Authors: Simon Armitage
C lay on the tiles on the kitchen floor for a few cold, quiet
minutes, considering the ever after. Then with her good
hand she punched a long, random number into the keypad,
eleven or twelve digits. After a lot of clicking and
crackling, it rang. “Who is this?” said a man. “My name’s
C and I’m dying from a spider bite,” she said, and described
the incident with the insect and the pre-packed salad
vegetables. The man said, “I’m dying too. I’ve been adrift
in an inflated inner tube in the Indian Ocean for six days
now, and the end is near. I think a shark took my leg but I
daren’t look.” “Why don’t you call for help?” she asked.
“Why don’t you?” he replied. His name was Dean. They
chatted for a while, not caring a hoot about the cost of
premium-rate international calls during peak periods. “Is it
dark there?” C wanted to know. “Yes. Are you married?”
asked Dean. C replied, “I’ve had no luck with men, even
though I’m a lovely person and I’ve taken good care of my
body.” “What’s your best feature?” “My laugh,” said C,
laughing. “And my lips, which have never received the
attention they deserve.” The poison had reached as far as
her windpipe and was tightening around her throat. Dean
said, “Do you think we could have made it together?” “I
think so,” she whispered. “I don’t like courgettes,” Dean
joked, and those were his last words. “I would have done
broccoli instead,” she breathed, “or even cauliflower.
Whatever you asked for I would have made.”
There was a horrible pause as we sat there wondering
whether or not to applaud, then the curtains closed.
I’ve been writing a lot of poems recently about my
difference but my tutor isn’t impressed. He hasn’t said as
much, yet it’s clear that as far as he’s concerned my
difference doesn’t
cut much ice.
He wants me to dress my
difference with tinsel and bells and flashing lights, or sit it
on a float and drive it through town at the head of the May
Day Parade. “Tell me one interesting fact about your
difference,” he says, so I tell him about the time I lost my
difference down the plughole in a Bournemouth guesthouse
and had to fish it back with a paperclip on a length of
dental floss. He says, “Er, that’s not really what I had in
mind, Henry.” Basically he needs my difference to die in a
crash, or be ritually amputated in a civil war. Then he
shows me a prize-winning poem (one of his own in fact)
about a set of twins whose differences were swapped at
birth by a childless midwife, and who grew up with the
wrong differences, one in the bosom of the Saudi Royal
Family and the other beneath the “jackboot of poverty,” and
who met in later life only to discover that their differences
were exactly the same. He wants me to lock my difference
in a coal cellar until it comes of age then take it outside and
reverse over with the ride-on mower, thus making my
difference
very different indeed,
or auction my difference in
the global marketplace, or film it getting a “happy slapping”
in a busy street, or scream the details of my difference into
the rabbit hole of the cosmos hoping to bend the ear of
creation itself. I tell him I once swallowed my difference
without water on an empty stomach, but he isn’t listening
any more. He’s quoting some chap who went at his
difference with a pair of pinking shears. He’s talking about
such and such a poet who threw his difference in front of
the royal train, or had it beaten from him by plain-clothed
officers and rendered down into potting compost or
wallpaper paste, or set fire to his difference on primetime
national TV. And when I plead with him that no matter
how small and pitiful my difference might seem to him, to
me it makes all the difference in the world, he looks at me
with an expression of complete and undisguised and
irreversible indifference.
Leo burnt his hand very badly on a jet of steam
which hissed from his toasted pitta bread as he
opened it up with a knife. The visiting nurse said,
“Are you sure you haven’t been beating up your
wife?” “Excuse me?” said Leo. “Are you sure you
didn’t sustain this injury during the course of
physically assaulting your wife?” questioned the
nurse. Leo was shocked. “It’s a burn,” he said.
“Of course it’s a burn, but who’s to say she
wasn’t defending herself with a steam iron or a
frying pan? Do you cook your own meals, sir, or
do you insist on your wife doing the housework?”
Leo was flabbergasted. “I’m not even married,”
he said. “Yeah, right, and I’m the Angel of the
North,” she said, throwing him a roll of lint as she
barged out of the house and slammed the door
behind her.
Leo really wasn’t married. His friends were
married. Both of them. One was even divorced.
But Leo was a bachelor and not at all happy with
the situation. Bachelor—the word tasted like
diesel in his mouth. However, that night in the
pub he met Jacqueline, a young blind woman
from York, and they talked for a while on the
subject of Easter Island, about which neither of
them knew anything, and after an hour they were
still talking, and a few moments later their knees
touched under the wooden table. For him it was
like a parachute opening. For her it was like
something involving an artichoke. He lifted his
hopelessly bandaged hand to within a millimetre
of her cheek and said, “Jacqueline, I’ll never hurt
you. I wouldn’t do that. Everything’s going to be
all right from now on and you’re safe. Jackie, I
love you. Do you understand?”
They’d overbooked the plane. “At this moment in time,”
announced the agent at the counter, “Rainbow Airlines
is offering one hundred pounds or a free return flight to
any passenger willing to stand down.” A small man in a
cheap suit and Bart Simpson socks scratched his ankle.
“One hundred and fifty pounds,” she announced, fifteen
minutes later. Nobody moved. “Two hundred?” From
nowhere, this neat-looking chap in a blue flannel jacket
and shiny shoes loomed over the desk and said, “I’ll take
the money.” “But you’re the pilot,” she said, then added,
“Sir,” as if she’d walked into a Japanese house and
forgotten to take off her shoes. The pilot whispered,
“Listen, I need that money. I’m behind on my mortgage
payments because my wife’s a gambler. I’ve got two
sons at naval college—the hats alone cost a small fortune
—and I’m being blackmailed by a pimp in Stockport. Let
me take the two hundred, you’d be saving my life.”
I’d been sitting within earshot, next to the stand-up
ashtray. “Give him the money,” I said. “Who are you?”
asked Dorothy (she was wearing a plastic name-badge
with gold letters). “Dorothy, I’m George,” I said, “and
clearly this man’s in pain. I don’t want him going all
gooey midway over the English Channel. I once heard
sobbing coming from the cabin of a Jumbo Jet at thirty-
three thousand feet, and it sounded like the laughter of
Beelzebub.” “But who’ll fly the plane?” she wanted to
know. “Why me, of course.” I opened my mouth so she
could see how good my teeth were—like pilot’s teeth.
“Do you have a licence?” she asked. I said, “Details,
always details. Dorothy, it’s time to let go a little, to trust
in the unexplained. Time to open your mind to the
infinite.” By now my hand was resting on hers, and
a small crowd of passengers had gathered around,
nodding and patting me on the back. “Good for you,
George,” said a backpacker with a leather shoelace
knotted around his wrist. It was biblical, or like the end
of a family film during the time of innocence. I said,
“Dorothy, give me the keys to the cockpit, and let’s get
this baby in the air.”
“Let’s get married at the zoo!” exclaimed Scott. “Perfect,”
said Charlene. They found the name of a humanist minister
in the Yellow Pages and he arranged to meet them at 15:30
by the elephant house. “Are you sure you wouldn’t prefer
the glass wall of the penguin tank as a backdrop?” asked the
minister. “They’re so vivacious and life-affirming.” “No,
here’s fine,” said Scott. “Perfect,” agreed Charlene. “Then
let’s begin. Do you, Scott, believe that friendship and
decency underpin the essence of humanity?” “I do,” said
Scott, removing a stray hair clinging to Charlene’s lip.
“And do you, Charlene, agree to hand over the universe to
future generations in an improved and morally enhanced
condition?” “I do,” said Charlene, “I most truthfully do.”
But before the minister could pronounce them husband and
wife, a hulking brute of a man in dirty waders and a peaked
cap came galumphing towards them, bellowing, “What the
bloody hell fire is going on here?” The minister had sidled
away very smartly and was pretending to admire the
aardvark. “We’re getting married,” said Scott. “Not in my
zoo you’re not,” said the man. “Have you no respect for
these creatures, flaunting your humanness in front of them?
Can’t you see how defeated and ashamed they are? Have
you looked the orang-utan in the face?” Scott said, “But
we’re nature lovers.” The zookeeper guffawed. “You’re a
pair of hypocrites. Now fuck off.” Charlene’s heart sank to
the sea bed of her stomach. She hadn’t wanted to hear a
word like that on her wedding day. “Go on, leave this
place. The capybara needs its toenails cutting, and when I
come back I want to find you supremacists gone.”
It rained and there were no taxis. The silk dress Charlene
had ordered from a tailor in Wushi began to perish in front
of her eyes, and the scar on his back where Scott had once
been treated for shingles began to throb and burn. Back in
the house they argued like flamethrowers. But later, after
two bottles of chilled Veuve Clicquot and a tray of Dublin
Bay oysters in bison grass vodka, they pushed the coffee
table to one side and in front of a glowing fire dispensed
with restraint for the first time in their lives. For the heart
shall never relinquish its claim on the crown, and from
love’s furnace shall the golden infant be born. And I
should know, because my name is Sean Wain, Australian
test cricketer, peerless spinner of a red leather ball and their
beautiful bastard son.
Stealing from his mother’s house, Edward came
across a handwritten note tucked away in a scallop-
shell purse.
“As a child, Edward liked to climb trees in the
plantation and make dams in the stream at the foot
of the garden, and once carved a toy rifle out of a
table leg. But right from the very beginning there
was a craving emptiness in Edward’s life. Board
games and soft toys, space-hoppers and bikes—the
more it was given the deeper and wider it grew. All
sweetness was rancid on Edward’s tongue and all
teachers and doctors were assassins and spies. All
handshakes were tentacles, all compliments were
veiled threats, all statements and assessments were
worthless confessions obtained under torture, all
care plans were Byzantine conspiracies of evil
intent. Awake and asleep Edward stalked the
battlements alone, meeting the emissaries of peace
with the point of a bayonet, beading friendship in
the crosshairs of suspicion, scanning the open plane
from the watchtower so as to ride out and beat until
dead the first flames of tenderness or the sparks of
love. He is survived by his mother, Eleanor, from
whom he took everything, but who would give it all
again just to let him scream his agonies into her face
or pound his fury into her breast one final time. He
left no note.”
Edward opened the wardrobe, which was empty
except for the greatcoat, which slumped towards
him then engulfed him as he hauled it from the rail.
The huge, overburdening coat with its stiff, turf-like
cloth, and its triceratops collar, and its mineshaft
pockets, and the drunken punches of its flailing
sleeves. Through the neat bullet hole in the back,
daylight looked distant and pinched, like the world
through a dusty telescope held back-to-front to the
eye. And there Edward wept, crouched in the
foxhole, huddled in a ball under the greatcoat,
draped in the flag.
The elf said to Kevin, “You’re probably wondering why
I’m sitting here at your breakfast table this morning,
helping myself to your condiments. Kevin, I’m here to
make you a very special offer—let’s call it a once-in-a-
lifetime opportunity. Today you’re forty-four years and
thirty-six days old, and that’s exactly how long you’ve got
left! Let me save you the mental arithmetic: you’re going
to live till you’re eighty-eight years and seventy-two days,
and you’ve just crossed the halfway line. It’s what we
elves like to call ‘the tipping point.’ So, Kevin, as of now,
you can either carry on regardless and pretend we never
met. Or say the word, and I can flip the hourglass on its
head. Do you see what I’m saying? So instead of getting
older you’ll be heading back in the other direction. I’ve got
all the forms—you just sign here, here and here and it’s
goodbye incontinence, hello Ibiza! What do you say,
Kevin?”