesh sagged downwards. Something must hold with support. What line is here that you can’t see?  Bellow, grieve and float, or dangle on woodland branches. Quake with chill, rare intoned notes grate like hooded crows, hoping for lunch. You make me a gorgon howling moonlight, as if rays of bone structure could hit you. Rest and by and by your lack of foresight will don a Frankenstein as your alter-ego. Wail too eerily, or guess. I maybe ashes. Death is the new grey, as ruthless lies expire your consummate appearance. You eat and then you’re eaten. The stronger you’re deceived to give away nothing, the longer pain of leaving is gone too soon. You’re ancient now, grey’s not the new black, you sleep for England. You have fuel? Don’t need books to tinder phantoms lofty like wild eyes. Long gone, shaded youthfulness till noon.  You were eye candy once, had the grace to say, ‘I had my moments’. Lovers devoured your good looks, while others chose that roving rowdy distant itch. Some even loved that haggard pain-drawn face.  Reach out arthritic fingers to your fire, sadly only on for an hour. Love ran away to beach parties and poolside cocktails. Stars begged for their glitz. Winter falls.

 


Breathing Through the Pain

Rolling onto all fours: gas and air, gas and air.

Pushing, groaning, wave on wave

of mind and body merged in delivery.

I was such a proud Mum;

my Mount Olympus moment:

one to tell the mother and baby group.

My second, without Forceps/Ventouse Suction/nor C-Section.

Unsurprisingly, no future invites to birth parties of peers.

No Demob, debrief, Health Visitor, nor guide to

post-lactation, until six weeks later (doctor’s health check).

‘You deserve care too.’

                                    Yes. Right.

The baby? Eight months’ gestation, half-sized,

misplaced umbilical.

My best earth-mother delivery…

His name? Andrew.




SHUSH! Naughty Moon

[Also available as a video poem]

leaves hanging on late

full Harvest moon beaming shadows of the bogeyman

songs of harvesting grapes, travelling into space

Blue moons fanciful, volcanic eruptions

chords in atmospheric hell-hole

birdsong   no   twigs cracking   leaves shushing   oh yes

 

prayed for Black moons   darkness of greater night

shadows walking invisible until 4am

bible phases of the moon, researched online

186 place names, records of tides of moon phases.

horizon, noise droned on            buggers

heroes on bridge            endless traffic

 

october not the cruellest month  for Hunters

of game   or dying grass every type of tree dying

the Blood moon leached white  hiding nothing

gone now   first full moon in november

nocturnal wading woodcocks lumbering through thorns

and mud   easy picking out        november busy

call it Beaver/Frost/ Mourning   cleanse negativity before

thanksgiving                 oh, he was thankful never enough

frost would… before… no matter   we live the naughty

present (before rebirth)   churches bless our dead

will easter rise?   what fun   dancing cosmonauts   landing

on planet earth   expecting laurel crowns

castigated as crows   blue and yellow spacesuits orbiting

Mourning earth

 

I heard   what!   where!    no

Whizz  crack  stray   Putin’s law   they won’t find me

until lads and lasses return   medals   then   a seasonal service

at church in town   oh  yes   Frost moon beams me   Mourning

with no dam   no poppies   please   i’m brave   just sunflowers

 

Wendy Webb loves nature, wildlife, symmetry and form and the creative spark. Published in Reach, Sarasvati, Quantum Leap, Crystal, Dreich, Seventh Quarry, The Journal, The Frogmore Papers, Drawn to the Light; online in Littoral, Lothlorien, Autumn Voices, Wildfire Words, Atlantean, Poetry Kit; broadcast Poetry Place. Forthcoming: Amateur Gardening (14/10/23), Leicester Literary Journal. Book: Love’s Floreloquence; Landscapes (with David Norris-Kay) from Amazon; free downloads of other poetry from Obooko.

Love's Floreloquence: Amazon.co.uk: Webb, Wendy Ann, Meek, CT, Meek: 9798850867003: Books

Landscapes: Amazon.co.uk: Webb, Wendy Ann, Norris-Kay, David, Meek, CT, Meek, Norris-Kay, David: 9798851001659: Books


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