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“Aha! Here it is,” Mrs Harris uttered triumphantly, clutching an object that looked suspiciously familiar. A round, metallic ring poked between two fingers as she handed it over. It was my super eagle, my broken key ring with the green, white, green blocks of colour. The Nigerian flag encased in plastic. I was nauseous and gulped it down.

“You dropped it last night on the way home. I know it’s just a damaged key ring but I thought you’d miss it for some reason,” she explained, laughter lines crinkling at the corners of her mouth.

I fingered the break in the plastic, the same action from the night before. It was one of the handfuls of lucid moments I thought I’d had on my way back home. Now I wasn’t even certain I’d had that. I didn’t feel the tear until it hit my lip, until I tasted a salty sorrow with a swipe of my tongue. I wanted to tell her about how I’d begun to grow trees in silences. I couldn’t bring myself to talk about it. My tongue tightened from the burden of balancing half formed things.

I smiled ruefully. “Butterflies.”

“Indeed, never underestimate them. Come on, I’ll show you something,” she said.

The stairs creaked as we walked up. I spotted a coppery, watermark on the ceiling. It traced our movements all the way. And the exotic, sweet floral scent intensified the further we went. Mrs Harris began to hum that strange, haunting tune again.

“What is that song?” I asked, side-stepping a dustpan and brush. “You were whistling it the other day.”

“It’s an old Romany song about two lovers who died together promising to meet in the after life.”

I felt a weird sensation in my left arm, as if the hairs were needles holding half threads in them.

“My mother used to sing it to me as a child,” she continued, nudging the loft door open. “For some reason, it always stayed with me.”

“Odd song to sing to a child.”

“Yes it was but like I said, she was a little crazy.”

In the loft we were greeted by three candles flickering on the windowsill and the coppery watermark had retreated. It was a good-sized space containing a warm, wooden floor, a slanted ceiling and orange walls. A short bookcase sat tucked away in one corner and old record sleeves of obscure artists leaned lazily against it. In the centre stood a headless dress form, flanked by slouched bin bags spilling clothes. I ran my hand over its naked, smooth body, imagining the strewn clothes were trains of thought. “Where did you get it?” Under the low lighting it was a piece of art.

“Oh many years ago now.” She stood to the right studying it as if picturing that first instance. “I got it in Edinburgh from a shop that sold sewing machines. One day, they had it for sale in their display window. I’m always struck by things that are out of place, it felt right so I bought it.” She took a drag from her shrinking cigarette.

“It seems…” I struggled to find the right words without sounding judgemental.

“Old fashioned?” she offered, eyes sparkling.

“Yes! Old fashioned.”

“That’s because it is dear.” She shrugged resignedly.

I searched her features. “Do you use it often?”

“Sometimes.”

“Why?” I was genuinely interested; to me it lengthened the process of getting ready.

She rolled her eyes as though I was an idiot. “Because it’s fun to play dress up, no matter how old you get dear,” she remarked.

In my mind’s eye, I saw her working in the attic surrounded by twin dress forms, beneath a bulb lit by an orange echo, drawing her features onto heads for her army, dressing them up, sending them out into the corners of the city. And they bore mouths melted by candlelight, shrouded in the smog of God’s breath.

I left Mrs Harris’s with the same strange sensation in my left arm. As if the two were connected, I plucked the playing card from my back pocket. Sure enough, the spear-wielding figure had changed clothes.

At night I didn’t sleep till late. I sketched pictures of Mrs Harris in her different guises. Later, I watched the drawings for changes in their expressions, revelations in the lines of their bodies. But all they did was lead me back to the same blank space.

Periodic Elements

Mercury Hg 80 = Mrs Harris

It was a ridiculous hour of the day, maybe 2 or 3am. Mrs Harris stood amidst squares of flattened cardboard in her sitting room that would become temporary homes for things that have no business growing roots. She lifted them, her things, like dumbbells, as if expecting resistance. The black rectangular radio sat listening, her sounds slipping through its speakers. She could smell the mustard from the half eaten sandwich that rested on the arm of her sofa. A creature of the night, she was at room temperature when she left to go next door. She lifted the key from the potted plant underneath Joy’s window; of course it turned the lock open.

Hydrogen H1 = Joy

In sleep she followed a thought because it had something to show her. At first, it was pure, singular. She was a grown woman with her little girl voice, being thrown up in the air and caught. She could not see by whom. They were brown hands and arms locking over her middle. Each time she was thrown, glowing, meandering triangles approached her from either side before slipping over her feet and upwards. This happened many times until eventually she turned gold in colour. She heated up, boiling till it became unbearable. Her head exploded against the black backdrop revealing a red mist. The brass head was rolling at her feet, grinning again. Then she was headless, she had no choice, she picked it up. It was a scorching helmet in her hands. She paced through the red mist feeling no sense of belonging and floated above other elements.

Carbon C6 = Queen

She was a child waking up to find her father gone. Later, her mother would make moi moi she’d pick at. They’d sit across from each other at the big, empty glass table and try not to tremble. In a child’s way, she would blame herself and her mother for a long time.

Then:

She was clutching the brass head and a diary.

These memories became: Padding for her coffin

Fertiliser for the soil

Clothing to wear dead

She was a nucleus curling and unfurling its distended, wet eye.

The breath on a window with nobody there, a subtle repositioning of slippers, photographs, mugs. Whispers tickling the spine of a maple tree leaning to the side. Everywhere, the dead were among the living.

Peter Lowon Journal entry July 1964

I left Okafor having confessed nothing with the mouth but everything with the body. The panic in my pupils, the sweat across my top lip, the attempt to keep my limbs still; I was dead weight in a chair. I walked away upright, down the seven steps out. I felt his eyes bore into my back.

Everything seemed worse after that. The hot air outside that smelled of sun-stroked bodies, meat pies, roasted corn. Ripe failure. The women milling about with loaded baskets on their heads and worn, heavy expressions looked at me in judgement. I stuttered and tripped over a crushed, green, soft drink can.

To avoid having any witnesses I had asked the driver not to come, so I opened the black Mercedes driver-side door. The heat hit me all at once. If a man could sit in a car and while away his life I would have done it. I sat inside for the longest time watching my hands shake at the wheel. Listening as the noises of cars, chatter, music and life were drowned out by a splintered cry that came from beyond me. I thought of calling my father, my mother, rubbing the possibility as though it was a colourless marble. They would find out soon enough, but I did not want to tell them, knowing that if I did, there would be nothing but disappointment to follow.