Tinderbox.
All the children in her stories have slapped cheeks - bums that
wooden spoons break on. Laughter finds a restless perch.
Mum tied Dad up while he
slept but just his hands. Me and my sister, we watched
giggling from the front porch as he ran up and down the street after her. Furious
hearts beating, helpless tears flowing.
Run mum.
Your Nanna was the class
clown, did you know that? Our stories mark like chicken pox. Add another decade add another
decade; the scars stir to shingles.
How long are you dead before we throw away the x-rays? The last
thing on the fire, “though you could always see right through him” says Aunty. Our
childhoods steam like live coals gripped in our old girls’ hands. Once unlucky
always unlucky, comes mum’s voice singing out through the fumes. All the
children, Captain Thunderbolt to Cocky Lora.
All our children, Dukes of Hazzard to Pokemon.
Warm-handed and alive the little girls have learned to tune us
out.
Foul seeds of a bitter forest, coughing in his stink together.
She hit me with a paper
wasp Nanna.
I’ll give you paper wasp. You fight her and I’ll fight the
winner.
brilliant, Kerri
ReplyDeleteI love your pieces, snippets of childhood.
ReplyDeleteBitter-sweet and chock full of life. Enjoyed very much thanks Kerri
ReplyDelete