News!

WWG Young Writers Competition Results 2025

It’s been a delight reading all the entries to our Young Writers Competition from across RBWM! The judges have now created a shortlist of young writers. Read on to find out who has been shortlisted…

Let’s celebrate together

Our shortlisted writers are all invited to The Award Ceremony at 7pm on Saturday 11th October at The Old Court, Windsor. The event promises to be an absolute blast with amazing hosts, readings, interviews and lots of well-deserved clapping!

Every shortlisted entrant will receive a free ticket to the ceremony, plus two complimentary tickets for family and friends. Additional tickets can be purchased via the Old Court website for just £7 for adults and £5 for children.

Note for the Award Ceremony

  • Under 16s must be accompanied by an adult.
  • There will be a photographer at the event. Photographs will be used on various websites and other media. 

Subject to permission, prize-winning entries will be published on our website after the Award Ceremony.

WWG Young Writers Competition 2025 – Shortlist

By category in alphabetical order.

Y6-7 Stories

NameTitle of pieceSchool
Emma WhapplesThe Silent StreetClaire’s Court, Maidenhead
Harmony Carro-TevfikRunning AwayClaire’s Court, Maidenhead
Lexii YangFalse RecallRBWM resident
Orla CreswellThe Mysterious EncounterCharters School
Tharuli RatnayakaThe Forgotten SoulsDedworth Middle School
Theo Anton-LiThe End of the BeginningPapplewick, Ascot

Y6-7 Poems

Freddie SmartMy Dog Hector is The Best Dog in the WorldDesborough College
Julia JohnsonMy Bonnie and meSt George’s School
Ruby MoudrakGreatness of GratitudeSt Edwards Royal Free
Sophie McCabeScarecrowSt Edwards Royal Free

Y8-10 Stories

Darcey KelsallThe RunnerSt Edwards Royal Free
Lisa PietrzakHis Head Fell For HerSt Edwards Royal Free
Michael Aitchison-AnastasioReaching the Top of the GlobeThe Windsor Boys’ School
Sadie BellWhen I DanceClaire’s Court, Maidenhead 
Tabby SpenceThe LetterClaire’s Court, Maidenhead
Tianna FlemingFinding myself The Windsor Girls’ School

Y8-10 Poems

Aditi AroraWritten in the StarsMarist School, Sunninghill 
James OdgersFriend or FoeCharters School
Saad AzizGaza in my heartDesborough College

Y11+ Stories

Cyrus PoonawallaKiteEton College
Poppy KnowlesThe Man With No Face PhenomenonThe Windsor Girls’ School
Zakhar NavalnyyThe LighthouseEton College

Y11+ Poems

Cyrus PoonawallaDining HallEton College
Poppy KnowlesSelf-JustificationThe Windsor Girls’ School

A huge thank you to our sponsors

Without your help, we couldn’t have made this competition happen.

Prince Philip Trust Fund – the fund makes a real difference to the quality of life of people from communities across the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead. It focuses support towards disability, health, the elderly, families, children and young people, those in social need and the arts.

Chiltern Bookshops, not only for being brilliant independent bookshops, but also for their generous donation towards our prizes.

You can visit their shops in Gerrards Cross or Chorleywood for a unique bookshop experience including some fantastic author events.

LEGOLAND® – their Windsor Resort is a unique family theme park where visitors can take to the road, soar through the skies, and sail the seas in complete safety.  With interactive rides, attractions, live shows, building workshops, and driving schools, not to mention a staggering 80 million LEGO®bricks, all set in 150 acres of beautiful parkland. 

Tesco – one of the UK’s largest supermarket chains, offering groceries, clothing, electronics, and more. Tesco operates various store formats, including Express and Extra, catering to diverse customer needs. It also emphasizes sustainability and community support initiatives.

News!

WWG Young Writers Competition Results

What a fantastic response we’ve had to our Young Writers Competition from the RBWM community! We’ve received a wonderfully diverse range of short stories and poems and our huge thanks go out to everyone for the time and effort they put in.

The judging panel were both entertained and impressed by the entries and have now created a shortlist of young writers who will all be written to either directly or via the school through which they submitted their entry. Letters are being sent out the week commencing 2nd September but in the meantime… drum-roll please… you can see the shortlisted writers in the table below.

Let’s celebrate success together

Our shortlisted writers are all invited to The Award Ceremony which will be on Saturday 12th October at The Old Court, Windsor at 1830 for 1900 start. The event will last about two-and-a-half hours and will include interviews with published writers, Essie Fox and Philip Kavvadias.

After a short interval in the proceedings, the awards and prizes will be announced and presented. Each of our shortlisted entrants will be awarded one of the following for their category:

  • First prize
  • Second prize
  • Highly Commended
  • Commended.

First and second prize winners will have their submissions read out, either by themselves if they wish, or by our professional actor Philip Delancy.

Every shortlisted entrant will receive a free ticket to the ceremony, plus two complimentary tickets for family and friends. Additional tickets can be purchased via the Old Court website for just £7 for adults and £5 for children.

Note for the Award Ceremony

  • Under 16s must be accompanied by an adult.
  • There will be a photographer at the event. Photographs will be used on various websites and other media. 

Subject to permission, prize-winning entries will be published on our website after the Award Ceremony.

We’d like to thank our sponsors

Prince Philip Trust Fund makes a real difference to the quality of life of people from communities across the RBWM. It focuses support towards disability, health, the elderly, families, children and young people, those in social need and the arts.

Chiltern Bookshops are brilliant independent bookshops with branches in Gerrards Cross and Chorleywood that provide a unique bookshop experience including some fantastic author events.

WWG Young Writers Competition 2024 – Shortlist

Short Story Categories

11-12 YearsTitleSchool
Aurelia BrunoHeatwaveUpton House
Elliott MarshallThe Secrets She Left BehindSt Edwards
Jessica CostaThe Velvet WaistcoatSt Edwards
Lexii YangSilent AffectionsDedworth
Manahil ZeeshanHaunted Helter SkelterUpton House
Purna HewageThe Mysterious TrailTrevelyan
   
13-15 Years  
Alice MartinThe Devil’s MaskSt Edwards
Elena LittlewoodHeadacheSt Edwards
Jack LinesThe Glare of WarLVS Ascot
Myra ShakeelFive More Minutes
Poppy KnowlesHot Air BalloonsWGS
   
16-18 Years  
Kitty SealesDaybreakWGS
Mathilda HopperOur Peaceful Enclave
Nishi RathodThe Security MinisterWGS

Poetry Categories

11-12 YearsTitleSchool
Ella Boutall, Desiree Lawson and Ivey-Ann EatonBooksDedworth
Humphrey Najeeb GunnThe Autumn BreezeUpton House
Jessica CostaSwallowSt Edwards
Lily DanielsThe Train of HappinessSt Edwards
Sophie McCabeThe SeasonsSt Edwards
13-15 Years  
Alice MartinStar Struck LoveSt Edwards
Aria McGeachieCampfire TapestryTrevelyan
Poppy KnowlesThe ArtistWGS
16-18 Years  
Charles DraneSongs of DespairCollege
Liam LekaFlowerCollege
Matilda HopperAll You Need is a Library

Writing tasks

Spring has Sprung

And so we penned some short passages…

Spring

by Robyn Kayes

The lightning bolt shattered the sky as the spring storm took control of the land. Up on the highlands and down by the river, thunder roared overhead, and a ferocious wind destroyed all in its path. By the morning after, the overnight storm was a distant memory, as bright sunshine laughed at the sodden earth.  Crowds of daffodils appeared out of nowhere, and blossoms heralded a new beginning. The days stretched longer, and hopeful thoughts eased the gloom of winter. Summer gladness cast its shining fate upon the world, and dreams appeared to be achievable.


Hello Spring

by Phil Appleton

Hello Spring, Winter here. I thought I’d send you a message before you start overwhelming us with warm sunshine, smugness and birdsong. 

It’s all very well to get started in March when the days are longer, when some of us have the dark and dismal months of November, December and January to contend with. I have to try to get snow organised for Christmas while I get bad press for icy roads and people freezing to death. 

My energy bills are astronomic while all you have to think about is whether the daffodils will come out early and when baby animals are going to appear. I get slush, mud and dead leaves while you get lots of nice green foliage everywhere.

Still, you’re not always so clever. According to a Facebook study, couples are more likely to break up in the Spring and babies born in the Spring are more likely to develop schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression and anorexia.

So, spare a moment to think about all the hard work I’ve had to put in so that you can get all the glory. You don’t even know what Seasonal Affective Disorder is, do you? But I’m not done yet; there’s another week to go and it was snowing this morning… 

Photo by Kat Smith, Pexels

Writing tasks

Halloween Spooky Stories

Our October challenge was to write a short piece about Halloween. Lots of fun was had with spooky goings on. See what we came up with. And a little piece of advice… it’s probably best not to read these after dark…

[cue spooky laughter]


In The Bleak October by Vivien Eden

I sensed it before I felt it. It was whilst I was explaining in the written form why I was the perfect candidate to lurk unseen between the hours of two and six am whilst generating tiny magical clinks in the darkness which transformed empty glass bottles into ghostly milky-white ones. Doorstep sorcery. The depravity of society at that hour would indeed be something to behold, but I needed to nourish my blood. My usual fodder was proving more difficult to secure these days. The tapping of my long thin fingers slowed, then stopped. The abundant hairs pricked up on my arms. Unbeknown to me, it had entered the house.

It caused there to be still, heavy air all around me. I didn’t want to inhale it as I knew what it would do to me. And if it were to touch me, the sensation as it reddened my skin… it didn’t bear thinking about. I pulled down my sleeves to safely cocoon my hands. I had to get out of that room. Retreating upstairs seemed the safest option – downstairs in the cellar was certainly the last place one would ever want to be in a situation like this and, as I recalled, mine was currently devoid of a working lightbulb. I rushed past a blurred view of home-grown garlic bulbs on the windowsill whilst the crucifix on the landing wall taunted me. Was it even possible for Jesus to save me? Those who I had believed would look after me certainly hadn’t lately. My faith was waning.

Sadly, this was not a completely unexpected scenario. I had done my best to prepare for it – shrouding my body in layers of protection for it always happened about the time of All Hallows’ Eve. I ascended and traversed my residence from north to south. Entering the bedchamber, I glanced outside and the view of the sun-drenched apple-tree in my very own Garden of Eden imprinted itself upon my retina. I blinked and there it remained. Distracted by this vision, it took a moment before the horror revealed itself to me – for I had left the door ajar! I hastened to shut it to reinforce the physical barrier between me, and it. I had bought myself, what, five minutes, maybe half an hour before it managed to find me.

There was nothing for it. I edged towards the window, towards the holy light. As it started to seep through to my flesh, I experienced a fiery feeling. It was the most euphoric of times as I basked in that light – all my troubles forgotten. Then it faded and I felt the vulnerability and bleakness of my predicament: to let the coldness take me in its grasp… or to turn the heating on.


A Halloween Mystery by Robyn Kayes

The crisp autumn air fills her mind with pleasantness, as she jogs along the road. The earlier uneasiness has disappeared, the sky is blue, and she feels more able to face all her demons, and defeat them single-handedly. The pep talk keeps her going until she reaches the main road leading to her house. The clear light begins to fade as she opens her gate. A voice cuts through the gloom. ‘Hello, miss, trick-or-treat?’

‘Who’s there? Billy, is that you?’ she calls, trying to calm herself. Billy is the 9-year-old child living in the next-door house. ‘Or should I say, Captain, is that you?’ as she admires his pirate’s costume.

‘Yes, miss, it’s me. Mum hasn’t come home from work yet and I don’t like today, it’s very scary.’

‘Well, it’s Halloween so it’s supposed to be scary. I also get very nervous as it gets darker.’ Uh-oh, she thinks, why did I blurt that out to a child, he’s looking for protection, not confessions!

As they walk up the path to the front door, she says, ‘Come along in, Billy, I’ve got some sweets ….’ Suddenly, a black cat appears in the garden, meowing and hissing as it races up to them. ‘Where did he come from?’ says Billy, nervously. ‘Is he yours?’ she says, simultaneously. And they both laugh, and the scariness disappears, as they ponder on the origins of the cat.

‘Actually, he’s mine!’ A tall man stands at the gate, in full evening dress. He lifts his top-hat as his black cloak swirls around him. ‘May I introduce you to “Emperor Nero”, or just plain “Nero”, if you prefer. He disappeared and I’ve been looking for him. I moved into the house over the road a few days ago, and he’s not used to the new home yet.’ 

‘I know you, says Billy. ‘You’re… Mago the Magician. You were at my friend’s party.’.

‘Well spotted, Captain. Indeed, I am, and please introduce me to your lovely friend.’

‘This is Miss Terry, she’s my teacher,’ replies Billy, as the magician bows and shakes her hand.

‘Aha! A beautiful “mystery”! I’m Jamie, by the way,’ says the magician, with a wink.

‘And I’m Teresa, or Terry for short. Great costumes, both of you!’ She laughs as she offers them both some sweets.


Taking Sweets From Strangers by Mike Moss

Gerald opened the door.

‘Trick or treat!’ Five children, in unison not harmony, dressed as witches and things.

‘Trick or treat,’ Gerald repeated slowly. ‘And what is the trick?’

‘We’ll spray your house with gunk,’ spat a zombie, probably female.

‘Well, it’s treat. Here you are, have a couple each.’ Gerald held out a white paper bag and the children took their sweets, wrapped up mints, and ran off to the next street, giggling. Gerald watched them go, a sickly smile on his face, before shutting the door. It wasn’t long before the door bell rang again.

‘Happy Halloween!’ Another collection of zombies and witches.

‘No tricks, then?’

‘No, sir, just happy Halloween.’

Gerald held out a brown paper bag and the children took their sweets, assorted mini choc bars, thanked him and walked on.

This was repeated a few more time before things quietened down and Gerald, satisfied, put his feet up until midnight. Every so often he would chuckle to himself. Trick or treaters, the white bag, happy Hallowe’eners, the brown bag, their choice and, boy, what a choice.

The following morning the local news was awash with the number of children rushed to A&E. Every newscast, every half hour, the toll had risen, ten, twelve, fourteen critically ill, fifteen now, one dead. Parents were told to remove all sweets from children and call the Police, who would come and collect them. Queues formed at schools as teachers inspected children’s bags for contraband.

Detective Sergeant Emily Malone had been called just after midnight. She started to compile a list of affected children and the routes they took the previous evening. It was laborious, pressured. More police were drafted in. A chief inspector arrived to take control. At last, a breakthrough. A child who survived remembered where she had been given the mint that made her ill. She gave the address to Emily. The last house on Nelson St, with a red door, next to the gas works. The man said he was called Gerald.

Emily took two officers and drove to Nelson Street as dusk crept over the horizon. She pulled up near the end house and sent one PC around the back. Emily knocked on the door, though it was blue, not red like the girl had told her. A grey-haired woman answered. Emily flashed her warrant card. 

‘I need to speak to someone called Gerald.’ 

The woman looked puzzled. ‘I think you’re at the wrong house, dear.’ 

As Emily stepped into the house, the woman called out, ‘Bob, the police are here. They’re looking for someone called Gerald.’ 

There were two large suitcases in the hall. Emily pointed. ‘Are you going somewhere?’ 

‘No, just got back. From a wedding in South Africa.’ 

Emily frowned and asked for ‘Bob’s’ ID. Sure enough his name was Robert. 

‘The only Gerald I ever knew was Gerald Manning,’ volunteered Bob, ‘but that was a long time ago. Probably before your time.’ 

Emily shook her head, impatiently. This was not helping. Bob continued. 

‘You know, the child murderer. Did terrible things. Poisoned the children. You lot finally caught him, but too late for his poor victims. He hanged himself in gaol.’ 

‘That’s right,’ joined in Bob’s wife, ‘good riddance, and to think he lived next door, and his front door was red as if that wasn’t warning enough.’ 

‘Red? Next door?’ asked Emily. So we’ve come to the wrong house, she thought, but hang on, this is the end house. 

‘Of course,‘ continued Bob, ‘after everything that happened they demolished his house. It used to be the end house.’ 

Emily went outside and looked at the space where Mannings’ house had been. There must be some mistake, she thought.  A sudden chill made her shiver and the hairs on the back of her neck stood up as she heard distant laughter echo into the dark night. 


The Witch by Wendy Gregory

I awoke with a start to the smell of burning flesh, charred meat on a barbecue. I sniffed. With horror I realised that the burning flesh was my own. It was mingled with the smell of thick, suffocating smoke and cloying body sweat.

I jolted awake and sat up. Nothing. My bedroom looked the same. I sniffed, at the room, at myself, but the soothing scent of lavender was all I could detect. Relief swept through me. It was a bad dream, nothing more. I lay back down,  closed my eyes and contemplated whether people could smell things in dreams. Mm. I must Google it later. I drifted off.

Starting to surface I was aware of noise – crackling, hissing, screaming. Again the shock of realising that the screams were coming from me. Then shouting: a man’s voice. “Do it in the name of God! Finish It!” I couldn’t breathe, something was pressing hard on my neck. I opened my eyes. They stung. I was drenched in sweat. Christ what an awful dream!

I needed a shower and a strong coffee. In the bathroom I looked at myself in the mirror. My eyes were bloodshot, my hair matted. But what the fuck was wrong with my neck? I had a choker of purplish blue bruising, with a large, round medallion centre front. It looked for all the world as if I’d been garotted.


St. Elmo’s by Kanthé

It was back in ‘94 when I bought my first house. Saint Elmo’s it was called. I later found out that it was named after a saint who was tortured to death…Lovely eh? One month before we married – we got the keys. It used to be a farmhouse – hard to imagine, I know, a farmhouse smack bang in the bustle of Telford. But there it was; complete with outbuildings of faded blue corrugated steel out at the back and two fields of pasture at the side for cows.

All that’s gone now of course – the cows and the farming. We’re just left with a couple of manky old out-buildings falling apart; and a big square plot of land. The undergrowth overgrowing – the thick dark brambles and weeds rising up and reclaiming what it had lost.

I remember as a child – the two fields and the little bordered path that divided them. Walking up and down it countless times as a shortcut…gathering hazelnuts in the summer. But strangely I never remembered the house itself. Even where the cinder path split right in front of it. That house was a big blank hulking space in my mind.

It was a strange house. Actually 2 different houses joined together. An odd mish-mash of the old and new that suited us fine. I liked the cottage side with its big blackened  beam in the upstairs bedroom ceiling looking down. My wife liked fitting out the oak kitchen with its terracotta tiles and latticed windows. Ripping out the old, putting in the new; that was her.

It had originally been two single white cottages side by side. But one had been burnt out after some terrible incident  and the new modern wing was built in its place. So that you could have the marvels of a modern bathroom suite and indoor toilets. Modern luxury to forget a fragile broken past. A past stretching well over 200 years on the cottage side.

Two sisters originally owned the farmhouse – they toiled the land during the war. Their husbands – killed in Europe. When one of them died – the other couldn’t cope and the place was sold; eventually…to me – ramshackled and over-run. I got it cheap and spent my days before my marriage cutting the never- ending grass in the big square garden at the back – over 1.3 acres in total. Pruning the hedgerow at the front as October blazed around me.

My fiance, who stayed on in Wolves until our wedding, came up to help out – occasionally. She found a portrait of one of the ladies in the attic. An old woman wearing Victorian black. It looked grim and sepia with age. My beloved wouldn’t have it in the house. I ended up putting it in the summerhouse with the rest of the odds and sods and looked up at the house looming dark against the night sky. One baleful light in the downstairs cottage sitting-room as I made my way back into my empty old house and locked all the doors and windows…twice.

As I settle down with my cocoa, I can still hear the soft whisper of footsteps in the cottage bedroom above. The narrow door creaks open and the sound of aged footsteps coming down the stairs. Matching the creak of my armchair rocking…the gold handle of the sitting room door turning as I ponder how you can remove an image of an unwanted person but the spirit, as ever…remains…to reclaim that which is…her’s.


Halloween 2022

It was Tuesday, bin collection day. My downstairs neighbours Jill and John’s black and blue wheelies were outside the house, John’s refusal to share them apparently down to his OCD.

‘Morning Jill. How’s your mum?’

Moving on down the road I saw Patricia slowly walking her family’s aged and tiredlooking golden Labradors, the dogs probably weeks away from being put down.

‘Hiya.’

Then Dan, the friend who had been a best buddy but was now ensconced in a seemingly idyllic relationship with a Polish girl, and newly anti-social.

‘So, when are you getting married then?’

The bin lorry appeared in the distance, holding up the traffic in looming and noisy
presence. Patrick, the deep-thinking IT manager hurried past.

‘Hi mate, in a rush as usual?’

From number 48 emerged Nurse Jane, shouting a goodbye to her home-working
husband.

‘Hey Jane, coffee soon?’

Cars moved forward and reversed out of parking spaces, schoolchildren and parents emerged from homes as life slowly rippled through the neighbourhood.

My phone displayed its final message to the world: “In your breath, you probably have around one atom that was at one point a part of any breath ever breathed in human history.” Life really is too short.

Each human breath contains approximately 101,000,000,000,000,000,000 atoms, which means that even in our well-mixed atmosphere. You probably have around one atom that was at one point a part of any breath ever breathed in human history*

*Source: Forbes


Photo by James Wheeler

And if you’d like to move on from Halloween pretty promptly after that, remember Windsor Christmas Tales is available to order now directly from us!

The official book launch is only 2 weeks away! Come and join us on 10th Nov and get yourself a great price on Windsor Christmas Tales. Free event. Author signings.

Writing tasks

A Walk in the Park, by Robyn Kayes

My name is Teddy, and I’m a Labradoodle. Today, my mum and I had a lovely time on our walk. It was warm, and sometimes there was a bit of rain, which I enjoyed as it cooled me down a bit. I shook myself to clear away the water, and I laughed to myself to see my mum’s face. Then I met two friends and we ran about the park, chasing each other. It was great fun. My mum spoke to the humans that belonged to my new friends. Then she gave me some treats and some water. On the way home, the cat from next door ran in front of us and I started to bark at it because it always hisses at me, and I don’t like that. But it ran away very quickly and finally we got home. My mum gave me a bath and then dried me with a towel. I lay down in my basket in front of the fire and had a lovely sleep. When I woke up, I had my food and some water, and then went out to the garden, for a little run around the rose bushes. When I came back inside, my mum was talking to someone on her ‘fone-thingy’.

“Oh mum, I had a dreadful time on my walk today. The weather was miserable, it was so cloudy and then it started to rain, and I got wet. Teddy kept running away, and splashed into some puddles and got all muddy, and then when he came back to me, he shook himself, so all the mud landed up on me. And you’ll never guess who I bumped into with all that mud all over me! It could only be my ex and his new girlfriend, with their two big Labradors who chased Teddy all over and he got even more muddy. So eventually we came home, and I had to give him a bath, and got wet again in the process. I had to light a fire because the heating wasn’t working, so I had to call the plumber, but he can only come tomorrow afternoon. I couldn’t have a shower, but I managed to heat up some water so that I could have a wash. Then I made some soup, which helped. Now I just want to forget that this day ever happened.”

Uncategorized

September Showcase

A selection of work by Kulwant Randhawa

As, it is currently September I was reminded of this section in my first novel, which I am currently writing with the working title “My Own Ghost story” (I hope to change it, when a better title comes up.   I have enclosed the following extract for your interest:

***********

You know, I’m sat here today – Wednesday, September 19th 2018 reading that free newspaper / rag called Metro available all around London and there’s a headline on page 8 that’s too silly for words. It’s guaranteed to grab your attention – to get you to read an article that occupies less than a quarter of a page.

The idea of a secret romance grabs my attention, as it would most people, and I read the article. It seems a load of nonsense about a pair of Muslim parents who found out their daughter was having an illicit relationship with a guy from outside their community and went around to see him in order to sort it out; to sort him out. They did this by telling the fella, and I quote, that ‘they were dangerous because they were Muslims.’ 

I could imagine reading this out to Alya when we were alone in the refectory at Highsmith. I would snort in derision and she would look at me with that half-smile and say: 

“But we are … We so are.”

“You’re … what?

“Dark and Dangerous … and full of injustice. A black flag with the minimum of white – we’re born and die with a sword in our hand.”

That phrase came to haunt me in my waking hours and in my dreams.

I dreamt that Alya was on that beach. All dressed in black – from head to foot. With a long blade that curved in the bare sunlight. A curved sword in her hand. Drawing something unintelligible in the pale sand. A series of curves and squiggles in the pale sand. It looked Arabic even when viewed upside down.

“Have you heard of Jihad?” she would ask me.

“Vaguely.” I said. “Isn’t it a personal struggle.” 

“It can be. But much more fun if we make it world-wide – she smiled at me. A personal grievance writ large.”

And here’s the worst part of the dream. It changes in the ways dreams are wont to. From the merely unsettling to something much darker – to something much more real.

Suddenly we’re standing on top one of a very tall building. There’s a virtually identical building in the middle distance. I can see the Empire State Building in the far distance – in all its art deco glory, glinting in the morning light. This building is so familiar – after all, it’s from where King Kong went tumbling to his death. The familiarity of this building tells me where I am. This must be New York. Now I can see the island of Manhattan, the Hudson River and the Statue of Liberty enshrouded on a morning mist that’s lifting.

I am on the top of one of the World Trade Centre towers. Wasn’t this where Hitchcock sneaked in too film a scene with Jimmy Stewart for the movie Vertigo? I’m not too sure – maybe, maybe not.  But one has to admire the cool, calculated sneakiness of Hitchcock – his overwhelming desire to get What he wants, When he wants, makes me feel uncomfortable. What will people do to get what they want? To justify what they want.

Just knowing this fills me with unease – with actual vertigo. I know how much I Want. I am very high up and it’s a very long way down to solid ground. For a moment the very building seems to slip and slide – to turn over like my stomach. And I haven’t even really looked down yet.

Gosh! I’m so high up. It looks like I can almost see the rim of the earth curve away from me. As if the whole scene is seen / photographed through a fish-eye lense. When I am so far away from the fishes in New York harbour. I can’t even see the people on the ground – just insubstantial shapes and the vague movement of vehicles making their way through the narrow confines of the city.

I wonder if this this is the way God sees us – vague, insubstantial shapes that he can obliterate at will. Ant-like creatures scuttling around in our own teeming ant-hill.

But it’s a lovely autumn morning; clear and bright. And getting clearer and brighter with each moment. The air is cool and calm way up here. But there’s always that growing sense of unease that’s always prevalent in these kinds of dreams. 

There’s an airplane that looks like a toy plane banking towards us. Like a toy plane that someone’s just thrown into the air. It’s a jet liner – the sunlight glancing off it’s large metal frame. Growing larger and larger in my view.

There’s something scary about jet liners. How big and heavy and substantial they look – how can something that big and heavy stay up in the air? I just know that Newtonian mechanics would have a problem with it.

And what about all those people on board? Tens or hundreds of people huddled up in that pressurised tin can. Being held up by … what? By fuck all – that’s what.

And it’s coming towards us – growing bigger and bigger with each moment. Until it seems to take over and become the whole scene in front of us. I step back. 

 At the last moment, it – the plane turns – it just misses us, glides serenely past and slams into the neighbouring twin tower.

There’s a fiery bloom of igniting aviation fuel and a jagged hole in the building opposite. The tower we’re on judders in sympathy but remains tall and resolute. For a moment there is no sound. I look at Alya in concern and she looks just as resolute scratching a jagged hole with the tip of her sword. A look of grimm death on her face.

Ignoring my cries – as if I am miles away. Out of earshot.

There are news helicopters in the air now covering the story. Calling it a terrible, terrible accident. The ugly big hole in the twin building opposite is smoking calmly.

Just when I think it can’t get any worse. I can hear another set of engines revving and straining and there is another airliner on the horizon. Where the fuck did that one come from? This one is coming straight for this building and at the last moment turns to tear a gaping hole through my reality. Through the building’s reality. There’s the same fireball – but this one is a lengthening cigar-shaped missile that disintegrates everything. Even the scream in my throat.

I awake on the floor, tangled in my sheets; trying to make sense of it all. I cannot. 

Because you know what makes this nightmare scarier than most – I first had this dream in September 1987 – a full 14 years before 9-11.

***********

I WAS THERE … THE REAL NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET

 by Kanthé

Oh boy. This is a strange one. If you’re reading this – you should know it’s been a 100 years since I died. I bet you’ve all got flying cars by now. I left this transcript with a solicitor’s firm that I have done good business with in the past; with the sole stipulation – only to be opened 100 years after my death.

The event that I am talking about happened in the 1960s in the USA. Me, my brother and one other was hired by the Sicilians for a job. My brother and the other guy are long dead. It’s just me left now to tell the tale – and maybe that’s the way it should be.

It was just one day’s work for which we were handsomely rewarded. We flew into Texas via Miami and landed on a small private airstrip. It was a gorgeous, late autumn morning in November – although it had been raining earlier.

We travelled to the site in a white Chevy Impala with dirty windows. It was quite tough getting there on time – there were so many people; waving flags and banners and shit. Not all of them nice! God … even then there was a feeling that something heavy was gonna go down. Anyway, we got to the site – a railway yard; toured around for a bit and then parked up by the picket fence. The uniforms we were given were good – quite authentic. My brother made his way up to the Dal-Tex building and the other guy stationed himself down by the underpass.

I always use a Mauser 7.65 – you can’t beat German engineering. Poor Alek, with his 6.5 Mannlicher-Carcano – the Italians were shit at tooling – those bastard things always kept on jamming. Anyway, Alek couldn’t hit a Mack truck at 50 paces with that thing!

You know I met Alek once before; that Bannister and Ferrie too. Bannister used to be in the FBI and said he was there when they got that low-life John Dillinger. Well, I know someone else who’s as Dead as Dillinger now. The guy that I clipped was bigger than some two-bit hood. Anyway, Bannister was nothin’ more than a racist nut-job. Ferrie too – always lookin’ like some weirdo with his toupee and fake eyebrows. He said he was working on a cure for cancer … can you believe that shit? Anyway, it was at one of those illegal training camps they organised for the Cubans near the Louisiana Keys.

The site we chose was perfect. A turkey shoot someone said. Triangulation of fire – that was the key. But let it be known – the kill-shot was mine. All mine.

So was the boot-print on the fender, the cigarette stubs by the picket fence while we waited. Then it was a slow squeeze of the trigger, a red halo and it’s all over. Within 10 minutes we were out of the city and away. Out to Ontario, over to Paris then Marseilles and then home.

The waiting was the worst. Waiting for the target car as it came down Main Street, turned right onto Houston and then that dog-leg turn into Elm Street. That was when the real nightmare started. I still dream about it now.

There was a guy to the front and left of me filming the whole thing on his cine camera. Years later, it was bought up by Time magazine and it became the most expensive home movie in history. Can you fuckin believe that shit?

Many people may ask – why did I do it?  People lookin’ dumb; dumb-founded.

At the time – I was young; I quite enjoyed the silent notoriety.

I even quite liked the guy, actually. He was smart, intelligent, charismatic; classy wife too. But you know, I used to reason … a job is a job is a job … you have to be professional about these things. A soldier remains a soldier. Plus, I was the best and I took a pride in my work. I did not lose any sleep … not at the time.

That Oliver Stone son-of-a-bitch even made a movie about it. I remember going to see it with my son and my grandson. Of course, he never mentioned me in the film … Pinko Bastard! Ha! Ha!  I remember he threw some accusations around – but like the Beard would say … ‘close but no cigar!’ Ha! Ha!

Of course, I was itching to say something then. Can you imagine watching that and wanting to say: “It was me, God damn it!  This was back in the 90’s. But of course, I couldn’t!  I would have been dead – so would my son, my grandson – every member of my family.

I want it on record that I wasn’t responsible for his brother’s death or that black guy at that motel. Both very amateur – in my professional opinion. Nowadays – every Tom, Dick and Harriet is at it. No professional pride anymore. Everyone’s just after a quick buck.

But what about Alek? I hear you ask.

Alek was an agent, you know. What we call a Red Cut-Out, you know – a flaming big red jam-pot, put out there by the Agency to see what kinda pinko / commie degenerate flies gathered around that piece of shit! And plenty did, believe me.

That photo of him in his backyard with the gun, the rifle and the newspaper … ‘HUNTER OF FACISTS … Ha! Ha! Ha!’he wrote on the back. He always liked a joke did Alek!

A long time afterwards, when I knew better, I went to Arlington Cemetery; to pay my respects, I guess. I’ve killed a lot of people in my time, on and off the battlefield … and I’ve never really thought twice. It was just what soldiers did. He was the only one I regret … now.

When you’re young, death feels pretty inconsequential – part of a soldier’s life, I guess. As you get older, it feels different. As I looked at that eternal flame … I thought life’s not eternal. It can be snatched away, blown away by a kid in a man’s body … thinkin it’s just another job.

I think that’s when things started turnin shitty – for me; and for America too.  Goodbye the swingin 60’s and welcome to a hard, new reality – shaped like a golden bullet; and it’s been shootin through America – through the 70’s, 80’s, 90’s and into the new millennia.

There’s no retirement plan for a hired gun. You’re always watchin your back – or payin someone else to. The money soon runs out. Towards the end, I got diagnosed with bone cancer. It feels like something foreign eating away at you. Being Catholic, I thought it was God’s Judgement eating away at me. Amends have to be made, you know; before it’s Too Late.

This document is an attempt at Atonement.

Let it be understood – I was (just) the trigger. The blood (his blood) is on my hands … it’s taken this long to accept the guilt (and not shrug it off as ‘just another job’).

But the brains of the operation are still out there. The organisations are still out there … weaving their black arts – doing their black operations.

NOTE – I can’t give you specific names. Everybody operates on a ‘needs to know basis’. But I can leave you with the clues and code names that will lead you to the source … and believe me, it goes right to the top.

Firstly, look to a place called Red Bird Airfield – two journeys from and to that site in November.

My personal handler was known as Hard Hat and I was Badge Man. I think there is a super enhanced photograph of the two of us together at the picket fence the moment I fired – my face obscured by the muzzle flash.

The liaisons between us – the blue collars, and them – the white collars, was someone known as Grey Bishop. I’ve a feeling that this is a 2 Man – I don’t know, I’ve never met either. Only heard it mentioned once and that was over the phone.

Col. Fletcher Prouty’s Mr. X sounds right about the government putting out the FAKE NEWS (see Mr Trump … it was the government that started all this FAKE NEWS bullshit! Ha! Ha!) and Cyril Wecht was right about the sabotaged autopsy.

That just leaves those with most to gain – politically and financially. Follow the Red Bird connection and the Red Birdseeds. That Texan polecat was quick to plonk himself on the throne. Standing there taking the Oath of Office, next to the ex-First Lady wearing her husband’s blood and brains over her nice pink suit.

It was a bloody disgrace – I can see that now.

The tragedies that that family suffered: older brother dead, younger brother assassinated. Then his own son, bearing his name, dies in an air-crash. A whole political dynasty crashed and burned … WOW!

That just leaves me … and my regrets.

I can’t excuse myself from that tragedy – I was very much involved and I am ashamed.

*********** THE END ***********

© Kanthé 2017

Bibi

My grand-mother could sew.

Boy she could sew – even when she hit 100 and beyond;

Sat on her bed with the summer streaming in

She would pick a stitch, unpick a stitch.

Not even using her glasses sometimes

To thread a needle – a flash of light in her withered hands.

I would sit and watch her at her hobby; 

Cussing her husband, my grand-father – her hubby;

So quiet laid out beside her,

Snoring softly the evening song.

Her moaning and deriding his fallow behaviour,

Her fingers pressing and preening the cloth

of her underclothing;

Always a remark about someone or other;

Always keeping busy at whatever kept her busy,

A busybody that had a view on anything – on everything that was going on.

She could cuss you clean, could my grand-mother.

A busy little bee, my little bibi;

I feel empty now she’s gone.

A shrunken husk of a once proud woman

Stitching and unstitching her memories as a fine garment,

Fine and bright is all we have

Now that her day is done.

© Kanthé 2015

Koestler Bronze Award for Poetry 2016

Gucci’s Handbag

Angelika walked smoothly down the stone steps off Oxford Street, through the darkened passage-way, and around the corner. The black Gucci handbag tight within her grasp.

It felt so solid and real – the leather so fine and smooth, the gold and jewelled inlays so polished. It smelt like what it was; expensive. As she looked at it she knew – it was so her. She could imagine herself parading it, along with that little black two-piece Chanel suit she had seen earlier, on some Milan cat-walk. The photographer’s flash bulbs going off like champagne corks and the crowd going wild. And throughout it all, Angelika smiling – her jewels a-smiling – dead-pan, just like Kim Kardashian. Her grey-green eyes smiling in the gloom.

She opened the bag and the first thing she noticed was the faint, not unpleasant smell – something like the odour of burnt metal and grease. The first thing she discovered inside was the mobile phone – a black i-phone 6 with a cracked screen.

Angelika remembered the woman using it; nervous, agitated as she paced the marble floor of the upmarket store alone. She remembered her dropping it on the cold, hard floor – the hard, cold crack it made. She pressed the single button on the front of the phone and the picture of a small girl with a chest-nut coloured plaits and a missing front tooth beamed back at her; along with the band display requesting her to enter in a pass-code of four digits. Four digits she didn’t have.

What had caused the woman to drop the phone? Was it the tall, stocky older man that joined her from the Soft Furnishings section?

He looked as morose as his dark expensive suit, as the woman started remonstrating with him again. Angelika remembered them coming through the revolving doors of the House of Fraser like that – the woman still trying to make the man listen; he still trying to ignore her pleas. They had separated in the lobby and were now back together again but nothing had changed. There was a white handkerchief clutched in the woman’s long, pale fingers – she noted.

Angelika pulled out a fine, silk gentlemen’s handkerchief in white. There were a few splotches of maroon staining it that caused her grey-green eyes to flicker then grow wide, then oval and finally perplexed as she brought out the next two items.

There was a tube of scarlet lipstick – WOW! A really top brand; something that Kate Moss would use; and a tube of non-descript concealer that you could buy anywhere. She remembered the woman re-applying the red lipstick but not the concealer which was nearly empty.

That first time – when the woman came onto the marble foyer in a fine sable fur and large sunglasses – she looked like some 1940’s movie star. But a full-length fur coat during a summer heavy with July?

Something was wrong. Angelika was sure of it.

The next two items: a travel pack of Annadin and a packet of ultra slim-line cigarettes – a French brand she had never heard of. The woman had been smoking when she came in but had put it out in the tall art deco ashtray by the entrance. At one point she had put her fine manicured fingers to her temple, her head bowed; her shoulder-length, dark auburn hair a curtain. Maybe it was migraine after all – the pack was half empty.

The woman looked stressed, standing there alone. Presently there were footsteps and a man entered from the left; it was the same one that had left her there earlier. She rushed towards him.

Angelika presumed that he was the woman’s husband – although he looked at least ten years older. The man looked rich and privileged – but mean with it; you know the kind that would feed their pedigree Shiatsu the finest, most succulent cuts of beef – but would also kick it when things weren’t going his way. The kind that would be missing a fine, silk handkerchief from the breast pocket of his fine black suit.

The couple had been arguing – but discreetly, as they moved through the ladies clothing section. His grip tight on her arm – through the lush sable fur towards Angelika they moved. His heavy face pressed close to hers – there was urgent whispering which Angelika couldn’t make out. A trace of spittle on his urgent, fleshy lips – the woman’s lips a little red and swollen; the make-up a little blotchy and shadowy around them.

His fingers, strong and thick – gripped the woman’s delicate, pale narrow chin; tilting it up so that she could not avoid his heated, east European gaze. Nor the hot little words he hissed at her.

Angelika knew all about Domestics – had heard plenty of them in her line of work. Raised voices behind closed doors, escalating into shouts, swearing – from both sides; breaking furniture and the invisible shoves and slaps. She just turned up the volume on her i-pod and carried on with her hoovering.

She thought that the rich would have a civilised means for sorting out their marital problems; but No – it was the same old shitty mess – just in designer clothes. The psychologist’s mantra was that talking helps – but they’re wrong – talking doesn’t help, not really. More often than not – it pours petrol on the flames; to leave the couple watching what they have built go up in smoke. A funeral pyre, indeed.

When he had finished making his point, the man walked off towards the Gents section while the woman stared after him. She looked a little shocked; maybe a little dumbfounded, would be more accurate. Rather like Ilsa Lund – the way she had looked on that nocturnal air-strip in Casablanca. A little overwhelmed at the turn of events, but still a little hopeful – maybe. His finger marks as pink bruises around her chin and jaw. She touched them as if they were something new. Angelika didn’t want to watch anymore but she found that she could not look away. It was like a car crash happening before her very eyes.

The next item was a fine hand stitched purse in tan leather and Angelika’s feline eyes lit up. It was not to last however, for the purse contained only a few notes and a handful of coins. A grand total of £17.56p in cash – £17.56! Angelika couldn’t believe it – and even though there was a platinum American Express card in there – it was out of date; long expired. Angelika was in shock. She thought the woman was loaded – but Angelika, a humble zero hours contractor – had more cash on her than the woman – who had stood there like a Venus in Furs. Actually, shock was an understatement.

There was a travel pass in the bag with the woman’s face looking wan and tired as in any passport photo. A photograph where the woman actually looked her age; not the manicured, Bo-toxed to an inch of your life, visage displayed in the department store. Angelika tried not to judge but it was hard not to.

The only thing that warmed her – defrosted a little of the chill that she felt towards the woman, was another photograph. It was an earlier photo of the young girl on the phone pic. This time she was a toddler – with the same chestnut coloured hair as a mop-top. And the woman smiling – the first time (the only time) Angelika had seen it on the face of the woman. Mother and child together in each other’s arms – happy.

Finally the woman followed the man – he was in the Gents section of the open plan store, looking at the silk ties. Angelika tried to maintain a close but safe distance. The couple said a few words quietly and he took the woman’s arm and was about to say something else, when he caught Angelika drop her gaze. Instead, he used his grip to guide the woman out of the side entrance to level B of the multi-storey carpark adjoining the store. There was a flinty look in the eyes of the woman as her gaze briefly met Angelika’s as she was led out of the store by the man. A clash of colours as the woman’s dark chocolate gaze met Angelika’s grey-green.

Angelika was intrigued. Slowly she edged closer to the side of the entrance and peered around. She saw the couple at a wine-coloured Bentley in the second reserved parking bay – saw them getting inside. There were a lot of distractions going on inside Angelika’s head – mainly about the state of the couple’s relationship; but Angelika was also a very level-headed girl.

Eyes on the Prize … Eyes on the Prize … Eyes on the Prize’ she kept repeating to herself as her little fists clenched. Refusing to believe that such a prize could drive off at any moment – out of her life.

The other distractions happening on level B of the multi-storey, was what appeared to be a maintenance crew, working on the advertisement light display boxes on the far end of the floor. Consequently, there were numerous banging noises and light flashes in the area. Then there was the almost constant squeal of tyres and brakes as cars negotiated the tight turns; and the way the bright July sunshine bounced off the moving vehicles into her feline eyes. Angelika was bombarded with so many thoughts, feelings, desires and sensory input – she felt overwhelmed for a moment.

That’s how she appeared to the young mother and child who walked past her out of the store. The child’s expression was blank and yet curious – the mother looked at her suspiciously. Suddenly Angelika felt self-conscious. Even though her dirty blonde hair was in the latest style and her stacked heels were worn by all the girls on TOWIE – she suddenly felt cheap – as if she didn’t fit in; as if she never would.

Suddenly there was a sharp crack and a flash of light and someone in the maintenance crew swore and a pair of connected fluorescent tubes went over onto the dirty concrete floor. The spell was broken.

Angelika hurried back into the store and back to the ladies’ section looking for something else to catch her eye. Presently the woman returned – the sunlight flashing through the revolving doors, flashing across her aged features, making her blink. Angelika was surprised when she saw her and the Gucci handbag; maybe not so surprised after all, and the young girl went back to tailing her first love.

The woman looked even more confused and agitated than she had been before. The moment of steel in her gaze disappearing as quickly as Angelika’s self-doubt. She tried to hide it of course – looking through the racks of even more fancy and expensive furs. But in a distracted manner – looking at her i-phone – as if expecting it to ring; but it didn’t. So she put it away in her bag; that gorgeous thing – the finest thing to come out of the House of Gucci.

The woman selected a coat and held it against herself, the Gucci bag loose in her other hand; but it was No Good. She needed a mirror that was full-length. Slowly Angelika moved forward, as if in a dream – as if she was on the Serengeti – in the tall grass. Until she was almost within touching distance. That was when the woman put down the bag, to try on the new fur – moving over to the floor-standing mirror a few yards away. Angelika looked around.

There was no one in the vicinity – not even the floor staff. This was it. Angelika moved in and picked up the bag in one smooth move and then she was off. Down towards the perfume counter and the set of revolving doors on the other side of the store. She didn’t look at anyone and walked as if the bag and she were made for each other – which of course, they were.

She never looked back. The few metres down Oxford Street was the worst. That’s when she expected the heavy hand of a store detective, or even worse – a policeman, to fall on her shoulder. Her narrow, fake tanned shoulders almost hunched in anticipation as the crowds surged around her like foam and swallowed her up in her smart summer clothes.

Angelika felt no guilt; almost no guilt. She normally took what she wanted. Especially from those that had too much: from shops, from people. It funded her desire for better clothes – maybe even a bit of Bling; something her basic job could never provide. She was just supplementing her meagre income – the government should be proud.

She had taken control; not like the woman – at the receiving end of the man. But the woman had looked vulnerable when she came back from the multi-storey. A little lost; alone. The girl actually felt a little sorry for the woman she left behind in the House of Fraser. Angelika knew that she could never live like that.

She turned off Oxford Street, down the row of steps, through the darkened passage-way and around the corner. The useless items from the Gucci bag scattered all over the dirty, litter-strewn ground.

Angelika reached down in the black Gucci bag for the final item – hoping against hope that it was something worth having. It was. It was probably the most significant item that the woman possessed – the only item that could bring about lasting change.

It was a neat little revolver with a pearl-handled grip that slid effortlessly into Angelika’s dainty slim hand. The barrel still warm, the chamber empty and the smell of burnt grease and metal still there – pervading her delicate Polish nostrils.

“Wow. Maybe she took control after all.” Angelika breathed as she stroked the new object of her affection and the black Gucci handbag slipped from her grasp into the gutter below.

… And somewhere in the House of Fraser, the woman smiled once more.

*********** THE END ***********

© Kanthé 2015

A Day and a Night in the Life of …

I wake up between silk sheets imported directly from China. 

Today I am in a bed that once belonged to King Henry VIII – there’s heavy embroidery all around. On the wall opposite there’s a black and white picture of Howard Hughes. He looks very dapper in his pinstripe suit; tall and dark – standing in front of one of his planes with Katherine Hepburn on his arm. In another photo he’s with Ava Gardner – looking as if he’s about to buy up the whole wide world.

I step onto cold marble tiles and walk towards the huge picture window. It’s a view over the west face of my estate. Acres and acres of it – a forest in the far distance marks it’s boundary.

There are footsteps behind me and I turn. An old man, dignified and sober with years of service etched on his face brings me camomile tea in the finest china money can buy. He tells me that I have a meeting in the city. He can see that I don’t really want to go – but he says that I should; it might be important.

I look at the picture of Howard Hughes again: a rich successful man, a man who owned an airline and a film studio and dated movie stars. The old man behind me tells me not to be too much like Howard Hughes … he tells me to remember how he ended up. I have an image of knotted, curved talons, endless wet wipes and jars of dirty, fetid urine – all in a row; the life of an obsessive reclusive. I agree to go to the meeting.

I’m at the meeting – I’m bored. The Board of ten men and two women – all in smart, neat business suits discuss Expansion, Future Projects, Cost-Flow Analysis, Market Share … I am thoroughly bored in my Saville Row suit, my Van-Heuson hand-stitched shirt and silk tie. I move my restless feet in the finest Italian shoes – so polished and neat. It’s all very comfortable, reassuringly expensive and utterly, utterly beyond me.

Now I’m having lunch at a very exclusive restaurant with a girl with the most delicate, porcelain skin ever – my mind is elsewhere. She takes a sip of the Chateau de Rothschild and reminds me that she is a supermodel and that she is late. I smile but I am not impressed. I don’t touch the Beluga caviar.

The girl climbs into the Ferrari F60 America with me. The car’s worth $4.8 million dollars (only ten ever produced – only this one in this particular colour) and a moment later I am gunning the supercar through the lunchtime city traffic. I drop her off at the Gucci fashion show – the show she wants me to attend; but I tell her I’m too busy … doing nothing. 

Another girl walks past dressed in black and my head is turned. She looks familiar. She looks at me quizzically and then at the supermodel and shakes her head in a disappointed manner. She calls herself Selina and I offer her a lift while the supermodel looks on furiously. Selina says she doesn’t like the car. I tell her it’s OK – I have a better one at home. She smiles and walks away.

By mid-afternoon I’m back home, looking at my collection of cars. I walk through a massive hall where a Dali, a Hopper and a Carravaggio are on display against the deep ochre wood panelling. I think it’s the first time I have seen them.

I’m standing in front of a huge marble fireplace, my face glowing from the roaring flames. Above the mantelpiece is my favourite painting. It shows a man and a woman dressed for going out. He’s in a smart overcoat, she is in a fine evening dress with pearls. A small boy with dark hair and even darker eyes stands between them. I feel I should know them but they all look like strangers now.

I am alone.

I am in my work clothes now – driving to work; what I call the night-shift. The car that I’m driving is not as roomy as my daytime car – but it’s much more powerful and with much better toys.

I’m standing on a roof-top high up, looking across a city that never sleeps. There’s a light pointing straight up behind me. An older man – looking older than his years, stands there beside it. His face – half-in and half-out of shadow. His face is friendly but it doesn’t crack a smile. A smile would be too much for this city.

He’s a man who’s done his duty and it’s turning him grey. His moustache is grey; his raincoat is grey. He’s lean and of average height. There’s something very south London about his face – a mild cunning with the steel to fight back when necessary; to grub in the shitty underbelly when needs be. A man to remain stoic in the face of whatever onslaught … a man that can also let go; someone who knows the difference between the two. He knows why I come out here – but then he too is gone.

There’s a full moon – its sickly glare brings out the lunatics. One steps out of the shadows and stares at me. A long white face – angular; and impossibly green hair. He smiles, he grins, he cackles – there’s just too many teeth for such a narrow face. He tells me that me and him are the same – two faces on the same coin? We’re NOT. He says that it would only take one small push for me to become him … One Mad Day. I disagree and he’s gone.

The softest footsteps behind me. I turn – it’s Selina in her work clothes. I’m impressed but I don’t show it – never show it. She says she likes me like this – all dark and brooding; all tooled up and full of muscle. Her red lipstick glistens in the moonlight. I’m tempted – but she wears a mask.

“So do you.” she says, naming me and walking away.

I’m alone again; with the city.

I know the darkness and the darkness knows me. I’ve been to the bottom of the well.

 My name is Batman … she calls me Bruce Wayne.

*********** THE END ***********

© Kanthé 2017

Ashfield Short Story Prize Winner

Article : EXCESSIVE FLASHPOINTS by Kanthé

EXCESSIVE FLASHPOINTS – An Inside Portrait of Ian Curtis and Joy Division

In the house of the hanged man … what do you see?

If you stand on the threshold of 77 Barton Street and look inside the slight Victorian terraced house, you will see a small triangular room to the left of the stairs. This was called ‘the blue room’ and was Ian Curtis’s private space – his writing place. This is where he wrote the lyrics, the lyrical poetry that became the voice of Joy Division. To the right of the stairs is the rest of the house – this was his wife Debbie’s place and later, her and her infant daughter’s place.

The house exists on a bend in the road. This means that 77 Barton Street is actually bent in two and the window of the blue room – Ian Curtis’s view, actually faces a different direction to that of his wife and daughter. An isolated view – maybe this is symbolic; maybe this is real.

Ian Curtis was not your average young man. The working class lad that dropped out of grammar school – he essentially taught himself. His reading matter was well beyond anything that his friends, colleagues, band-mates were reading; witness: Nietzsche, Herman Hesse, Jean-Paul Sartre, Dostoyevsky, Kafka, Rimbaud, Poe to Aldous Huxley (Brave New World), Anthony Burgess (A Clockwork Orange), William Burroughs, J.G. Ballard (CrashHigh-RiseThe Atrocity Exhibition). So, amidst the dystopian fiction, deeply philosophical works; combined with an interest in art (Andy Warhol, Dada and Surrealism). It was a proper education.

Like most teenagers, he couldn’t imagine himself at thirty. I know when I was that young, I felt the same way. It seemed an impossible age away. Now I’m over fifty and I can’t imagine being that young again. If Ian Curtis was alive today, he wouldn’t be a musician – I think he would be a fine, fine writer.

But when you’re in your teens – it’s music that grabs you first. It’s much more real – much more visceral, more immediate and ‘in yer face’ – as they say in modern parlance. And so it was when the Sex Pistols turned up to gig in Manchester – not just once, but twice in the summer of 1977. I know there was the glam and pop of Bowie and Bolan before this, but it was actually the Sex Pistols that showed the inhabitants of Manchester that anyone could get up on stage and perform … anyone. All you needed was three chords and determination.

So it was that Stiff Kittens was born … which then transformed into Warsaw and then finally Joy Division – a band that was already walking away from the dying embers of Punk to carve out their own identity. Joy Division have been described as ‘an original of the species that was to become Goth’ by no other than Bono of U2 (themselves a fledgling punk band around this time); but there was no dark eye-liner and dressing all-in-black that the genre seemed to define with Joy Division – they walked their own path.

It’s hard to define their sound. The music is certainly serious, you could call it heavy rock but it’s not metal. There’s more to it than that – but then certain songs like Twenty Four Hours do rock out in the traditional rock sense. It is the vocal and subject matter that is different; there is also a pace, a build-up and a coming down that is not present in other rock songs. It’s their sensibility which sets them apart from other bands. Charles Shaar Murray described their sound as ‘awful things carved out of black marble’ – but like marble, there are patterns of pale beauty and melody laced throughout.

The name Joy Division was taken from a book – a lurid piece of holocaust fiction entitled House of Dolls by Ka – Tznetik (a pseudonym for Yehiel Feiner). It was written in the form of a diary and told about the section of a Nazi concentration camp where young women were forced into sexual slavery – not the Labour Division – but the Joy Division. By the time the group selected the name in 1978, this sensationalist memoir had sold millions. Joy Division’s guitarist Bernard Sumner had been given a paperback copy.

Since they were essentially a ‘rock band’, Sumner’s guitar sound was very important. It tended to give a discordant edge to a lot of Joy Division’s music. At other times, it’s tone was chiming or performing a perfect counter-point melody, as in Decades. Everyone in Joy Division was a multi-instrumentalist which helped the band enormously.

Stephen Morris – the last member to join the band, is a talented drummer. He has a precise – even militaristic style, that suits the music and was evident even then. It goes well with his greatest ambition: that is to drum as well and as accurately as any drum-machine.

Peter Hook’s bass-lines are the emotional pulse of Joy Division. It was an inspired move to bring them to the front and centre-stage of the music. It’s what sets their music apart from everyone else’s. Hook wrestles the sounds out of his bass like a rock-star; stiff-legged and bent over his instrument – not quietly strumming along in the background as most bassists do. 

Something needs to be said at this stage about Ian Curtis’s voice. It’s deep, sonorous – almost a baritone; and it carries a depth, a weight missing from all his peers. It absolutely suits his lyrics – the two compliment each other perfectly. The weight of the voice gives the lyrics – about alienation, guilt, isolation and despair – a solidity, a maturity – a grandeur that a lesser voice would never be able to reach. Voice and words inter-lock beautifully – giving both an authenticity – something borne of experience rather than just imagined.

The two people most responsible for the ‘look’ of Joy Division is designer Peter Saville and the photographer Anton Corbijn. Peter Saville’s cool, austere graphical style made each Joy Division record sleeve a collector’s item. Whereas Anton Corbijn’s stark black and white photography of the band lead him to not only direct the music video of Atmospherewhen it was re-released, but also to direct the movie of Ian Curtis’s life with Joy Division in the film Control.

Curtis was a closed-in person. What he projected on the outside was different from his internal climate. Curtis found it hard to reconcile his role as a husband and as a father with his role as the lead in a rock band. It certainly caused friction between him and his wife and there were people around the band that wanted this distance to be maintained. They didn’t want the lead of a rock band to be seen with a heavily pregnant wife – what sort of image would that send out? A family man is certainly not ‘rock and roll’. I think this disconnect is the growing chasm that his wife was talking about in the title of her first book on Curtis Touching from a Distance – a title taken from the song lyric for Transmission.

Like a lot of people, Ian was a rage of inconsistencies. He went into things that he later wanted to back out of. In the song Passover, he sings – ‘back out of my duties when all’s said and done, I know that I’ll lose every-time.’ He wanted something – when he got it, he didn’t want it anymore. This kind of fruitless behavior can leave many a person feeling unfulfilled. As ready consumers in an empty, increasingly materialistic society – we are all destined to remain unsatisfied.

As writers, we sometimes write about what we’re drawn to – maybe this is where the alienation and guilt and despair come in. Maybe, as his wife suggests – Ian Curtis was, what we nowadays call bi-polar. Maybe it’s what’s all around us in our personal sphere – or maybe, even in the wider environment.

Someone once said of Ian Curtis: ‘he could see the madness in our area’. Maybe they were right. After all, this was late 70’s Manchester – with it’s dark satanic mills standing empty and alone. Sometimes this city has a dour, grey pessimism which forms the very weather plus a history that produced a society dispossessed and broken … and of course, left behind. The ‘winter of discontent’ in 1979 also hit this post-industrial town and produced a general feeling of malcontent and despair – that things were going wrong and this feeling leached into the very music and lyrics that the band were producing. Joy Division could not have come from anywhere other than Manchester.

Like Curtis, Manchester is a closed-in taciturn city. It’s inhabitants are not prone to talk about their feelings. So a certain isolation is there already. Combine that with the air of desperation that is already present … just below the surface – a historical malcontent. Joy Division were the only band that were able to express that feeling, make it coherent and whole for the rest of the world.

By 1980 everything was coming to a head. The diagnosis of his epilepsy had occurred while his wife Debbie was pregnant with his child. Then there was his intrinsically, introspective nature. His imploding marriage – partially caused by his growing relationship with Annik Honoré – the girl he met while on tour in Europe, was becoming white hot. I believe, the disintegrating relationship with his wife, and the song Love Will Tear Us Apart about a relationship fracturing, are more than just coincidence.

All writers essentially write about themselves; and the stuff that’s going on around us often bleeds into our work. It’s what makes our work individual and of the time and place. Curtis was no different.

And sometimes we’re actively drawn to what destroys us. A love triangle where no one wants to ‘break the chain’ as Stevie Nicks eloquently puts it in Fleetwood Mac’s awesome The Chain – (itself a testament to relationships crumbling) from the Rumours album – describes the situation perfectly.

With his epilepsy getting worse – very probably exacerbated with the late nights, flashing lights and alcohol and drugs of a life ‘on the road’. Everything was getting worse, coming to a head – and the warning signs were being ignored.

As he sings in Twenty-Four Hours (a song written in his final year 1980) – ‘excessive flashpoints, beyond all reach’ says it all. I think this was a description of his mental state at this time with his epilepsy firing off in his head, the medication – maybe even making him feel worse, and his relationships crumbling and the prospect of a tour to the USA coming up adding further pressure – those ‘excessive flashpoints’ were firing faster and faster. And they were putting him beyond our reach … beyond anyone’s reach, if true be told.

Like most people, on the outside it was a smile and ‘sure, I’m coping’ when it was clear inside that he was not. There was only one way this was going to go. Something desperate had to give. It’s always the weakest link in the chain that goes … and so it was with Ian Curtis.

On the evening of 17th May 1980 Ian Curtis wanted to be on his own. He had already moved out of the family home on Barton Street. However, he wanted to watch the noted German film director Werner Herzog’s movie Strosek that was playing on TV that night. Rather than subject his parents to a foreign language film, he decided to go back to Barton Street – knowing that the house would be empty. The film is about a newly released prisoner in Germany with mental health problems, who becomes a European émigré to the USA. Once there, he becomes so alienated by a foreign American culture that he succumbs to suicide.

The next morning Deborah Curtis found her husband’s hanged body in the kitchen. There was a glass of whisky and a cigarette on the coffee table and Iggy Pop’s The Idiot on the turntable.

Tony Wilson, the TV presenter and director of Factory Records – Joy Divison’s record company, described the final scene of the movie and the demise of his friend and artist:

There’s a dead man in the cable car and the chicken’s still dancing.”

And in the run-off grooves of Joy Division’s final album ‘Still’ is scratched the legend:

The chicken’s still dancing.”

*********** THE END ***********

© Kanthé 2017

THE WRITTEN WORD

A blank sheet of paper has length and width

But no depth, no weight.

But once you write upon it

It grows heavy – it’s density increases;

With thoughts, ideas

Stories, opinions –

With a sheer poetry

That astonishes – overwhelms me at times.

That scratches on a piece of paper

can mean so much.

That words can be … so black and white;

That they can be as light as a feather

Or as dark as sin.

Words – so funny and sad

And utterly terrifying and thought-provoking

All at the same time.

Words can create you; destroy you.

Maybe re-create you, animate you

To drown you – 

In a sea of thoughts.

© Kanthé 2015

Koestler Silver Award for Poetry 2016

THE FIRST AND LAST VALENTINE

You never told me –

The distance from your desk

To the office door

was so much fear and embarrassment

Over 50 yards in love.

A dozen long-stemmed roses shiverin’ in my hand –

in an office open-planned

A sea of faces behind each stall;

Grinnin’, smirkin – tryin’ to supress a smile

That the student and the girl from Housing

Could be so reconciled –

The sheer innocence of your smile

as you looked up from your work.

I’d a dozen long-stemmed roses then

Now my flowers lie wilted, broken in your bin;

We’re both sitting at separate tables now

Eating on our own.

What went wrong? … Who can say?

Love – like teeth – decays with age

Soft feelings, calcify like bone.

A hard, embittered self-protection

A closing down – rather than an opening up.

When we kissed and played – the first time;

When we stayed out for a night and a day – 

we felt like Gods – invincible.

Now it just seems like too much effort to say anything; anything at all.

Too many wounds – too many unspoken rules

Too many things left unsaid.

They say that Love is a Battlefield – 

I feel like a soldier mortally wounded – shot through the heart

In the trenches of a failing marriage

Watchin’ myself ebb slowly away.

And yet

and yet …

and yet …

Although I am older and not much wiser now

I still think back to those days …

Thinkin’ back to when we were so fresh, refreshed and played upon

Our thoughts – borne aloft like paper planes.

Although I look at you from winter now – I see

You’re rose petals on virgin snow

Your hair as dark as midnight wings

Copper high-lighted – in a sunset of burnished gold;

Your eyes glint like studded stars

Your words spoke soft upon my days

Your touch feels like summer to an aged man

Hope springs like resting autumn boughs

… you’re always in my thoughts.

For J.

© Kanthé 14-2-2018

MOM

Put out the stars

Unplug the sun

My mom was the moon

And I – her wayward son.

She was the heavens

That long distance fall from grace

That I fell from –

My mother was the moon

Cool and serene and shone upon;

Me – in the dark, alone now

I feel abandoned.

There’s a photograph of my mother

All up in black and white

A lady, a great beauty – regal

A picture my dad keeps inside his heart.

Mother – please forgive me

I’ve wronged so many people

I don’t know how to make it work

To get forgiveness in other people

Those bonds that are meant to bind us

Don’t seem to be there anymore.

Her fingers – cool in the summer against my brow

Warm in winter –

kept warmer by her love;

My hand in her hand – no need for gloves

A sharp look to prevent my wrong-doing

Re-assurance – with a soft touch.

That was my mom.

Mum … Mom … Mother

That’s the name and face

A child gives to God.

A mother is everything.

My mom was that – and more

And now she’s gone.

There’s nothing that isn’t cold.

I wonder through shallow days

However many left on earth

I start to cry reading a letter about her

I feel tears in the middle of work.

I know that nothing lasts forever

Our bodies return to earth

Our spirits up in the ether there –

Somewhere.

My mom – looking down

At her wayward boy – lookin’ up;

A connection that cannot be broken 

The zephyr that caresses my forehead 

Has all the air of a mother’s touch.

© Kanthé 2017/2018 

ECLIPSED

Approaching St. Peter’s Square, Wolverhampton

The last year, the last century

British Summer Time.

Sunlight flashing off walls, windows

And the terrazzo square in many shades of brown.

Fresh air – fresh people in short sleeves – office clothes

Flowing hair and bright clothes and bright eyes.

I’m on the university side, coming around St. Peter’s church

On that elevated section

A crystal blue sky.

Then it happens –

Everybody looks to the heavens, shading their eyes

With sunglasses and those silly cardboard cut-outs

With dark lenses pointed at the sun.

It has begun.

The very air changes – grows cool – almost cold.

The light dims in a near clear sky

I’m seeing the same scene – St Peter’s square – as if through parchment

A twilight in the middle of day.

I gasp – the hairs on my fore-arm stand up

The colour of the light changes

Grows grey, dark grey – a greeny-grey.

I can’t help it – I look up

At the welcoming sky.

The moon glides in front of the dumb sun

I very nearly cover my eyes

But I don’t;

These cheap sunglasses should be enough.

A black disc in front of a valiant sun

For a moment – a valiant moon that can face down a star

For that moment – when they’re the same size.

They call it a totality.

There is complete silence.

The twittering of birds – frozen

The world is frozen within a moment 

Everyone looking at a blazing sky

A corona of light like a halo

Around a dark countenance

To produce a lunar twilight.

A diamond ring – a celestial marriage brings

Forth a ring of diamonds

As sunlight breaks over the mountainous imperfections

Around the edges of the lunar landscape.

Sunlight returns – twilight evaporates.

The birds return to their mating calls

The people to their everyday gripes.

But I have changed.

I feel eclipsed.

By this most natural of things

This almost religious feeling

How the astronomy of things works like clockwork

Above the very chaotic nature of our lives.

© Kanthé 2017 

Uncategorized

Late Summer Showcase

By Nitin Suneja

Killer DNA

Shane and Mila had spent years perfecting their understanding of genetics. They wanted to ensure their first child would have the best start in life. After years of setbacks and rejections, they finally got the approvals they needed from the Ethics Committee. Their patience had been rewarded and their research approved for human trials. They were ready to have a child. Potentially even the future of humanity. 

Adam truly was a remarkable child, but that was to be expected of course. You just had to look at his parents. Both mother and father were at peak health and highly intelligent. A brief look at their families showed no major illnesses through the last three generations. He was essentially the human equivalent of a race horse. 

Now, twelve years later, Shane and Mila were forced to watch impatiently through the two-way mirror as their dear son is put through his paces. The testing process had been a long and arduous journey, but they were confident they had done everything possible to prepare Adam. They were now at the final hurdle. The end of the testing when they would find out if they were successful and if their benefactors would provide them with the additional funding required to take the trials to the next level. 

They look on through the windows as Adam remains seated in the centre of the room. His slim statuesque form remains unmoving in the chair, patiently waiting for whatever undisclosed test was coming next. His onlooking parents appeared more stressed than him. Actually, Shane had seen him this way before. It is almost as though he was focusing on something, but in all these years, he never truly understood what went on in Adam’s mind. 

For no apparent reason, Adam shifts his stance. The shift is barely discernible, but Shane picked up on it. He knew this sign. It always preceded an event which Adam seemed to know was coming before it did. 

The door swings silently open. They watch as their old friend and colleague walks into the room. “Hi Adam,” she greets him warmly. “Are you ready?” she says ruffling his hair as she walks past him. 

His body still perfectly still, he nods his head, once again a barely noticeable movement. Jane moves to stand beside him and places her hand reassuringly on his shoulder. 

“Do you know what the final test is Adam?” 

“I am not sure. The team has tested me on all of the areas you have trained me on…” He pauses, contemplating the situation.  

The wrinkles appear on Shane’s forehead as they usually do when something confuses him. Even he thought it was unusual when Jane originally mentioned the final test. She wouldn’t explain what it was, just that they needed to ensure Adam expected nothing. Both Shane and Mila had been monitoring Adam’s progress during all of the training sessions except of course the outdoor fitness sessions when Jane took him out alone to the obstacle course in the forest. Jane steps backwards from Adam towards the corner of the room. Before disappearing to the right of the mirrored wall, they see her remove a remote from her left pocket, her finger poised threateningly over the only button in the middle. 

“… except one…” Adam’s delayed response is not lost on anyone. Jane flexes her thumb and presses the button.  The lights go out in the room. 

Shane and Mila stare at the mirror as the lights go down in their room plunging them all into darkness. The room would be pitch black if not for the imperceptibly dim lights in the room beyond the mirrored wall. Stunned, they wait, terrified for their only son. They hear shuffling sounds through the intercom system. A mechanical sound like a door sliding almost silently, but not quite, open. 

Shane tries to focus on the chair where Adam was just moments ago. Mila has turned her back to the wall, tears streaming down her face and gratefully hidden in the darkness. Shane does not notice. His attention is on his only son. He can barely make out the outline of the chair. And Adam is not in it. More shuffling. Tears blurring her vision, Mila turns the handle on the door to find it electronically locked. 

A whispered sound emanates from the intercom. A thump as something hits a solid object. Silence. A brief scuffle followed by another thump. 

“The door’s locked,” Mila states silently sobbing. 

Shadows move within shadows in the room. An almost silent whimper can be heard: the tell-tale sound of fear before a final thump propels him hard against the mirrored wall. 

Shane and Mila both jump back instinctively as the outline of the adult body slams hard against the mirrored wall in front of them again. The persons head tilts sharply forward as though pulled with incredible force and is then rammed hard against the glass wall, fractures appearing in the glass, accentuated by the red blood like veins of lava crawling down a volcano. The dead body slides pathetically to the floor leaving nothing but the blacked-out room ahead of them. 

Deafening silence. 

A click and a hum as the room lights flicker on again. Adam is sitting completely still in the chair with his back to his parents. If not for the three bodies lying still on the floor his parents could have thought nothing had happened. 

Jane steps back into view again as the door silently opens once more. 

Shane presses his hands on the mirror desperate to understand what just happened. His brain sees his son before he notices the bodies strewn around the room. Relief is replaced by stunned disbelief still affecting his ability to process the situation. Who are those people on the floor? How, no, why did Jane do this to them? Were they a threat to Adam? He needed answers and soon. 

“What happened Jane?” 

“Really Shane?” a disembodied voice he did not recognise said. “I thought you were smart?” 

A man dressed in high ranking military uniform steps into the room from the right followed closely by two armed guards. 

“Who are they Jane?” Shane asks indicating the new arrivals. “And why is this room still locked?” 

“Congratulations Jane,” Admiral Bower says ignoring Shane. “This truly is impressive. You have the latest DNA results?” 

“Yes Sir,” she pulls a folded piece of paper out from her pocket and hands it to him. 

Admiral Bower slowly unfolds the paper as though he had all the time in the world. 

“Abnormal?” he comments while reading, one eyebrow raised quizzically. 

“That is correct Sir. No-one has DNA like Adam. He is truly unique.” 

“Not for long,” he smiles. “Consider your funding approved.” 

“Wait,” Shane calls from the locked room. “Her funding? This is our research. What is happening here?” 

Admiral Bower dismissively addresses Shane without even looking in his direction, “You were never in charge! Now let the adults to talk.” 

“I need an ETA for the first one hundred and for the clone oven by the morning. Include your initial funding requirements. And consider it approved with immediate effect Jane. I want work to commence tomorrow morning.” 

“That’s our funding. What the hell is going on here?” Shane shouts, the anger seething within him now. Mila slumps to the floor, her back supported by the wall and her knees held tight against her chest. 

Jane looks at the Admiral, “The scientists Sir?” Admiral Bower glances at the mirror before nodding his head. The lights glow brightly in the concealed room revealing Shane like a specimen in a jar. 

“My dear Shane,” Jane responds. “You always were so charmingly naive. What did you think we were doing here all these years?” 

“The mission. The same mission. What else Jane?” He takes a deep breath. “Humanity is doomed to fail. We need to eradicate illness to ensure humanity has a future. Nothing has changed over all these years.” The confusion is now evident in his voice. 

“Well,” Jane states thoughtfully, “you are right on one point at least. The mission has not changed. We were just never on the same mission. You thought you were going to save humanity? Humanity can’t be saved in the way you think Shane. Medicine is simply not enough anymore. We need weapons to win this war. And Adam has just become the prototype.” 

“Wait, what? Are you insane? Adam,” he says looking directly at his son. “Come to me.” 

For the first time, Adam stands and turns to face them. Blood is spattered across the front of his clothes and face. His small hands are red as summer blossom roses. He reaches his hand out and clasps Jane’s empty hand, the poison dagger into Shane’s heart. 

“Do you want to do it Adam?” Jane holds the remote out, tapping a button to signify which one to press. 

Shane watches helpless as his son takes the remote and presses the button. Gas floods into the room through the open vents. Shane’s head drops before he slumps voluntarily to floor beside Mila, his beloved wife before accepting the inevitability of their approaching death. 

Rift Wars by Nitin Suneja available now.

http://www.nitinsuneja.com/