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Blossom Hibbert

Blossom Hibbert has a pamphlet, suddenly, it’s now, published by Leafe Press. Her work has been published in places such as The Temz Review, Litter, International Times and Buttonhook Press. She hides along the Mediterranean,drinking greek coffee, picking olive trees and finding inspiration in the soil.

 
Two Coffees With A Madman

coffee #1

I am having a coffee with a stranger.

(I bought him from a flea market)

He does not eat / drink too much


but has eyes like sharp rock cracks in windows; hungry, wet... and waiting. Inside his hat is

where the pigeon’s roost, but we are the only two people in the womb that know that. My

one-handed companion has so much linear expression he contains far too much


ego.

ergo... (he is)

expression – less


His white collar is the rubbish bin of utopia – meaning it is of course the flaw in a flawless

world, thus we return to the crack in the window (we live inside a sycophantic circle of which

no one is on the outside)


He is so afraid of gold spoons for they have the capability to take everything he owns away,

till he is a drop of ectoplasm within the seafront of desire.


Ask what he wants from you. Ask what he wants - only if you are prepared to hear a

rehearsed monologue that makes grown men weep and women’s ligaments snap with

laughter. All that hullabaloo is not worth question time with the addicts. Go for a dawn pier

walk. You will be much better off that way.

Don’t forget to bring a coffee.


Since his death this morning, it has become even more important for him to explain life to me

over the steam of blacky ink. Like why


belonging is survival (and)

survival is belonging


It would take a landslide of small, shrivelled brown beans hurtling down Belvoir street

(where we converse) to make us move. I hide him in my bag just in case, but to my horror his

eyes stare through the tough white cotton.

Stare.... Why do you stare?


## ##

I order a warm croissant with jam.


I miss him already. To make this all better I sketch him on a napkin using a dulled-out pencil,

ripping the friable fabric when I shade in the coat. I imagine nerve endings within the napkin

and itch the inside of my elbow till I bleed a bit. When I am finished scratching both skin and

tissue, I sit back to look at the masterpiece.


Somehow, he looks as if he is crying a single worm of solitude. I do not sketch again. I now

know far too much.


The Curse of Knowledge is the passage from infant to adult; I am somewhere along the way.

My father’s absence lies down on the train tracks and prevents me moving any further. If he

were a freelance carpenter, I would ask him to build me a bookcase and single bed.


Oh, and a table for the man in the frame to rest on. But he is neither a father nor a carpenter,

so it doesn’t matter much. He is just an outline on a train track headed south.


I remove the man from the bag. Now, he can only view life through the bars of prison, he is

resentful at restriction, and this will never change. I have permanently altered the stranger’s

outlook. Damnit.


I take the golden spoon from its saucer and hide his eyebrows with it; he is now daring me to

care for something small and vulnerable that I usually would like to kill. Croissant crumbs

fall out my mouth onto his trench jacket and I commit a multitude of sins to wipe them away

– in doing so, my hand slips and his eyebrows reappear. He is deathly angry at me, under all

that gold.


I want to tell him of my love for jam red mugs with matching plates and also the gurgle of the

last drops of water down the bath plughole. His eyebrows stop me from continuing my list

and besides, caffeine is pressing against the infected valves of my heart. No one looks

through the peephole before letting it all flood in. It is all far too late now.


Caffeine comes rushing in as if the dam has burst. And... who is swimming on the

uttermost string of water? Oh...! Oh.


My photo frame man enters the heart chamber commonly known as

The Atrium.


Suddenly that long coat I once admired is stuck to my pulmonary artery, causing undulations

in blood pressure. Increasingly unsure of my own self-worth, I wipe the tear off my cheek

using the back side of four fingers and my skin shifts off my cheekbone. As if it never rested

there with such peace in the first place.


I have had enough excitement to last seven years. I place the man back into the bag with my

light head, ignore the stares, then we head out - as explorers of emotion.

Nobody is left to clear the dirty plates away. The landslide got them all yesterday.


coffee #2


We are having another coffee together; not picking up the thread we left off, but putting new

sheets on the stripped bed and beginning again. Today is the day for new beginnings. The

café we inhabit sits next to a river. The laughing frog and I...


Sip.

(mmm)


I redefine desire when I look at his hand.


In due course, I will write to the papers and let them know of my extraordinary discovery,

titled ‘redefinition’. I am the best columnist in all the land, I’m actually quite famous (I tell

my framed lover this static information).


As I contemplate the burdening fame, my love for the stranger sits in a neat space outlining

his grey hand...


I do not touch it for fear of allowing the tetanus (which has been chasing me since birth) to

get inside. The tetanus freezes your muscles in time, I am aware my photo frame man

inherited the clostridium tetani when he was first created, so am careful not to upset him with

my real lies (he will surely rea-lise).


I am ever so sensitive when it comes to bacteria... I also know he has a heart made of

galvanized steel, so it will not be attacked and will never cease to beat inside his tense state.

Poor, poor creature... I am so very kind and loving and sweet and sensitive...


If only inland revenue could see me now!


If only the taxman of times tables would walk past our flatland furniture... that’d show him!

They redefined society around three years ago; the death of working class as the driving

political force turned us into troglodytes. Turned us into (pre)


socialites.


The hierarchy of the rich and the poor is something I wish neither to climb up nor slide down.

I am happy where I am; in the coffee shop of beginners, sipping beside my blank lover. We

don’t let society hold us back. We don’t let dentists hold us back.


Only a million bumble bees would understand the new relationship I have formed with this

picture frame man; growing like a tumour on the underside of my brain.


Only anna kavan would understand me now.

And when I reach for his hand, I get exactly

what I want. Shoelace tendons and the bone from Sunday roast chicken sticking out.


I get exactly what I want. His hand without all the trimmings.


Mmm.


The river shifts water back and forth, it is moving with eternity. It has been accustomed to

change since the triceratops’ great tongue licked the salt off the rocks. I am red with jealousy

for this river beside me. I am boiling up with anger... How dare river banks be so used to

change that they wake all calm and placid and normal. How dare change make me so afraid.


All my unborn children have arranged a morning concert that I am late to... I am instead

having a streetside coffee with a photo frame and I am running behind the time. Even the

bloody clocks have shoes nowadays.


With laces made from dead men’s super-digital flexor tendons. Didn’t you know?

I drink black coffee rapidly, eyes looking to the sky, and inherit heartburn almost

immediately. I begin whispering a prayer to my lord; my paternal sperm creature.


My unborn children will sing me songs of Monmouth and Missy Higgins in a bit. They sing

just to make me weep. My unborn children remain nameless because of prostaglandin tablets

being eaten like sweeties and codeine for the chaser. I am the mother of the orchestra in the

echoing moments before sleep takes over – this is when I am naked, wet, and shaking.


My head is lost within the melody of the soldiers. My neck is lost to the toast

accompaniment. My egg is a fairy egg; yolkless, void of life. Not as delicious for breakfast.


I must hurry up and spoil you/ greet you/ taste you. I must hurry up and be the mother you

couldn’t be (almost too late).


The new definition of desire has been written on the blackboard for the pigeons to read,

digest, read and worse... remember.


I desire complete unattachment most days. But today, I want to find some rope and tie us up.

The pigeons might peck our eyes out, but we won’t care – we have love!


They will take over soon, you know.


It will be us against them.


And by ‘us’, I mean my deceased coffee companion and the pigeons.


And by ‘them’, I mean everything else – elephants, the bubonic plague, mycelium.

I don’t have a side.


I am liminal.


The picket line runs up my body and tickles me till I giggle like an infant. I am neither child

nor adult.

Remember?


An American lady sits beside us.

We quieten down.


Hotels are ever so i t chhhhy, photo frame (didn’t we learn that last night!)


The river complains itself through the gutter of land, I am nonchalant about the water and

prove this with a quick whistle. Then I blow my nose on my scarf. Colonisation of the wet

land is current and important and something the politicians forget. I love the man in the frame

according to how much I owe the tax man.


I can get used to change quicker than it feels. Just right now, it feels I won’t adapt and will

instead freeze over. Just now, it feels like things are going to last forever. The journey has

only begun but it is going to last forever. Unease is a dirty little trick.


Malaise is even worse.


I have aligned my view to the political preferences of sewer rats and realise...


I was wrong

all along.


The referendum is futile! It will take me seven years to recover from the shock and when the

mayor of Monmouth turns my life support off, I can finally exhale a lifetime of dirty rotten

sins.


One last request before I go!


A jam red scarf please, for I have been warned certain areas of the underworld are deathly

cold.


The American lady says, ‘have a lovely one’ and I know she means have a lovely death. I

share one remaining wisp of thought with my photo framed lover. It is a comparison between

dentists and builders.


The dentists use cement for root canal surgeries because it is cheap and creamy.


The builders use cement for telegraph poles because it is grey and sticks well into the gums

of pothole streets.


I ask my lover if the streetcleaners can be the toothbrush? But


he died yesterday so doesn’t say much anymore. Just waits to be put back in my bag.


I sigh and accept defeat. No one wants my bullshit metaphors.

 




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