Category: Non-fiction

  • Once Upon A Midnight Dreary

    Once Upon A Midnight Dreary

    This short piece was written almost four years ago.

    To the city of Edinburgh, its light, its shadow, and all the people in my life there that kept the sun shining.

    致 Iris

    Walking down Cowgate at twelve in the morning and my coat snaps at my legs, pulled tight against my chest. Winter’s chill hangs in the air like a detective waiting to break the news of her husband’s murder to a widow. My clothes are frosted, and I brush icing from my shoulders more from habit than discomfort.

    Head bowed and shoulders hunched, I focus on obliterating continents of snow stained as last night’s slurry crumbles under the weight of my boots. Overhead on Southbridge snatches of conversation drift below the cobblestones. They’re punctured by an old and sad song I should have remembered, crooned by a drunkard possessed by the soul of a poet. My head bristles with late-night Trainspotting-phobias, the vague fear of muggers lunging out at me. Distant figures huddle together on the steps of houses or stagger into alleys. Obscured by blinking lights they are gargoyles squatting in the fog, backs crooked with regret. 

    A young girl (she looks about my age) walks past. Mascara dribbles in rivers of black ichor down her face. I feel my hand reaching out to stop her, ask if she’s all right. I watch her stumble past in a fog of shame and reasonably expensive perfume. Stupid of me, really. I realize how I must look: black coat smudging into the shadows like printer’s ink, lamplight catching on my glasses and transforming my eyes into owlish discs.  I stand there for a few seconds. The echoes of her sobs hang back awkwardly as if waiting to start a conversation.  

    For some reason, I still haven’t moved. I don’t, until the last hints of grief dissipate into the night. Gone, along with the cigarette fumes from the crooked of a man pressed up against a wall away from the wind. Then I keep walking. 

    There’s a mist hanging off the pavement, steaming out the corners of the slabs like vapour from an athlete’s body. When I look at the windows of slumbering pubs, take-out joints, karaoke bars and restaurants my reflection fights to keep up. I leave it behind, watch it pause, a child lost at a supermarket. When it catches up to me, I cannot help but shudder. 

    It’s around this time I realize I’m all alone, and I can’t recognize my own face no matter how hard I look at it. I run my fingers over the pale skin, pinching the bruised bags under each eye from one too many all-nighters and wonder if this is some kind of costume. It might be the lack of sleep, but I can’t help but wonder if a human being can be haunted by themselves. 

    I stare down my wavering twin in the oily window of a kebab joint. At any moment that figure might step outside the panes, straddle the gap from shadow to man. The thought twists in my stomach and catches on something. It’s a sick trick, a Ghost of Christmas Present prematurely dredged up on an October evening. I forage ahead, but the shade waist in my computer after every short story deleted in disgust slithers at my boot-heels. It coalesces in parked vans and the black of hibernating road-signs. A passing motorbike’s headlamps spill over me and I see that thing sucking in icy breaths, savouring them. 

    Can a person be haunted by themselves? Maybe if every 3 a.m. insomniac thought, every i buried resentment festered into bitter pus, an ectoplasmic ooze that dribbled from every pore. Perhaps, like the best kind of ghost, it is something to be summoned. Dragged from a Limbo of unseized opportunities and squandered second chances.  

    I’ve reached the Royal Mile at this point, having turned up one of Cowgate’s forked, sloping wynds, taking the long way back to my accommodation. I nod imperceptibly at the other stragglers ambling up and down the stretch of road. The wraiths come thick and fast, rushing into the faces of strangers I feel I should have known.  

    The Ghost of Semesters Past gives way to the Ghost of Wasted Futures. That long-haired guy in the leather jacket leaning his girlfriend’s head against his shoulder, I’m just his other half. The warning shown to a Dickensian hero if he doesn’t mend his ways. The youth in the poster for a book-signing at the John Knox house….  I could see strokes of myself in that dimpled smile. A chattering student blows past me, moving in a cluster of his mates to another party, another nightclub. His name, lost in a peal of snickers, sounds like mine. Shuffling my feet, I wait for the traffic light to change at a crossing by the World’s End pub. There are no cars. In the sanguine glow of the STOP sign, I’ve become the phantom, dogging the footsteps of those merry travellers of the night.  

    I’ve turned right, down, breezed past the roundabout leading up to Pleasance, passed my accommodation. I can’t risk seeing that apparition again, ten feet tall in the windows of the building. By the time I’m aware of where I’m going, I’ve overtaken Dynamic Earth’s squat, hedgehog scaffolding and am at the foot of Arthur’s Seat. The curves of its hills dwarf me and just then the noise building up behind my forehead stops.  Obliterated by the mass of earth and stone stamped against the skyline.  

    Grass squelches softly underfoot as I make my way alongside the Seat, a wavering comma framed against trees and bushes. Maybe another time they would have pawed at the cuffs of my trousers, running brittle fingers over my clothes. Here, amidst the silver fog and the whistle of the wind they scatter the boggarts cackling in my mind. 

    Deep breaths: long, quiet, inhalations that suck up an air that escaped petrol fumes,  cigarettes and ripening trash. 

    This is not the quiet of a bated breath before a murderer strikes, but the rise and fall of a cat’s chest as it curls up on its side. There is no noise save the beating of my heart, marking out its verse in iambic pentameter. Mist spills over the sides of the hills like a bed-side confession. Deep breaths. There are no reflections to hide brooding spectres here, no fun-house mirrors to distort regret. There is no one left to haunt, and the condensation on my brow is a baptism.  

    New apparitions form out of the wisps of smoke: a trek with a crew of high-school friends, new companions and flat-mates, a makeshift picnic of battered takeaway feasted on whilst the April sun set in the horizon. A spring-time evening cushioned among flowers and another semester bid adieu. The banshees of past, present and future slink away. I shrug and let the thin faced phantasm lurking behind me slide from my shoulders. 

    Before I turn home, I indulge myself. Night restores the ruin of St. Anthony’s chapel into Camelot. From the haze I see a child (small even for his age) emerge, running breathless along the knolls. He is brandishing a stick, battling Balrogs alongside bearded wizards and knights in shining armour, striking left and right. His blond hair is dipped in quicksilver under the moon, glasses slipping off the edge of his nose. Two other shapes sprint to join him, a fellowship of three. I watch them crest over the hill, whooping, bickering, giggling, fading. Yes. Some parts of myself are worth bringing back from a grave I dug far too early.  

    One last haunting. I am long gone to my bed, but I leave the ghost of my smile among the Scottish peaks.  

  • A Song for Laika

    A Song for Laika

    A while ago, as we stood outside the terrace of a bar in Madrid, a friend asked me suddenly: out of all of God’s creatures who ever lived or walked this earth, which do you pity most? My answer, spoken over an overpriced cocktail, ice-cubes melting in the dry Spanish night, was a Russian mongrel terrier. Her name was Laika, and I was not lying. Scoff at me all you like (he certainly did) but I will not budge. My heart goes out to the sad creature plucked from the streets of Moscow and sent to a cold grave in a steel coffin, tracing lazy circles around the globe.

    I have seen the postcards, cartoons, the granulated photographs. A little white-and-brown face, ears bent at the tips like the folded corners of a book’s pages. Her head, cocked with an air of playful inquisitiveness, mouth hanging open, moments before she was sent to die, alone and scared. Barely clinging to the memory of the human touch she had dreamed of, in fitful snatches, as she rooted through greasy dustbins on Muscovite streets speckled with frost.

    How proud she looked, unsung canine hero that paved the way for us shambling apes to plant our flagpoles on lunar sand and tighten a girdle around the cosmos.

    What a sin for us to live with, that we watched as man’s best friend lay belly-up before our path to please us, then pressed our boots upon her furry stomach to step towards the heavens. Yet even then, she would have still trotted at our heels, tail vibrating, wet nose nudging at our thighs. Staring with round, black marbles, portals to love, unconditional and infinite, that we do not know how to understand, or how to give.

    No number of statues cast in bronze and emblazoned with trite slogans can do you justice. For all its shining pallor as it strikes the sun, metal does not have a heart as bright as the one (barely the size of a hand) that beat within your breast as solitary days with nothing but hunger for company gave way to a world of engineers, doctors and cosmonauts fussing over your every move. Showering you with precious names, so unlike the curses and kicks a street-dog would learn. Mutt and beast became Kudryavka, meaning ‘little curly,’ for your snail-shell tail, Zhuchka: ‘little bug’, squashed by human indifference. So many new friends! A world of play and touch as alien to you as the distant suns where you would pass your final moments. As rough and calloused hands stroked your fur, I wonder if you felt safe for once. If you stored beneath your fragile, shaggy chest, a kernel of affection to keep you warm.

    A scientist took you to his home, to be with his children, as the clock shaved away the minutes before your life was snuffed out. Scampering to and fro, barking with excitement to the squeals and giggles of little ones that showered you with kisses, rolling on the floor and squirming, legs kicking in satisfaction as stubby fingers scratched away your itches. Curling up, nose pressed against the scent of a family and a home, rocked to sleep by the slow rise and fall of a human’s lap as he breathed.

    A brief memory of what should have been, before the terror of tight, sharp metal confines and the bellowing of rocket fuel. The engines, screeching whirlwind of pure fear, overpowering every animal instinct with their heaving, juddering, rattling steel. Belching out their bitter kerosene, hurtling you away from the figures you had worshipped with the tenderness of paw-prints scratching at a trouser-leg, into the lifeless waste.

    I can see your breath fogging the grimy windows of your shuttle, as you saw what no other being before you ever had. Could you have possibly understood that the sapphire marble, speckled with shards of green, was not a tennis ball lying out of reach for you to gnaw at?

    I set the scene: by the light of the sun, within a silver capsule floating before the threshold of eternity, a four-legged friend watches. In her inkwell eyes she holds galaxies. She waits for when she will be let out of this tight, wintry box. Fitfully, her tail drums a beat against the iron walls, impatient for when she will return to hugs and praise and food. She sounds off one or two barks, calling out names known only to her. The answer is a mindless hum from the shuttle. Her pleas fade into echoes, choked in the satin sheets of space.

    With a low, whine of confusion, she slumps on the floor, a tired sigh puffing from her coal-black button nose.

    For the first time in aeons, the crackling quasars and solar winds are underscored by soft yelps and twitches as she chases sticks in her sleep. The dance of meteorites and stardust stops for a second, interrupted by the lapping of a pink tongue washing fur. The street-mutt does not know it. Could not know it.

    She is the loneliest creature in the Universe.

    In a better world, she would not have perished. I smile to myself as I daydream of the surface of the moon, a wreck bearing the faded letters CCCP nestled in a lunar crater. There, a little figure in a clunky spacesuit, glass dome on her head already misted over as she pants, sprints and jumps. She strides, mammoth leaps free from the confines of gravity, tongue flapping as she runs after the rabbit of Chang’e. The rings of Saturn are marked with pawprints as she chases her tail in an endless circle, and she sniffs the dusty trails of comets that remind her of the snow back home.

    Call it childish fantasies, mock their lack of substance. Better to dream of this, than think on the last moments of the world’s finest canine cosmonaut as she struggled to breathe. Her vision blackening as precious air ran out, the shuttle collapsing, shrieking like a fallen angel, plummeting back to Earth. Turning cherry-red then blinding white in the hellish furnace of re-entry, five measly kilograms of life scorched to ash, scattered to dot the rapids of the Milky Way. The wreck of the shuttle dissolving into a dart of light, until it is but another flaming trace in the sky to make a wish upon.

    When I hear the howls of your compatriots as they turn their snouts to the sky, I think they sing a song for you, Laika. A yowling cry in honour of the stray that sailed the winds of space. Their eulogy will keep you company, the way we never could.

    I step away from my desk as I write this, and leave my computer screen to pulsate, beckoning back to finish this tale. A pinned-up picture of my West Highland Terrier catches my eye, her face straining to break out of the photograph and onto my chest in a wet, snuffling heap. She would lick away my tears, salty treats brushed away by a sandpaper tongue. Laika, no-one was there to wipe away yours.

    It is 10:30 in the evening and night has snuck up on me outside the streets of Edinburgh. I look outside my window, ignoring the neon logo of a convenience store and the orange fuzz of streetlamps. Above Arthur’s Seat, a golden streak arcs across the heavens.

    In my mind’s eye, a shooting star becomes a dog, running into the waiting arms of her master.

    The End

    -First draft originally published at Student Journalism | The Broad Online | Edinburgh