Ep. 8 Van Demonian Supernatural: The Sea Maid

Sophia’s Testimony (-requested by Carmen after the fact) 

My original training was in archeology and I’ll admit people are a kind of dig to me. Right from the first moment I see them. I start dusting back earth carefully, sorting through rubble, collecting samples, bagging and tagging… Some of the samples I take through observation skills, the rest… Suffice to say, with Henry I knew he was for real from the moment he greeted me on Criterion Street. When you talk to the dead all your life you get a sense for the feel of a historical period. People from different places and times smell differently, move differently, sound differently, to you and I today. Such as the way there was no self-consciousness to his attempt to pull out my chair. He did it on reflex and then tried to prevent himself just in the manner of someone with a long-standing physical habit.

When you really pay attention to other people you start to notice things like that. But today most everyone's too attention starved to learn how to be powerful. All our most cherished secrets are like that, hidden in plain sight because no one can be bothered really doing them. Henry wasn't like that though. Which was another signature of his era. He was watching me just as closely. In my memory I was back in in a prattishly middle class home in West Kennett, years ago now, where quite unexpectedly I met other people like myself… We come in all sorts you see, sexes, social classes, ethical temperaments... Until that day back in Wiltshire, I hadn’t known there were other people who wanted to see what lies beneath the silt and dust strata of things. 

“Thank you for meeting me today, Miss…”

“Don't stress yourself, Dickens,” I teased him with a little punch in the arm to loosen him up. "Sophia's cool with me."

My practiced eye saw more than his apologetic head ducking. It was clear to me from small nuances in his body language and grey-to-pale-blue eyes that here was someone who usually learns very fast. Someone who makes tremendous demands upon themselves and gets irritated quickly when he doesn’t immediately correctly master a new skill. I could also tell he was used to struggling to fit in and that the fear of not doing so went down to the self preservation level. 

“My apologies. It is always the interaction between the formal and informal aspects of modern socializing where I trip up. Usually just when I think I have it all under control!” 

I smiled as I watched him thank the waitress as she filled his water glass and took his order for a pot of loose-leaf black tea (Milk, no sugar). The stitches on the cuff of his shirt, which showed by about half an inch at the end of his grey suit coat as he extended his hand for the glass, were elegantly hand-stitched. The material was high quality linen. I wondered if this was Madeleine's work? I had already noticed her noticing me noticing her clothing!

His hands were long-fingered and fine boned in the way we palmists read as indicating a sensitive and artistic temperament. The fact his fingernails were very closely manicured to the finger, and his hands untoughened by hard work anywhere except around the fingertips led my guess that he was a musician. 

“It must be difficult for you, adapting to all this.” My sympathy was genuine even though I could not truly imagine his predicament. An old friend of mine back home who is of the blunt sort, would have grunted at me: ‘enough with the small talk’, but Henry had a more gentlemanly style of frankness.

“I can see you’re very good with people, Sophia. It seems you have kindness in you, which is rarer still. I’m told you have The Sight like I do?” 

Although he appeared to dodge my question I felt I learned about him from the fact he didn’t answer. There was a feeling of firm emotional discipline around this young man that held in check a brewing storm. At the moment I thought this a glass shattered in the kitchen and someone cried out in shock. Everyone in the café stopped talking for a moment. 

Henry didn’t jump like everyone else. He looked back at me when I stared at him and raised one of his eyebrows faintly, but almost defiantly, as if to say ‘what?’ I sensed that like poltergeists, the ghosts of the young ones who had never spent the energy of their heart and sex, he had probably felt the swell and pop in his chest right before the sound. It wasn't the first time this had happened to him.  Of course I didn’t take the bait by mentioning it. I’ve always found it best when in the presence of strong preternatural activity, the full capacity of which you aren't sure of yet, to never let them see surprise or fear.

“I do. Did you ever hate it, being Sighted? When you were growing up?”

“Indeed. My mother believed I was a changeling. Whenever I was disagreeable she would threatened to leave me out on the hill for my real family to come and get me. Now, you say you’ve seen a lot of things, Mi… My apologies,” he cleared his throat. “Sophia. For some reason I went to call you some other name and I can’t for the life of me think what it was now?”

It was my turn to raise my eyebrows but my expression was more on the sceptical side. I wasn’t buying his attempt to pass his ability off as a slip of the tongue. I figured he was trying to hedge his bets in case he’d guessed the first letter incorrectly, which he hadn’t. 

“Well, I’ve had a few names over the years. Not many people know what they were though…” I left the words hanging in the air to see if he’d take the bait. He pretended not to notice, like a proud peregrine falcon that won’t take landed meat from your hand but must chase the lure. "It's kind of a 'I could tell you but then I'd have to kill you' sort of deal."

“Oh. Well seems best to steer away then. Perhaps instead, you could answer for me what I find to be my most burning current question? Why do you imagine I was sent back when so many were not?”

I wanted to tell him I wasn’t the Oracle of Fucking Delphi and I was over people wanting big universal answers to the meaning of things! After some of the bad calls I'd made in the past it was a wonder I was still practicing at all. Sometimes when a seer makes a mistake people get hurt. But sometimes you just have to take a deep breath and be the priestess you were looking for as a younger woman. Table the fact you don't have all the answers. Deliberately assuming that mindset I found myself thinking mythically. “I suppose you were able to make all of Hell weep for you or something, hon.”

He frowned as he sipped his tea and glanced up at me over the rim of the cup. “What do you mean?”

I smiled to myself. I felt so old under the weight of the piled up meanings around that story… That moment when you realize you’ve made a reference that only two humans left alive would have understood the exact significance of and neither of them are present. With a melancholy sigh I relied on explanation in the place where I missed understanding. “In the myth of Baldr, the Norse shining one, he was slain by the finest projectile, a little piece of mistletoe. Hel agreed to return Baldr on the condition that all the denizens of the Underworld would all weep as one for his sad tale. Everyone did except for Loki, if it hadn’t have been for Loki then Baldr would have been resurrected.”

He nodded to himself slowly. “Rather fitting,” he muttered. “I was slain by something very fine indeed. Mere words... I cannot imagine though why I would be wept for by so many. There are an ample number of tragedies in this world after all. Mine was but one drop of salt in the ocean.” He shrugged gracefully, as if the weight of excessive self-importance were something you could slip off the shoulder’s like an old coat, even at his age.

“Why did you kill yourself?” I asked. 

“What makes you think I killed myself?”

“The air felt like a held breath when you walked up to me. Suicides feel like that. Suicides used to make me claustrophobic until I got used to it.”

“Fear,” he sighed. “Fear that if I refused to do so the man I loved would fall victim to state sanctioned murder for the crime of loving me. His mother made it clear to me that such an outcome was on the cards, and let me know what I needed to do to protect him.”

“Wow… Nice mother! And did your man get any say in this, whether he wanted this grand sacrifice in the name of his protection?” I was probably a bit sharp with him, but his story hit a nerve for me. It hit somewhere far too close to home.

Pain flashed into Henry's eyes that reminded me of sheet lightning, partly shielded and diffused by clouds that obscure the view of the thing itself. Curtly he shook his head and swallowed uncomfortably. “As to his mother, I imagine she felt she did what she had to.” Quite suddenly he looked back at me. “She had reason enough to be afraid for her son. Times were different then. May I now in turn ask you something personal?”

“I guess…”

“What brings you to Hobart?”

 “Dark MOFO primarily, they paid for my flight.”

“Yet you’re here for something else. Looking for something… That’s what having the Sight is about, don't you think? The Noticing? Who are you hiding from and why does it scare you that you know I'm real?”

The hair was standing up on my arms as if I was afraid he somehow knew everything.          “Pardon?”

“I was too frank, let me try again," his tone was calm and carried a cool, understated type of kindness which I first mistook for mere politeness. "What I mean to say is this: what you are and what I am puts us in league. You can tell me the truth safely.”


Stimulus question: Henry, please explain your thought process after meeting Alma up until the moment you solved his riddle?

One question obsessed me utterly. What kind of fairytale were we in? It was a question I'd lived with all my life but now Arthur had brought it to a head. I had assumed a love story. Yet the genre of the love story, ending with a marriage as they usually do, had never really made a lot of sense to me. My early demise had, in fact, been a result of the world convincing me that tragedy was the only kind of narrative where someone like me appears. So I guess I didn’t really look at Sophia immediately and think of her as someone who could help me. What was there left to help with? Everything I half-lived after he wasn't there anymore was an after thought. A postscript of sorts. Surely? It seemed too late for everything. Now was just about picking through the ashes of a vanished flame, trying to make sense of it, and speaking aloud my silenced tale. 

I already knew the way I wanted to write about love wouldn’t be like your conventional love story. It would be serpentine, winding, crooked, and intricate full of quiet contemplative retreats where he and I would meditate on the mystery of one another from afar. Where we would shed skins and don new ones for each other’s fresh delight. Where we would only seek each other’s company again once we had watered the flower of our longing, only when we were aching for it, so that the sight alone of each other ravaged the senses.  This is how he and I had begun on instinct alone, but we we had never arrived… It seemed as though perhaps we never would.

Love as an art form, with all the usual discipline you’d expect from art, rather than a gorged-down, unconscious biological imperative, was something I was born knowing the way I was music. I knew stories about love that didn’t wrap up with a happy ending, but instead bore it out through the trials of life its glory and bravery both untarnished by the corrosion of time. Already I knew how to begin it, and perhaps even how to live it, given the chance, I just didn’t know how to write it yet. I suppose nothing deemed unspeakable easily knows how to speak of itself, until suddenly it does, and the world rearranges to make room for a fresh influx of guerilla narrative.

           “What’s the saddest fairytale you can think of?” You asked me while I was sitting in your lounge room with my notebook, trying to crack Arthur’s code. I see now that you weren’t far off leading me to the answer in that question, but clearly this was not the way I was meant to find it.

            “It isn’t going to get solved this way,” I replied, getting to my feet and walking to the window. I leaned against the casement and looked out. The window didn’t face the street as those on my family home had done and I felt the loss of it. The front window was where I sat waiting for his arrival to repeat itself, as I had a feeling it would, time after time in different contexts, different streets, different eras. 

            “Maybe this is something Henry has to do alone,” Madeleine suggested tactfully. 

            If displeasure had been read into my comment it wasn’t present. I was merely in a state of deep concentration, the type that comes right before settling into the calm at the eye of the storm where all good ideas body forth from. Arthur knows me. This I must have faith in that if nothing else. He would know me anywhere, no matter what, and I would know him. And if that is so then he would have picked something that would fall into line with my most natural impulses, the things I would do if I was just acting normally…. 

            “Research,” I suddenly said aloud to myself. “If I couldn’t solve it off the top of my head, I would do research! Carmen? May I borrow your internet machine?”

This is the way fairytales happen in the 21st century… They start with words like: I entered “Fairytale +Sea Shell +Mill wheel” on Google and the top hits were ‘The Little Mermaid’. And they finished with... I still don't know how they finish.  He and I are history's suspension dots.

          My heart began to gush a glut of ocean water into my throat. It stung but I swallowed hard. Without needing to elaborate I knew the story. Released in the 1840’s ‘The Sea Maid’ by Hans Christian Anderson was childhood reading material for Arthur and I. But which was the part that had contained an image of both a sea shell and a water mill? I searched for this and found in them in the part of the tale that deals with the sea maid’s journey to the dwelling of the sea witch, where she must pass through water mill-like swirling and over the skeletons of drowned men.

Drowned in a flooding Hobart rivulet, which contained multiple mill wheels, through which my battered corpse had to pass, I had gone full fathoms five to the sea witch’s depths where the skeletons of whales lurked. So this imagery brought the hairs to a stand on the back of my neck, to the tune of the pouring rain outside. But that was just only the beginning of my friend's ingenuity and subtlety. 

As I continued the research I could feel his mind dancing with mine. I was on the blood trail the story was leaving. Finally it was truly pungent with truth! In the story Ariel was a fae creature fallen in hopeless love for a human man. The man hears her singing voice and greatly admires her. Later she rescues him from drowning. She is so enamored of him that when the sea witch offers to trade her two human legs to walk on land in return for her voice, she accepts. The sea witch cuts out her tongue, in later versions her voice is stored in a seashell. The sea witch tells her she can only earn a human soul if she is given the kiss of true love by her prince, otherwise she will simply turn into sea-foam. She agrees to these harsh conditions and the sea witch adds her voice to her ‘collection’. 

As I read my fingers that itched to play but had not the quality of music in them twitched and burned. What if, as for the sea maid, I find him only to be unable to identify myself without my music? In the story Ariel gets her chance to be human and perhaps earn a soul but the prince will only ever love the owner of that beautiful voice he once heard, and Ariel has cut out her tongue so she cannot sing... This is the central wrenching tragedy of this saddest of the faerie tales…

She is locked out from receiving a human soul because he can love no one but the owner of that voice she no longer has. Given an option to save herself by doing harm to her beloved she prefers death to betrayal, and as the reward of an amoral universe is forced to watch him marry another. 

Keeping her love silent the mermaid turns into sea foam, but her spirit is lifted up by the faeries of air who tell her there is still a chance for her if she spends hundreds of years doing good deeds. In later versions of the story the little mermaid gets her voice back from the sea witch at the end, the sea witch has been collecting voices in sea shells. 

            As soon as the thought of voices in seashells occurred I thought of the image of the shell inside the ear that Arthur had showed me. It had always been the way he skin-rode people, after-all, going in through the ear… I looked up seashells and ‘collection’ down the rabbit hole of the hidden Allport collection.

Suffice to say there’s a whole Huon Pine 'cabinet of curiosities' of which a large part is devoted to a sea-shell collection, probably started by Cecil’s mother and continued on by him and his son Henry… The idea of Cecil’s mother as the sea-witch who stole my voice and prevented me declaring my love made sense. And the idea that Arthur would secret this virtue he meant to support my work with, this magical packed punch he'd brewed in our denial, into something associated with giving me back my stolen voice unwords me utterly.

             Wrapped up in the layers of meaning is Hans Christian Anderson’s own unrequited love for a young man, and his pain when forced to keep his love that dared not speak its name silent whilst watching his beloved marry someone else. Tears rolled down my face as I read. Arthur didn’t just know indeed how I think, it seemed to me he was saying: I see youI know you. I knew you before I knew you. I know and see your silent pain that none other witnessed. For the first time since I’d come back the oyster-cut pain in my feet stopped smarting. As if in the simple act of witnessing the knives I walked over for him Arthur had miraculously closed up the stigmata of it.

Tears gushed a raw flood of life over my face and I dropped back my head. At that moment in my mind’s eye I saw a beacon light go up from my chest, parting my ribs into the night-sky. The intensity of the feeling made we gasp because it was black hot shot with silver and smelt of burning whale fat. I felt the lighthouse I had become and let even the light tangled into my bones erupt towards the heaven in offering with one message. 


I’m here. 



Ep. 5 Van Demonian Supernatural: St Jude and the Lament of Mabon

Dear Henry, 


See? I’m practicing proper cursive script. Do you like it? It’s not as good as yours yet. But I’m good at picking up fussy, flourish things like this. Tiny stitches and loops on letters… Carmen’s always been the one who handles the blunt force things in our lives, and I put the finishing touches on. But I’m not so good at describing things in words. 

            You say it’s so important that we ‘say it all clear’ and tell our story loudly while we still can because you never know when it will all be snatched away from you. But I’m not really sure how to do that. I wish you could teach me how to write. I will try and describe what happened leading up to us finding our next lead, but I don’t promise it will be high art. 

            Carmen and I were in the kitchen getting ready for work and she was dressed in her nurse’s uniform. “He found this little prayer card of Saint Jude and he’s stuck it to an old jar with a tea light in it. I think he’s praying to it,” she told me as if it was pitiful.

            I shrugged. “Well, he’s a nineteenth-century Catholic in trouble, what do you want from him?”

            “Do you know who St Jude is?” she asked. 

            I shook my head. 

            “He’s the patron saint of lost causes...”

            I pressed my lips together sadly and we both acknowledged the poignancy. “Do you think we should tell him about great-grandad Cecil’s collection yet?”

            “Might be a good idea to do it soon, give him something to focus on, going through all that old stuff. You know, like busy work? That’s usually good for grief.”

            “Don’t you think we should talk to someone else about him? He needs more than busy work. He needs a future of some kind… I mean, by no fault of our own, or his, we have an illegal immigrant from another time with no ID... What are we going to do with him long term? How is he going to contribute to society? He tells me that his own major saleable skill was being able to play music, but he can’t do that anymore. I asked him to write down his major remaining skills and he listed ‘sending the evil eye’ and ‘laudanum tolerance’…” 

            “Well he was only recently a teenager I suppose… I know he says that maturity levels are way down since then, but his skillset sounds on point… What are you thinking we should do? Like going to the authorities or something?” Carmen crossed her arms. “Because fuck that, I’m sorry, but I know people who can get him fake ID done up…”

            “I think we need to find someone to help us. Not the authorities, but not necessarily criminals either… I mean, someone that knows about… well… the supernatural.” I was waiting for her to mock me because if she did I was going to remind her that you came back from the bloody dead so all the cards are on the table now. 

            “A priest? Are you thinking the Catholic angle?”

            I shook my head. “No I’m thinking of something a little more outside the box than that.”

            That’s what led me out there looking for witches, occultists, mediums, spiritualists, whatever turns up when you go looking for the psychic riff raff of the city. I will say right from the start that whatever Carmen says it was more than coincidence that an Allport descendent happened to be standing in the rivulet tunnel taking photographs after her hospital shift when you came along. And just as that was no coincidence neither was it that I then went to that particular card reader… 

I think I know what we have to do next now, Henry. I’ve found people who are specialists in the uncanny. That’s what I do, I think. Carmen saves people, I discover people. Her super hero name has to be Saving Carmen and I’m Discovering Madeline. See what I did there? You will approve of the double meanings I’m sure, if not the mangled grammar! 



Dearest Madeline,


I am a poet, not a schoolteacher, I’m not here to correct your grammar or hatchet out the joy from language as pedants do. Twist it to any shape that pleases you, yet touch it still, work it in your fingers, soften it to other shapes you haven’t tried before. You don’t have to be good at it, but write it anyway. Our mind is partially bound with words, it pays to make them supple. My kind are the outlaws of language, we capture and torture English until it gives up its hidden secrets to us. We put grammar on the rack and to the thumbscrew, stretching and rending them, while we ask again and again for them to confess to us where the devil sucked upon their witch-teats. 

            It vexes me when people say they are afraid to write. The whole of society seems to exist to clamp down on the main artery of creativity, anyone who creates does so in the teeth of all, risking mockery and infamy. Anybody with any sense is afraid to write, especially if it means bearing their jugular vein to the unkind masses. If you say you want to write but you won’t because you fear you will be derided, know that you will indeed be derided, by at least someone, somewhere, out there. But do you intend to let that bitter mediocrity own you? Or do you love language enough to do it anyway?

           You are right about Saving Carmen and Discovering Madeline, I like what you did there. ‘Maddie’ is quite lovely and I appreciate all she’s done for me, more than I can express, yet I am very much looking forward to discovering Madeline.

            It might interest you, (just as an aside and because I’d rather talk about just about anything than the matter at hand) to know I have a girl living inside of me, who has a different name to myself, just as you do. At least, she has the embryo of a name. She is something made of light. She lives inside the jaws of the wolf in my belly. I am the man, who swallowed the wolf, who devoured the girl… It isn’t around just anyone that she comes out, you have to hold open the jaws of the wolf like the lady with her hands in the mouth of the lion in Strength from the tarot deck. 

            My interior girl of light came out around you Madeleine when you let me brush your hair. I’ve always enjoyed it when ladies allow me little privileges, which would not be extended to normal men. That’s not how I’m meant to refer to myself anymore, is it? There are all these beastly new categorizations for attraction I need to work out. I never thought about it like that, this gay, straight or bisexual business, all I know for sure is that you aren’t the first lady to allow me the relaxed intimacy of a girl friend.  

That which is man in me indeed takes much less interest in the sexual features of women’s bodies, but the beast inside, and the girl… They have their own agendas. Usually it was only in Arthur’s presence that I could allow partial freedom to those other parts. To the sharp bird of prey beak that lives in my mind, ready to rend the visceral of an idea and to the hungry, feral she-wolf in my gut, and the girl hiding inside the beast skin, also. But despite struggling to fit my understanding to the three-pronged division of sexuality your era presents me with, I’m coming to feel safer here… Which really wouldn’t be terribly hard under the circumstances of the now absent death penalty that hung over our every move.

With the subsiding of fear I find myself able to think with lucidity again. When your mind is doused with the chemical wash of fighting or fleeing you are never really thinking rationally. It is only now that I can realistically assess the level of danger I was putting him in. It is only now that I discover what Arthur left behind him here in Hobart, like a resounding echo of his life ringing out still, that I can feel the true magnitude of my mistake. Fear swallowed me utterly, just as despair threatens me at times now. It was his job to protect me, and yet I could not bear the risk he would have taken for me. 

Now I can relax I see that I had no right to take that decision from his hands, it was his life to risk, his death to choose. What is love though, but that kicking out from the very centre of yourself against the death that has chosen your beloved? It was Arthur’s job to hold the cloak around me, to conceal me, to partially reveal me, but to neither report what he had seen nor record it. The work we did was secret, and he knew better than most how to Keep Silent. Such is the sacrifice akin to death, which is asked of the men who ward the edges of our House’s precinct. 

            For this reason I doubt I will find anything about myself in his papers…

Arthur would have destroyed any evidence from before my death, not because he was ashamed about he and I, in truth there was nothing, at the physical level, that we were guilty of. He would have done it still because it was his job to be an invisible man, a man made of many faces and no face, composed of nothing but shadows and ocean mist. 

            Sometimes I see echoes of his particular talents in yourself and your sister. Forgive me if my words come off sounding paternalistic, which might seem strange when you are physically older than I. If it sounds so it is because I am a contemporary of your forebear, and out of my love for your forefather I feel a strange stewardship or guardian role over you two. You are the product of my love, even if you could never have been the product of our love.

 At the physical level it has been you two who have shielded me from this new world, and I who can protect you from the other more arcane terrors that lurk below our feet and inside the walls of this city. I feel that in some way the luck force of his family line is therefore still with me, heralded by your arrival, still draped around me like his loving sponsorship. His spiritual patronage endures over the whole city having its roots in his collection. 


As to how to tell it all clear… we must tell and tell until our very skin becomes see-through that is what it means to get clear with yourself. If we are to empty out all the falsehood that’s been shoved down our throats we must go to the extreme ends with confession. I took my clothes off in the night and opened the window, standing naked beneath the moon and told the sky I was who I was, unchanged, unashamed. Before mankind I will put my clothes back on, I will put my human skin back on, and walk around taken for normal, but I have given back their voices. My voice is alone now in a stark sort of purity.

One simply screams in some form and tries to do it tunefully, that is all art is, that is all writing is, an eruption of what is unbearable otherwise, made beautiful so as to be tolerable to others…. One finds one’s self in a place, and one writes from there. One sits very still and listens to the story demons creeping up, barely breathing with anticipation. I felt them skulking around up from the rivulet about when the rain began to ease off. When I feel that breeze stir in a certain way I grab a pen and brace myself. 

            I over heard you and Maddie from the kitchen talking about how the dam had dropped in Les Revenants just before the zombies came back. I may have rolled my eyes at you, but I was intrigued. You noted that the dam was back in fine form again now in Hobart, after all this rain that ‘Henry has brought with him’.

Movies, songs, and the electronic world that interacts with your stream of consciousness so regularly are looked to as oracles of sorts, just as the sky and bush were looked to for omens once. You don’t notice that you do it, or count it as a belief system, but you believe these electronic stories and story fragments you are immersed in have some bearing on your reality. You believe these stories interact with each other and with reality in some way, just as my mother believed the folk stories she grew up with enough to claim I was a changeling. 

            When I heard you two talking it led me to consider what a man of Arthur’s talents would have done with such things at his disposal. Right when I was thinking it, the electricity went down and we were plunged into the reassertion of primordial night. 

            “Arthur?” I murmured into the now dark air of your flat. Perhaps it is the same species of mytho-logic you used to link your viewing of a French television series to a drop in Hobart’s dam water, and onward to my own synchronistic appearance? It is story logic to be sure, but what isn’t, when you break it all down? I knew what it meant in my marrow. It meant Arthur killed the lights, like our century split the night, and it means he can still hear me. 


Stimulus Question: Henry, could you please describe Cecil Allport, whom you called Arthur, and your relationship with him? I’m particularly interested to hear more about the reason you believe he would be capable of turning off our electricity? This might help give you something to do while I’m at work other than turning all of our jars into saint candles and hiding magical pee samples. –love, Carmen. 


There are some things in life so far outside the ordinary we can only express them in mythic terms. For this reason I will as yet give you no: ‘we met at the age of ten at my father’s house’ or ‘as we grew I would read poetry to him as we lay on our backs in the long, late-summer grass.’ Even those facts seem too pedestrian, and to do it justice in another form would require a novel-length endeavor. 

            Let me tell you, instead of describing our relationship, about the story of a child named Sorrow, whom my Welsh Grandmother spoke of in hushed tones. Pryderi, son of Rhiannon, stolen away on the night of his birth reappeared in the home of a horse breeder whose mare had been in foal, but the foal had been snatched away. Pryderi had reappeared, replacing the vanished colt foal, which had been taken from the stable by a monstrous hand of a creature of a troll being of the Otherwise. The loss of Pryderi caused Rhiannon much sorrow and care as she was punished for his murder, and for this the child was named for sadness.

            Pryderi and his equine double, are part of an ongoing story about divine twins of light and darkness. One who sees the sun through the sky and the other on its perilous nightside journey through the Underworld, one passing it to the other… Snow White and Rose Red, a feminine version of this ageless story with no beginning and no end, that is always going around and around like the sun seems to walk across the heavens and down into the salty arms of the sea. 

I knew a man once who claimed to have danced with the Vodou Queen of New Orleans, he used to say Arthur and I were the Marassa… Because even as far afield as Africa the story was still going around and around about twin beings that herald the beginning of things.

            Just as I was taken, and the unlucky Pryderi, Mabon ap Modron was also stolen from his mother’s side by otherworldly beings. Mabon grows to young manhood languishing in a strange land, little different to Sleeping Beauty in his isolation and the feats that must be passed to obtain him, except that he, like the caged bird, and myself, sings in his captivity.

‘What is to be got of me will be got through fighting’ –Mabon warns the intrepid heroes who would attempt the task. Oh I know all the words to the paean of Mabon… I know that old refrain like the Irishman in me knows the bittersweet tune of heartsick, and the scent of dawn after whiskey and tears. 

It is King Arthur and his war band who rescued Mabon, by entering the deathly domain of water on the back of the Salmon of Wisdom. I think that was one of the reasons I thought of calling Cecil ‘Arthur’, in the beginning. Though it was not the reason at the forefront of my mind I see now the form of the salmon of wisdom rising beneath me, monsterous, titanic, lifting me from the water that threatens to engulf me, with a strength greater than any human hands. I realize suddenly that it was not Arthur, or my angel who lifted me from the ocean and brought me here, but the specter of some rising immortality, its nature only partially knowable. It was who I am still becoming that lifted me.

That idea of Arthur, the raven-turning once and future graal king, lurked deeper in, within the wet, subterranean chambers of the heart where Mabon sings his lament inside me, waiting for his fated appointment with the sacral king. In a way that name, his secret name, is still only the echo of an idea gestating in the dark. But once unleashed into many minds, ideas can be powerful. 

When I fell into trance his were the hands that steadied me and the hands that held the fob watch that mesmerized me, also. When he and I touched hands in the séance, sparks could be felt as though were designed by nature to create a battery. When I went out into the world his arm was there through mine, mutely telling the world I was his friend, and therefore not to be bothered by anyone, or else… His voice the one that spoke for me when I was uncertain... When I trembled under the weight of my calling and my gift, his was the coat around my shoulders and the excuses for why we had to leave early. When The Ignorant came to persecute me it was his fists that drew my enemy’s blood and his quick tongue that left them stammering for a stillborn comeback. 

It was me who showed him how to break the fourth wall on reality, so that he saw for the first time how what we call life is but a stage play, and who the audience is and the people who leverage our puppet strings. It was me that pressed close the heat of the cunning fire in my own brow over his until his forebrain grew incandescent with the glow of our connection. I taught him how to see and hear what is called dead, but has merely moved its location to the interior spaces of life. It was I, since we were little more than boys, who held him when he was sorrowful, cooked for him when he hungered, tended him where he hurt, read to him and broadened and deepened his apprehension of the beautiful, and again and again decided to place our friendship above all petty irritations in life. Thus something of the divine nature touched upon us, lightly, perfectly, shyly... 

And it was good. 

That is all I know how to say of it for now. As to how he could have turned out our electricity, well… Your great great grandfather was a two-faced man, a crossroad’s walker, a taker and wearer of the faces of others and the skins of beasts, the kind of man a grave can’t hold down for long. He had a wolf inside him like I do, but there was a fecund and fearsome darkness that lodges close to his heart, a breathless outer space, close to the Void sensation.

I feel his influence here still and I know his collection of curiosities, which his son Henry bequeathed (as he wished it) to the people of Hobart, will prove this to be true when I can bear to go look at them. 

My avenging angel who watches over me told me once that I would need to come to terms with the sex in me to progress with my Art, because it is not enough to say that sexuality is part of magic. Magic, instead, is a sexuality, something which exists within the erotic nature of a person. If magic is up inside you it’s as unstoppable as if you are a boy who likes other boys, and it is felt and wanted with the same kind of intensity. I believe and know he is right. 

Yet for me I feel that if magic is an aspect of human sexuality then sexuality, for me at least, is a type of art. Some people have a gift for it, like music or dance. There is no discontinuity between my music and how it felt to love Arthur. There is no real line between the compulsion toward poetry and the intricate and mindful expression of love, which I desired to compose upon his flesh with mine. 

Make no mistake about it, to me that was what our relationship was, if you want to know, art… A thing of deep enduring beauty and a joy forever, a still unravished bride of quietness, a foster child of Silence and slow Time. Like the figures in Keats’ Grecian urn, we are suspending in mid-motion always, a lost refrain, or cause, a few unplayed notes lingering in the air, a reaching out hand ungrasped, a caress never quite landing. 

Maybe.

Episode 1. Out of the bridgewater jerry

Have you ever been in the grip of an instinct so total there is nothing else? Like when you’re trapped under water and kicking for the surface, your whole being sharpens into desire. Your body becomes a single raw nerve of will to live and nothing more. Even the sound of your own name is less familiar than the taste of air. Nothing before the absoluteness of it seems to exist. 

It is like this when I try to remember what happened before I came back. 

Only the white noise of the tide above pressed in and down on my senses as I strove for the light. I could hear the steady roar becoming sea girls singing to me, or perhaps to each other, which is always a far worse sign of one’s impending doom... Was that the light above that I must reach to breathe, or did that growing whiteness blanching my vision salt-white mean I was going under? There shouldn’t have been such well-being, such rising peace, at the same time as the water was pushing up my nose like wet cotton wool. I knew all about drowning, after all. I do it with an easy grace. I take in water like a creature designed for penetration and gushing.  

The temptation to surrender to the spreading opiate of death was intense. Surrender is all through the thing I am, but so is this fight, this implacable determination… Fighting and kicking felt like cold wet hell is bearing down on you, and you nothing but a single thought of love in the grip of darkness. I. Will. Never. Stop. Fighting.

But is this the biggest lie I tell myself? This sinking, this letting of the sea girl’s frigid hands… This was a cool, unraveling shiver of ecstasy, what was the point in saying no to it anyway? When everything beautiful in the world is heading West, out into the mist and further, further… The feeling of this potential surrender smelt like formaldehyde and felt against the skin like the sound of the word ‘syringe’. I could feel my legs membraneing themselves together and turning into a marine tail in one big numb fuzz. Soon someone would force me to wear oyster shells. The peonies that grow on the bottom of the ocean are unlike other peonies. We will pick them together in the sea gardens, nestled in the guts of shipwrecks. Take my hand. We’ll walk straight across a moonbeam.

I called my song out into a thousand shells that trapped the echoes and sent them all back on themselves like a love making. This is your realm, I came here on purpose. Your many hands tore my clothes off. Sullivan’s Cove had me in a gang bang full fathoms five, my brains fucked out with ambergris and mankind’s lies. But before it could end without beginning strong hands lifted me skyward, skittering towards the choking light sluicing amniotic. I cannot truly account for the power of those arms. No mortal man I’ve known possessed such a strength as the one that plucked me from the water in the teeth of all probability. 

The next thing I remember is the way the oyster shells fossiled into the rocky edges of Hobart town cut my feet as I walked towards the shore, my wet clothes clinging to my ragged breath. It took me some time to realize it had happened, in truth, those deep lacerations. At first I couldn’t feel it, but then as the salt worked in it seemed all too natural that every step I took back onto human ground felt like walking on broken glass. This is the deal after all, is it not? When you want to take something that belongs to the ocean? It is the condition, after all, for people like me who seek what I seek.

As I walked an undulating sea mist parted around me. I'd lived in Hobart long enough to know I was in the middle of the Bridgewater Jerry. Some countries have the Wild Hunt, here our spectral horsemen are of the marine variety, riding horses made of mist. It gave me weird clammy shudders to have it souping its way around me and pulling at my clothes. I felt I heard echoes in the silent white cavalcade as though through he mouth of the bay the dead were gathering up their bones from Cornelian Bay, under the burial ground and constructing ghost horses from them. 

It is the one great outrage to the order of things that nobody is ever expecting, when the dead come back. Of course they do it in all kinds of way, every day, but mostly no one notices. At this stage all I remembered was falling into the floodwaters and then the reason why I was now fighting so hard for the shore. The reason was a man, and the man had a name, a number of names… But could I have told you my own name at that moment? I don’t think so. Could I have told you that the year was 1874 at my last recollection? Unlikely. 

When I reached dry land I fell down. Even after rest against the familiar grit of my home I was not able to frame the questions that were already eating at me like sea lice. I'd woken up swimming hard for the surface, full of all the drama of life and love and ready to fight like hell, only to realize that I can never make that last assay across the final abyss of night without him lifting me. No matter how many different angles we try it from throughout the centuries, this part of the outcome is always the same. I can jump so far that I go close to crossing, but at the last minute I am always there with my hand out. If he doesn’t grab it I can’t do the last bit.

 The knowledge of our perpetual triumphant defeat was a kind of soft surrender all its own. To lie half broken with fatigue and bruising on a nighttime shore, devoid of the knowledge of time and space… It was liberating. The bloodlessness of refusing the struggle...  

But the cold of a Van Diemen’s Land autumn wouldn’t allow me long to contemplate who had lifted me and the poetry of it I still half knew, or how I’d come to find myself water buried in our deep port harbour. Unsteadily I got to my feet and looked down at myself. I wasn’t sure at what part of my ordeal I’d lost my shoes. My clothes were torn in several places but it was too dark to see if I was injured. The imperative of the cold was far more urgent. 

It was then that I mounted the bank and was blinded by the most intense light I’d ever seen. Staggering back I shielded my eyes from it whilst at the same time trying to investigate. I was of the type to see visions and spirits, had been since early childhood, but this was a corpse light of a new magnitude. Once my eyes adjusted a little I went further up the bank to investigate, as this intrusively bright illumination was not getting any dimmer. I was shivering and hugging my body and as the harsh white light bathed me in its cold gleam I saw my bluish-white flesh and wondered if I would frighten someone when they came upon me. It was too overwhelming in the first instance to try to understand the source of the light. Something was wrong with Hobart, or perhaps something was just wrong with me? That had always been the fundamental question, after all.

As I walked barefoot up the embankment towards the regatta ground I decided that it was the latter. I’d hit my head in the initial fall that had somehow terminated in the depths of the bay… I shuddered at the thought of the sharks and other marine monsters that moved in the dark there and the blood and intestinal sludge I must have passed through around the abattoir. 

It was only then, with the thought of dirt that I paid heed the open cuts on my feet. They didn’t simply mean, as I had previously imagined, that walking back into the world of man to find the man I loved would be like every step was cutting my otherworldly feet with knives. No, they also meant I was at great risk of infection. 

Stumbling at the first notice of the bloody footprints I was leaving, I sat down on the grass in the severe floodlight that was doing such violence to the night, and tried to get my bearings. If it was something altered about my perception rather than my surroundings why were the steps different? How long could it reasonably have taken my body to make its way from Strickland Falls to where the mouth of Hobart Rivulet gave itself up to the bay? Not long enough for someone to have put in this ugly new railing… Getting to my feet I ran my hands along it, checking to make sure it was indeed objectively real. 

It was while I was confirming this that the first surge of panic began to set in. My heart started hammering, forcing a new heat out to my extremities. Something was gravely wrong. I got to my feet unsteadily. My palms were now wet with sweat as well as seawater as I tried to use the strange new railing to stay on my feet.

“Arthur,” I whispered into the brazen night air. It was as though through invoking his name with the vibration we call sound, I had somehow conjured to quivering every bloody rooted heart wound that had brought me to my current predicament. Needless to say the sudden memory gush, strong as a main artery, forced me back down into a sitting position. All the blood had gone out of my face and my legs wouldn’t work for a moment. “No… Our Lady… no… what have I done? I must… I must,” as I muttered aloud I made another attempt at standing. “He must be frantic…” I whispered. My breath was turning to anxious spurts of vapour in the crisp night air as I slowly turned in an arch to look backwards upon the direction I had just come. 

With a start as strong as a shove in the chest I stared and frowned at the sight before me. The other side of the bay was awash in pinpricks of distressed light, each so concentrated as to make up the power of five gas lamps. “I must have hit my head.” Yet even as I spoke these words I began to run up the hill in the direction of the town. It didn’t matter that my feet were cut or that I was half frozen and bathed in confusion by the orange glare. My body was possessed by something greater than these forces. Fear for the one I love, and the power of this emotion drove me without mercy. 

It was only when I crested the hill and saw all the metal carriages without horses that lay still and quiet like sleeping monsters stinking of chemicals that I retched and stopped. For a while I stood with my hand reassuringly wrapped in the green branch of a she-oak, which for a time seemed the only familiar thing left. The waves of nausea were accompanied by a sickly sense of growing understanding. What happened to Oisin and Thomas the Rhymer has happened to me, I managed to word to myself. But if I had been in Tir nan Og why hadn’t I turned to dust yet when I first stepped foot upon the land of man? It must mean I haven’t been gone too long… Otherwise I would be dust... Dust. 

After Fear came the rampaging scavenger Hope. How much more did that particular demon wish to ring from me yet? Had I not been squeezed out like an old dishcloth over and over and never yet known water? How long could it have really been that I’d been away? I looked at the backs of my hands, which were still those of a twenty year old who had done only moderate physical labour. Worst-case scenario? Ten years? No. Though my hands don’t show it, it must be longer for all this change to have occurred… What are these things here? Twenty years? Thirty years? 

It wouldn’t matter, I told myself desperately, I wouldn’t care how old he’d grown while waiting for me all that mattered was finding him. What made me pause to be physically ill was the thought of the not-knowing he had lived through, the anguish he must have known in my absence... I thought my heart wouldn’t stand it, yet somehow, like the diamond bright thing it was, it took it. Carbon doesn’t end up adamantine from being unable to withstand intense pressure, after all.  However long it had been I must make it to his home as rapidly as possible to put a swift end to it, no matter how long he’d been forced to live with the mystery of my disappearance I could still make it all better and there was no question in my mind that he would remember and miss me bitterly. 

Before I could find my way to Davey Street and rush along it to the richer end of South Hobart, it appeared I would have to do some purging. My legs shaking I leaned for strength against the she-oak. Ocean water came out of me at first, and then a long, thick sludge with the appearance of wet bladderwrack, soggy written-on paper, laudanum-blue with running ink, heaved together with the seaweed in a gelatinous mass, tangled all together in hair and fish bones. The disgust I felt in voiding this ocean junk via the mouth was much dwarfed by the relief I felt in ridding my system of it. I wanted to poke with a stick that which had come out of me, as though it were the embryo of some monstrous oyster-bodied young I’d miscarried onto the Regatta Ground. 

There wasn’t time for that or to try to understand how such things got inside me, I had to find Arthur. I had to tell him I was sorry… I had to put things right. Whatever pain I’d caused when, like an injured cat, I’d stumbled into the wild looking to take myself off with myself and slipped into the faerie mists, I would pull it clear from his body through sheer force of will and take it into my own. “Hold on, my love,” I whispered to myself aloud as I headed for the lights. I blinked several times as I tried to come to terms with what had happened to my city where only so recently had been cobblestones were now hard endless cement without evidence of natural providence. “You have to be out there,” I said my chin set with stubbornness, pulling my torn shirt closer around my chest. “I know you do. Because without you, not me... It’s that simple. If I am here in this strange place, then so are you. And I’m coming to find you.”